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Viking 2By Marty McDowell/NASA
On September 9, 1975, the United States launched Viking 2. The Vikings
were the first robotic spacecraft to land on Mars. Their mission was to
determine whether life had ever existed in any biological form on the red
planet.
The first pair of orbiters and landers, Viking 1,
was launched on August 20, 1975, followed on September 9 of that year by
the second set, dubbed Viking 2. The initial job of both orbiters was to
find suitable landing sites for the landers. Later, the orbiters recorded
images of the entire surface of Mars, providing informative pictures of
volcanoes, lava plains, immense canyons, cratered areas, and valleys. The
Viking landers transmitted images of the surface, took samples and
analyzed them for composition and signs of life, studied atmospheric
composition and meteorology, and deployed seismometers.
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This image was acquired at
the Viking Lander 2 site.
Image courtesy of NASA. |
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Each spacecraft consisted of an orbiter
and a lander. After orbiting Mars and
returning images used for landing site selection, the orbiter and lander
detached and the lander entered the martian atmosphere and soft-landed at
the selected site. The orbiters continued imaging and other scientific
operations from orbit while the landers deployed instruments on the
surface. The fully fueled orbiter-lander pair had a mass of 3530 kg. After
separation and landing, the lander had a mass of about 600 kg and the
orbiter 900 kg. The lander was encased in a bioshield at launch to prevent
contamination by terrestrial organisms. The total cost of the Viking
project was roughly one billion dollars.
The Viking mission was planned to continue for 90 days after landing.
Each orbiter and lander operated far beyond its design lifetime. Viking
Orbiter 1 functioned until July 25, 1978, while Viking
Orbiter 2 continued for four years and 1,489 orbits of Mars,
concluding its mission August 7, 1980. Because of the variations in
available sunlight, both landers were powered by radioisotope
thermoelectric generators -- devices that create electricity from heat
given off by the natural decay of plutonium. That power source allowed
long-term science investigations that otherwise would not have been
possible. The last data from Viking Lander 2
arrived at Earth on April 11, 1980. Viking
Lander 1 made its final transmission to Earth November 11, 1982.
Source: NASA.
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Space References (Books):
Dickinson, Terence. Nightwatch:
A Practical Guide to Viewing the Universe. Firefly Books, 1998.
Greene, Brian. Elegant
Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate
Theory. Vintage, 2000.
Hawking, Stephen. Illustrated
Brief History of Time, Updated and Expanded Edition. Bantam, 1996.
Hawking, Stephen. Theory
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Hawking, Stephen. The
Universe in a Nutshell. Bantam, 2001.
Kaku, Michio. Hyperspace:
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Dimension.
Kranz, Gene. Failure
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Berkley Pub Group, 2001.
Sagan, Carl; Druyan, Ann. Comet,
Revised Edition. Ballantine, 1997
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Reissue Edition. Ballantine, 1993
Sagan, Carl. Pale
Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space. Ballantine, 1997
Space References (Videos):
Cosmos.
PBS, 2000.
Stephen
Hawking's Universe. PBS, 1997.
Hyperspace.
BBC, 2002.
Life
Beyond Earth PBS, 1999.
The Planets. BBC, 1999.
Understanding
The Universe. A&E, 1996.
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SPACE SPECS |
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| | Courtesy of NASA | |
|  | Launched: September 9, 1975
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|  | Destination: Mars
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|  | Arrival: August 7, 1976
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|  | Return:
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|  | Nation: U.S.
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|  | Mission: Mars orbit and lander.
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