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This is a list of all spacecraft landings on other planets and bodies in the solar system, including both intended and unintended crash-landings. The list includes orbiters that were intentionally impacted, but not orbiters that later crashed in an unplanned manner due to orbit decay.
For a list of all planetary missions, including orbiters and flybys, see List of Solar System probes.
| Mission |
Country/Agency |
Date of landing/impact |
Notes |
| Luna 2 |
USSR |
September 13, 1959 |
First lunar impact. |
| Ranger 4 |
USA |
April 26, 1962 |
Intentional hard impact; hit lunar farside due to failure of navigation system. |
| Ranger 6 |
USA |
February 2, 1964 |
Intentional hard impact. |
| Ranger 7 |
USA |
July 31, 1964 |
Intentional hard impact. |
| Ranger 8 |
USA |
February 20, 1965 |
Intentional hard impact. |
| Ranger 9 |
USA |
March 24, 1965 |
Intentional hard impact. |
| Luna 5 |
USSR |
May 12, 1965 |
Unsuccessful attempt at soft landing; crashed into Moon. |
| Luna 7 |
USSR |
October 7, 1965 |
Unsuccessful attempt at soft landing; crashed into Moon. |
| Luna 8 |
USSR |
December 6, 1965 |
Unsuccessful attempt at soft landing; crashed into Moon. |
| Luna 9 |
USSR |
February 3, 1966 |
First successful soft landing; first pictures from the surface. |
| Surveyor 1 |
USA |
June 2, 1966 |
Soft landing. |
| Surveyor 2 |
USA |
September 23, 1966 |
Unsuccessful attempt at soft landing; crashed into Moon. |
| Lunar Orbiter 1 |
USA |
October 29, 1966 |
Lunar orbiter, intentionally impacted at end of mission. |
| Luna 13 |
USSR |
December 24, 1966 |
Soft landing. |
| Surveyor 3 |
USA |
April 20, 1967 |
Soft landing. |
| Surveyor 4 |
USA |
July 17, 1967 |
Contact lost on descent. |
| Surveyor 5 |
USA |
September 11, 1967 |
Soft landing. |
| Surveyor 6 |
USA |
November 10, 1967 |
Soft landing. |
| Surveyor 7 |
USA |
January 10, 1968 |
Soft landing. |
| Apollo 11 |
USA |
July 20, 1969 |
First manned landing. |
| Luna 15 |
USSR |
July 21, 1969 |
Possible attempted sample return; crashed into Moon. |
| Apollo 12 |
USA |
November 18, 1969 |
Manned mission. |
| Apollo 13 |
USA |
April 14, 1970 |
S-IVB stage crashed for seismic research (rocket stages from a number of other Apollo missions that successfully landed were also crashed in this manner[1]) |
| Luna 16 |
USSR |
September 20, 1970 |
First successful robotic sample return. |
| Luna 17/Lunokhod 1 |
USSR |
November 17, 1970 |
Robotic lunar rover. |
| Apollo 14 |
USA |
February 5, 1971 |
Manned mission. |
| Apollo 15 |
USA |
July 30, 1971 |
Manned mission; lunar rover. |
| Luna 18 |
USSR |
September 11, 1971 |
Failed attempt at sample return; probable crash-landing. |
| Luna 20 |
USSR |
February 21, 1972 |
Robotic sample return. |
| Apollo 16 |
USA |
April 21, 1972 |
Manned mission; lunar rover. |
| Apollo 17 |
USA |
December 7, 1972 |
Manned mission; lunar rover. |
| Luna 21/Lunokhod 2 |
USSR |
January 8, 1973 |
Robotic lunar rover. |
| Luna 23 |
USSR |
November 6, 1974 |
Failed attempt at sample return; damaged on landing. |
| Luna 24 |
USSR |
August 18, 1976 |
Robotic sample return. |
| Hiten |
Japan |
April 10, 1993 |
Lunar orbiter, intentionally impacted at end of mission. |
| Lunar Prospector |
USA |
July 31, 1999 |
Lunar orbiter, intentionally impacted into polar crater at end of mission to test for liberation of water vapour (not detected). |
| SMART-1 |
ESA /
Sweden |
September 3, 2006 |
Lunar orbiter, intentionally impacted at end of mission. |
| Mission |
Country/Agency |
Date of landing/impact |
Notes |
| Venera 3 |
USSR |
March 1, 1966 |
