Vega 1

Revision as of 06:59, 29 December 2024 by imported>Maeamian (→‎Descent craft: Changed language to reflect that the two immediately prior Venera Missions to Vega, 15 and 16, didn't include landers)
(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Template:Use dmy dates Template:Short description Template:More footnotes Template:Infobox spaceflight

Vega 1 (along with its twin Vega 2) was a Soviet space probe, part of the Vega program. The spacecraft was a development of the earlier Venera craft. They were designed by Babakin Space Centre and constructed as 5VK by Lavochkin at Khimki. The name VeGa (ВеГа) combines the first two letters from the Russian words for Venus (Венера: "Venera") and Halley (Галлея: "Galleya").

The craft was powered by twin large solar panels and instruments included an antenna dish, cameras, spectrometer, infrared sounder, magnetometers (MISCHA), and plasma probes. The Template:Convert craft was launched by a Proton-K rocket from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Tyuratam, Kazakh SSR. Both Vega 1 and 2 were three-axis stabilized spacecraft. The spacecraft were equipped with a dual bumper shield<ref name=Agureikin_1984/> for dust protection from Halley's comet.

Venus missionEdit

The descent module arrived at Venus on 11 June 1985, two days after being released from the Vega 1 flyby probe. The module, a Template:Convert sphere with a diameter of Template:Convert, contained a surface lander and a balloon explorer. The flyby probe performed a gravitational assist maneuver using Venus, and continued its mission to intercept the comet.<ref name=nssdc1/>

Descent craftEdit

File:Vega 1.jpg
Spacecraft Vega 1

The surface lander was identical to that of Vega 2 as well as six previous Venera missions. The objective of the probe was the study of the atmosphere and the exposed surface of the planet. The scientific payload included an ultraviolet spectrometer, temperature and pressure sensors, a water concentration meter, a gas-phase chromatograph, an X-ray spectrometer, a mass spectrometer, and a surface sampling device. Since the probe made a nighttime landing, no images were taken. Several of these scientific tools (the UV spectrometer, the mass spectrograph, and the devices to measure pressure and temperature) were developed in collaboration with French scientists.<ref name=nssdc1/>

The lander successfully touched down at Template:Venus coords and quad cat in the Mermaid Plain north of Aphrodite Terra. Due to excessive turbulence, some surface experiments were inadvertently activated Template:Convert above the surface. Only the mass spectrometer was able to return data.<ref name=nasa1/>

Tools on the lander include:

BalloonEdit

File:Russian "Vega" balloon mission to Venus on display at the Udvar-Hazy museum.jpg
Vega balloon probe on display at the Udvar-Hazy Center of the Smithsonian Institution

The Vega 1 Lander/Balloon capsule entered the Venusian atmosphere (Template:Convert altitude) at 2:06:10 UT (Earth received time; Moscow time 5:06:10 a.m.) on 11 June 1985 at roughly Template:Convert. At approximately 2:06:25 UT the parachute attached to the landing craft cap opened at an altitude of Template:Convert. The cap and parachute were released 15 seconds later at Template:Convert altitude. The balloon package was pulled out of its compartment by parachute 40 seconds later at Template:Convert altitude, at 8.1 degrees N, 176.9 degrees east. A second parachute opened at an altitude of Template:Convert, 200 seconds after entry, extracting the furled balloon. The balloon was inflated 100 seconds later at Template:Convert and the parachute and inflation system were jettisoned. The ballast was jettisoned when the balloon reached roughly Template:Convert and the balloon floated back to a stable height between Template:Convert some 15 to 25 minutes after entry.

The mean stable height was Template:Convert, with a pressure of Template:Convert and a temperature of Template:Convert in the middle, most active layer of the Venus three-tiered cloud system. The balloon drifted westward in the zonal wind flow with an average speed of about Template:Convert (Template:Convert) at nearly constant latitude. The probe crossed the terminator from night to day at 12:20 UT on 12 June after traversing Template:Convert. The probe continued to operate in the daytime until the final transmission was received at 00:38 UT on 13 June from 8.1 N, 68.8 E after a total traverse distance of Template:Convert or about 30% of the circumference of the planet. It is not known how much farther the balloon traveled after the final communication.<ref name=nasa1/>

Halley missionEdit

After their encounters, the Vegas' motherships used the gravity of Venus, also known as a gravity assist, to intercept Halley's Comet.

Images started to be returned on 4 March 1986, and were used to help pinpoint Giotto's close flyby of the comet. The early images from Vega showed two bright areas on the comet, which were initially interpreted as a double nucleus. The bright areas would later turn out to be two jets emitting from the comet. The images also showed the nucleus to be dark, and the infrared spectrometer readings measured a nucleus temperature of Template:Convert, much warmer than expected for an ice body. The conclusion was that the comet had a thin layer on its surface covering an icy body.

Vega 1 made its closest approach on 6 March at around Template:Convert (at 07:20:06 UT) of the nucleus. It took more than 500 pictures via different filters as it flew through the gas cloud around the coma. Although the spacecraft was battered by dust, none of the instruments were disabled during the encounter.

The data intensive examination of the comet covered only the three hours around closest approach. They were intended to measure the physical parameters of the nucleus, such as dimensions, shape, temperature and surface properties, as well as to study the structure and dynamics of the coma, the gas composition close to the nucleus, the dust particles' composition and mass distribution as functions of distance to the nucleus and the cometary-solar wind interaction.

The Vega images showed the nucleus to be about Template:Convert long with a rotation period of about 53 hours. The dust mass spectrometer detected material similar to the composition of carbonaceous chondrites meteorites and also detected clathrate ice.

After subsequent imaging sessions on 7 and 8 March 1986, Vega 1 headed out to deep space. In total Vega 1 and Vega 2 returned about 1500 images of Comet Halley. Vega 1 ran out of attitude control propellant on 30 January 1987, and contact with Vega 2 continued until 24 March 1987.

Vega 1 is currently in heliocentric orbit, with perihelion of 0.70 AU, aphelion of 0.98 AU, eccentricity of 0.17, inclination of 2.3 degrees and orbital period of 281 days. Template:Citation needed

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

Template:Sister project Template:Portal

Template:Venus spacecraft Template:Comet spacecraft Template:Orbital launches in 1984