| Mission
|
Country/agency
|
Orbital insertion
|
Current status
|
Notes
|
| Luna 10[1]
|
USSR
|
3 April 1966
|
Contact lost 30 May 1966, probably decayed the same year
|
First extraterrestrial and Moon orbiter
|
| Lunar Orbiter 1
|
USA
|
14 August 1966
|
Impacted lunar surface 29 October 1966
|
First United States of America extraterrestrial orbiter
|
| Luna 11[2]
|
USSR
|
27 August 1966
|
Contact lost 1 October 1966, probably decayed the same or following year
|
|
| Luna 12
|
USSR
|
25 October 1966
|
Contact lost 19 January 1967, probably decayed the same year
|
|
| Lunar Orbiter 2
|
USA
|
Launched 6 November 1966
|
Impacted lunar surface 11 October 1967
|
|
| Lunar Orbiter 3
|
USA
|
8 February 1967
|
Impacted lunar surface 9 October 1967
|
|
| Lunar Orbiter 4
|
USA
|
Launched 4 May 1967
|
Contact lost 17 July 1967, impacted lunar surface 6 October 1967
|
|
| Explorer 35
|
USA
|
Launched 19 July 1967
|
Deactivated 24 June 1973; impacted lunar surface in the middle to late 1970s
|
|
| Lunar Orbiter 5
|
USA
|
5 August 1967
|
Deorbited; impacted lunar surface 31 January 1968
|
|
| Luna 14
|
USSR
|
10 April 1968
|
Mission terminated 24 June 1968, its orbit probably decayed
|
|
| Luna 19
|
USSR
|
2 October 1971
|
Mission terminated 20 October 1972 and contact lost on 1 November 1972, probably decayed the following year
|
|
| Explorer 49
|
USA
|
Launched 10 June 1973
|
Contact lost August 1977, its orbit probably decayed
|
|
| Luna 22
|
USSR
|
2 June 1974
|
Mission terminated November 1975, its orbit probably decayed in 1976
|
|
| Apollo 8
|
USA
|
Launched 21 December 1968; entered orbit after 69 hrs
|
Left orbit after 10 orbits; splashdown on Earth
|
First crewed lunar orbit
|
| Apollo 10
|
USA
|
Launched 18 May 1969
|
Left orbit 26 May 1969
|
|
| Apollo 11
|
USA |
July 19, 1969 |
July 21, 1969; Lunar module ascent stage abandoned in orbit, impact site unknown |
First human Moon landing
|
| Apollo 12
|
USA |
November 18, 1969 |
November 21, 1969 |
Human Moon landing
|
| Apollo 14
|
USA |
February 4, 1971 |
February 7, 1971 |
Human Moon landing
|
| Apollo 15
|
USA |
July 29, 1971 |
August 4, 1971 |
Human Moon landing
|
| Apollo 15 subsatellite (PFS-1)
|
USA |
August 4, 1971 |
January 1973 |
|
| Apollo 16
|
USA |
April 19, 1972 |
April 25, 1972; Lunar module ascent stage abandoned in orbit, impact site unknown |
Human Moon landing
|
| Apollo 16 subsatellite (PFS-2)
|
USA |
April 24, 1972 |
May 29, 1972 |
|
| Apollo 17
|
USA |
December 11, 1972 |
December 14, 1972 |
Human Moon landing
|
| Hiten and Hagoromo
|
Japan
|
Hiten: 15 February 1993
|
Hiten was deliberately deorbited and impacted the lunar surface 10 April 1993
|
First Japan ese lunar orbiter
|
| Clementine
|
USA
|
Launched 25 January 1994
|
Left lunar orbit and entered heliocentric orbit; contact lost June 1994
|
|
| Lunar Prospector
|
USA
|
Launched 7 January 1998
|
Deliberately deorbited; impacted lunar surface 31 July 1999
|
|
| SMART-1
|
ESA
|
11 November 2004
|
Deliberately deorbited; impacted lunar surface 3 September 2006
|
|
| SELENE (Kaguya, Okina and Ouna)
|
Japan
|
3 October 2007
|
Deliberately deorbited; impacted lunar surface 10 June 2009
|
|
| Chang'e 1
|
China
|
5 November 2007
|
Deliberately deorbited 1 March 2009; impacted the Moon's surface.
