Clemenntine(:
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The Vikings followed a lunar calender, dividing their years into 13 months, which is the number of new moons in one year.
George Washington invented the lunar calendar
A lunar trench is called a Rille (the German word for groove).
Because in the Chinese Calendar, which is the Lunar Calendar, it is the New Year. The Lunar Calendar and Solar Calendar is different.
I'm not sure what you are asking. The only manned lunar mission that failed was Apollo 13. For why that mission failed visit the related link below.
clementine
Yes. It is correct to say that viking was a name of a lunar probe.
lunar orbit
Yes. It is correct to say that Pioneer was a name for a lunar Probe.
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Clementine was officially called as the Deep Space Program Science Experiment. It obtained multi-spectral images of the whole lunar surface, analyzed the moon's mineralogy and gathered gravity data.
The first American lunar probe was Pioneer 4, launched on March 3, 1959. Its main goal was to achieve a close flyby of the Moon, providing valuable data on radiation in space and the lunar environment. Pioneer 4 successfully passed within 37,600 miles (60,500 kilometers) of the Moon, making it the first U.S. spacecraft to escape Earth's gravity and travel to another celestial body.
NASA has launched the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) and the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) satellites to the moon. LRO is tasked with mapping the lunar surface, while LADEE studies the moon's thin atmosphere and dust.
among other things it also observed the near-earth asteroid 1620 geographos and tested some other stuff but it's most famous for being a lunar probe it should not be confused with the citrus fruit, which is delicious (unlike the spacecraft)
That would be Christopher Columbus.
Data gathered from the Clementine spacecraft supports the presence of water ice in permanently shadowed regions near the lunar poles. This discovery has important implications for potential future human exploration and utilization of resources on the Moon.
The Vikings followed a lunar calender, dividing their years into 13 months, which is the number of new moons in one year.