First impact on the surface of another planet. Contact lost before atmospheric entry. |
| Venera 4 |
USSR |
October 18, 1967 |
Crushed by atmospheric pressure before impact. |
| Venera 5 |
USSR |
May 16, 1969 |
Atmospheric probe; crushed by atmospheric pressure before impact. |
| Venera 6 |
USSR |
May 17, 1969 |
Atmospheric probe; crushed by atmospheric pressure before impact. |
| Venera 7 |
USSR |
December 15, 1970 |
First successful soft landing on another planet; transmitted from surface for 23 minutes. |
| Venera 8 |
USSR |
July 22, 1972 |
Soft landing; transmitted from surface for 50 minutes. |
| Venera 9 lander |
USSR |
October 22, 1975 |
Soft landing; transmitted from surface for 53 minutes. First pictures from surface. |
| Venera 10 lander |
USSR |
October 25, 1975 |
Soft landing; transmitted from surface for 65 minutes. |
| Pioneer Venus Multiprobe |
USA |
December 9, 1978 |
One of four atmospheric probes survived impact and continued to transmit for 67 minutes. |
| Venera 12 lander |
USSR |
December 21, 1978 |
Soft landing. |
| Venera 11 lander |
USSR |
December 25, 1978 |
Soft landing. |
| Venera 13 lander |
USSR |
March 1, 1982 |
Soft landing. |
| Venera 14 lander |
USSR |
March 5, 1982 |
Soft landing. |
| Vega 1 lander |
USSR |
June 11, 1985 |
Soft landing; instruments failed to return data. |
| Vega 2 lander |
USSR |
June 15, 1985 |
Soft landing. |
| Mission |
Country/Agency |
Date of landing/impact |
Notes |
| Mars 2 lander |
USSR |
November 27, 1971 |
No contact after crash landing. |
| Mars 3 lander |
USSR |
December 2, 1971 |
Sent signal for only 20 seconds after landing. |
| Mars 6 lander |
USSR |
March 12, 1974 |
Contact lost at landing. |
| Viking 1 lander |
USA |
July 20, 1976 |
Successful soft landing; first pictures from surface. |
| Viking 2 lander |
USA |
September 3, 1976 |
Successful soft landing. |
| Mars Pathfinder and Sojourner rover |
USA |
July 4, 1997 |
Mars rover. |
| Mars Polar Lander |
USA |
December 3, 1999 |
Contact lost prior to landing. |
| Beagle 2 |
 UK/ ESA |
December 25, 2003 |
No contact after landing attempt. |
| MER-A 'Spirit' |
USA |
January 3, 2004 |
Mars rover. |
| MER-B 'Opportunity' |
USA |
January 25, 2004 |
Mars rover. |
| Phoenix |
USA |
May 25, 2008 |
Landed in the north polar region, and will investigate whether conditions there are suitable for life to have evolved. |
[edit] Other bodies
| Body |
Mission |
Country/Agency |
Date of landing/impact |
Notes |
| Eros (asteroid) |
NEAR Shoemaker |
USA |
February 12, 2001 |
Designed as an orbiter, but an improvised landing was carried out on completion of the main mission. Transmission from the surface continued for about 16 days. |
| Jupiter |
Galileo |
USA |
December 7, 1995
(atmospheric probe)
September 21, 2003
(main craft) |
Atmospheric probe, and, later, main craft were intentionally directed at Jupiter and disintegrated in Jovian atmosphere. [This scarcely constitutes a "landing" but is included here for completeness as an intentional impact on a planetary body.] |
| Titan (moon of Saturn) |
Huygens probe |
ESA/
USA/
Italy(ASI) |
January 14, 2005 |
Successful soft landing. |
| Comet 9P/Tempel 1 |
Deep Impact |
USA |
July 4, 2005 |
Impactor. |
| Itokawa (asteroid) |
Hayabusa |
Japan |
November 20, 2005 |
Planned sample return. |
| Enceladus |
Cassini-Huygens (Cassini Orbiter) |
ESA/
USA/
Italy(ASI) |
March 12, 2008 |
Orbiter. Passed through Enceladus' vapor plume. Not a landing, however, it did enter Enceladus' atmosphere. |
Note: Phobos landing was unsuccessfully attempted by Phobos 2 in 1989.
[edit] References
- ^ "The Sky is Falling", NASA, April 28, 2006
[edit] See also