|
First China lunar orbiter
|
| Chandrayaan-1
|
India
|
8 November 2008
|
Deliberately crashed into lunar surface. Impact probe remained operational for a few days. Contact lost 29 August 2009.
|
First India n lunar orbiter
|
| Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter[3]
|
USA
|
23 June 2009
|
Active
|
|
| Chang'e 2
|
China
|
6 October 2010
|
Left lunar orbit 8 June 2011; currently in deep-space orbit
|
|
| ARTEMIS P1
|
USA
|
2 July 2011
|
Active
|
|
| ARTEMIS P2[4]
|
USA
|
17 July 2011
|
Active
|
|
| Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL)
|
USA
|
31 December 2011 / 1 January 2012
|
Both spacecraft were deliberately deorbited and impacted on the lunar surface 17 December 2012
|
|
| LADEE
|
USA
|
6 October 2013
|
Deliberately deorbited 18 April 2014
|
|
| Chang'e 3
|
China
|
6 December 2013
|
Landed on lunar surface 14 December 2013
|
First Chinese lunar landing
|
| Chang'e 5-T1
|
China
|
13 January 2015
|
Returned to Earth on 31 October 2014
|
|
| Chang'e 4
|
China
|
12 December 2018
|
Landed on lunar surface 3 January 2019. The Queqiao relay satellite was placed in an Earth-Moon L2 halo orbit.
|
First lunar far-side landing
|
| Longjiang-2 microsatellite
|
China
|
25 May 2018
|
Deorbited 2019
|
|
| Beresheet
|
Israel
|
4 April 2019
|
Crashed onto lunar surface 11 April 2019
|
First private lunar lander. Successfully orbited for 7 days. Soft landing failed.
|
| Chandrayaan-2
|
India
|
20 August 2019
|
Orbiter is active. The Vikram lander lost contact at 2.1 km from the lunar surface, and was subsequently destroyed.[5]
|
It was originally thought that Vikram had survived the impact, and ISRO continued trying to contact the lander until the lunar night.[6]
|
| Chang'e 5
|
China
|
1 December 2020
|
Orbiter is (As of 2022) in lunar DRO orbit.
|
First lunar sample return mission by China. Ascent stage deorbited on 7 December 2020. Capsule successfully returned sample via service module on 16 December 2020. The orbiter will make lunar flyby in extended mission on 9 September 2021 in Distant retrograde orbit.[7]
|
| CAPSTONE
|
USA
|
14 November 2022
|
Active and on a Near-rectilinear halo orbit (NRHO)
|
Lunar orbiting CubeSat that will test and verify the calculated orbital stability planned for the Gateway space station.
|
| Artemis 1
|
USA
|
25 November 2022
|
Remained on a Selenocentric orbit (DRO) until 5 December 2022, then returned back to Earth
|
First mission of the Artemis program.
|
| LunaH-Map
|
USA
|
25 November 2022
|
Decayed 20 February 2023
|
|
| Lunar IceCube
|
USA
|
25 November 2022
|
On a Selenocentric orbit
|
Contact lost shortly after the launch. Conducted lunar flyby on 21 November 2022, likely in a heliocentric orbit.
|
| Danuri KPLO
|
USA / South Korea
|
16 December 2022
|
On a Selenocentric orbit
|
Lunar Orbiter by the Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI) of South Korea . The orbiter, its science payload and ground control infrastructure are technology demonstrators. The orbiter will also be tasked with surveying lunar resources such as water ice, uranium, helium-3, silicon, and aluminium, and produce a topographic map to help select future lunar landing sites.
|
| Hakuto-R Mission 1
|
Japan
|
21 March 2023
|
Crashed onto lunar surface on 25 April 2023
|
Carried the emirati Rashid and the japanese SORA-Q lunar rovers. Contact lost during landing attempt.
|
| Chandrayaan-3
|
India
|
5 August 2023
|
Success (returned to Earth Orbit)
|
Propulsion module, also functioning as a Chandrayaan-3 relay satellite. Conducted 4 flybys enroute return to Earth's orbit.
|
| Luna 25
|
Russia
|
16 August 2023
|
Crashed onto lunar surface on 19 August 2023
|
Lunar south pole lander, landing scheduled for 21 August 2023. Contact lost after orbit lowering maneuver.
|
| SLIM
|
Japan
|
25 December 2023
|
Landed on Lunar surface on 19 January 2024
|
Carried the japanese LEV-1 and LEV-2 lunar rovers. First Japanese soft landing.
|