What's The Lowest Possible Moon Orbit? [Q&A Livestream]

Fraser Cain (Universe Today)
Fraser Cain (Universe Today)Jun 16, 2026

Why It Matters

Understanding the Moon’s low‑orbit limits is crucial for designing viable lunar drones and habitats, directly affecting mission cost, safety, and the pace of sustained lunar activity.

Key Takeaways

  • Moon lacks atmosphere, so drag isn’t primary orbital decay factor.
  • Lunar mascons create gravitational “bumps” destabilizing low orbits.
  • Below ~50 km altitude, orbits become unstable and decay quickly.
  • Stable “frozen” orbits exist around 50‑60 km, lasting years.
  • 1 km orbit impossible; spacecraft would inevitably crash into terrain.

Summary

The livestream tackled a viewer’s question about the minimum altitude for a stable lunar orbit, especially for low‑altitude reconnaissance drones. The host explained that, unlike Earth, the Moon’s exosphere is essentially negligible, so atmospheric drag does not dictate orbital lifespan.

Instead, the Moon’s irregular gravitational field—caused by massive mascons and rugged topography—dominates orbital dynamics. Below roughly 50 km, these “bumps” induce rapid decay, making sustained orbits impossible. However, scientists have identified a set of “frozen” orbits around 50‑60 km where the perturbations balance, allowing spacecraft to remain aloft for years with minimal station‑keeping.

The host cited the GRAIL mission as a real‑world example: its low‑altitude orbits decayed faster than anticipated due to mascon effects. He emphasized that a 1 km orbit is unfeasible; even hovering above the highest lunar peak would eventually result in impact because the gravitational irregularities cannot be countered without constant thrust.

For lunar hopper drones and future surface infrastructure, these findings impose strict design constraints. Mission planners must target the stable frozen‑orbit band or allocate fuel for continuous adjustments, influencing payload mass, cost, and operational timelines for commercial and scientific lunar ventures.

Original Description

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