Site icon SNN

On This Day In Space: Sept. 3, 2006: SMART-1 spacecraft crashes into the moon

On This Day In Space: Sept. 3, 2006: SMART-1 spacecraft crashes into the moon_64f4cbb1255f1.jpeg

On Sept. 3, 2006, a European satellite named SMART-1 crashed into the moon! This wasn’t actually as disastrous as it sounds, because the spacecraft did it on purpose.

SMART-1 launched in 2003 and was the first European spacecraft to go to the moon. It was also the first mission of a program called Small Missions for Advanced Research in Technology, which was a series of low-cost spacecraft that the European Space Agency launched to test new spaceflight technologies.

Related: SMART-1 space probe slams into the moon

Artist’s impression of ESA’s SMART-1 mission at the Moon. (Image credit: ESA)

SMART-1’s primary objective was to test something called Solar Electric Primary Propulsion, or a solar-powered electric engine. While it orbited the moon for almost two years, it looked for water ice and other chemicals on the lunar surface.

When it slammed into the moon, that was also done for science. Astronomers back on Earth watched the impact with their telescopes, hoping that it would give them some insight into the mechanics of meteor impacts.

On This Day in Space Archive!

Still not enough space? Don’t forget to check out our Space Image of the Day, and on the weekends our Best Space Photos and Top Space News Stories of the week.

Follow us @Spacedotcom and on Facebook. 

Exit mobile version