The first space probe to attempt TLI was the
Soviet Union's
Luna 1 on January 2, 1959 which was designed to impact the Moon. The burn however didn't go exactly as planned and the spacecraft missed the Moon by more than three times its radius and was sent into a heliocentric orbit.
Luna 2 performed the same maneuver more accurately on September 12, 1959 and crashed into the Moon two days later. The Soviets repeated this success with 22 more
Luna missions and 5
Zond missions reaching the Moon's neighborhood between 1959 and 1976. The United States launched its first lunar impactor attempt,
Ranger 3, on January 26, 1962, which failed to reach the Moon. This was followed by the first US success,
Ranger 4, on April 23, 1962. Another 27 US missions to the lunar neighborhood were launched from 1962 to 1973, including five successful
Surveyor soft landers, five
Lunar Orbiter surveillance probes, and nine
Apollo missions, which landed the first humans on the Moon. For the Apollo lunar missions, TLI was performed by the restartable
J-2 engine in the
S-IVB third stage of the
Saturn V rocket. This particular TLI
burn lasted approximately 350 seconds, providing 3.05 to 3.25 km/s (10,000 to 10,600 ft/s) of
change in velocity, at which point the spacecraft was traveling at approximately 10.4 km/s (34150 ft/s) relative to the Earth. The Apollo 8 TLI was spectacularly observed from the Hawaiian Islands in the pre-dawn sky south of Waikiki, photographed and reported in the papers the next day. In 1969, the Apollo 10 pre-dawn TLI was visible from
Cloncurry,
Australia. It was described as resembling car headlights coming over a hill in fog, with the spacecraft appearing as a bright comet with a greenish tinge. The 1994 US
Clementine spacecraft, designed to showcase lightweight technologies, used a 3 week long TLI with two intermediate Earth flybys before entering a lunar orbit. In 1997
Asiasat-3 became the first commercial satellite to reach the Moon's sphere of influence when, after a launch failure, it swung by the Moon twice as a low delta-v way to reach its desired geostationary orbit. It passed within 6200 km of the Moon's surface. The 2003 ESA
SMART-1 technology demonstrator satellite became the first European satellite to orbit the Moon. After being launched into a
geostationary transfer orbit (GTO), it used solar powered ion engines for propulsion. As a result of its extremely low delta-v TLI maneuver, the spacecraft took over 13 months to reach a lunar orbit and 17 months to reach its desired orbit. China launched its first Moon mission in 2007, placing the
Chang'e 1 spacecraft in a lunar orbit. It used multiple burns to slowly raise its apogee to reach the vicinity of the Moon. India followed in 2008, launching the
Chandrayaan-1 into a GTO and, like the Chinese spacecraft, increasing its apogee over a number of burns. The soft lander
Beresheet from the
Israel Aerospace Industries, used this maneuver in 2019, but crashed on the Moon. In 2011 the NASA
GRAIL satellites used a low delta-v route to the Moon, passing by the Sun-Earth L1 point, and taking over 3 months. == See also ==