Viking 1 & 2

Red & Rusty



Mission Details

Landmark Dates
Craft
Destination

Viking

V1 Launched: 20 Aug 1975
V2 Launched: 9 Sep 1975
V1 Landed: 20 Jul 1976
V2 Landed: 3 Sep 1996


Viking Landers

Mars

 

Where are the Martians?

The aim of the Viking mission was to make controlled landings and then search for any signs of life -past or present (it never found any). Each vehicle had two parts: an orbiter, which remained circling the planet, and a soft lander.

 

Viking 1 reached Mars orbit on 19 June 1976 when images were taken to locate a suitable landing site: Chryse Planitia. The orbiter's path was adjusted several times in order to obtain close-up images of Mars" satellites, Deimos and Phobos, and to observe different aspects of the martian surface.

Viking 2 reached Mars orbit on 7 August 1976, and landed the following month on Utopia Planitia.

The orbiters were equipped with two television cameras, an infrared spectrometer to map the distribution of water vapour and a radiometer for determining temperature distribution. The landers sampled the upper atmosphere during descent, made meteorological measurements and carried out experiments on samples of martian soil. One of the prime objectives was to test for the presence of organic material which might indicate the existence of life, but nothing 'concrete' was found.

Thousands of images were returned from both the orbiters and landers. The whole of the martian surface was mapped to a resolution of 150-300 metres. The Viking 1 orbiter operated until 7 August 1980, and the Viking 2 orbiter until 25 July 1978.

The landers ceased operating in November 1982 and February 1980, respectively. The mission was regarded as very successful, and it had greatly exceeded its expected lifetime. The results from the Viking experiments showed us volcanoes, lava plains, immense canyons, cratered areas, wind-formed features, and evidence of surface water are apparent in the Orbiter images.

The planet appears to be divisible into two main regions, northern low plains and southern cratered highlands. Superimposed on these regions are the Tharsis and Elysium bulges, which are high-standing volcanic areas, and Valles Marineris, a system of giant canyons near the equator.

The surface material at both landing sites can best be characterized as iron-rich clay. Measured temperatures at the landing sites ranged from 150 to 250 K, with a variation over a given day of 35 to 50 K. Seasonal dust storms, pressure changes, and transport of atmospheric gases between the polar caps were observed.

From Viking results it is believed that Mars was once similar to the Earth with a thicker atmosphere that allowed water to flow on the surface. This possibly meant that long ago, when Mars was warmer, tiny cells may have formed which hibernated as the climate cooled (again, these have not been found as yet).

Mission Results:

  • The orbiters did detailed mapping, beamed back television pictures, and investigated the global properties of the atmosphere.
  • The landers were the first successful Mars landers (after the disappointment of the earlier Soviet lander). Their experiments studied the weather, photographed the surface, and investigated the physical, magnetic, chemical and biological (they didn't find anything biological!) properties of the surface layer
  • Using mechanical arms, the landers collected soil samples. Nutrients were added in an attempt to revive any cells. Initial results looked promising, but later ones weren't (as I keep saying).

In conclusion, life (past or present) on Mars cannot be ruled out, but no definite signs of organic activity were found, and the general opinion now is that Mars is sterile at the present time.

Copyright © 2001 Captain Cosmos
with research by Joanne Line