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Pioneer 10

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Image:Pioneer10 art.jpg
Characteristics of the mission:
Name Pioneer 10
Nation United States of America
Objective(s) Study the interplanetary and planetary magnetic fields; solar wind parameters; cosmic rays; transition region of the heliosphere; neutral hydrogen abundance; distribution, size, mass, flux, and velocity of dust particles; Jovian aurorae; Jovian radio waves; atmosphere of Jupiter and some of its satellites, particularly Io; and to photograph Jupiter and its satellites.
Craft Pioneer-F
Craft – Weight 258 kg
Administration and planning of mission Ames Research Center - NASA
Launch vehicle Atlas/Centaur/TE364-4
Date and time
of launch
03 March 1972 at 01:49:00 UTC
Launched from Launch Complex 36A, Cape Canaveral
Scientific
instruments/
Technology
experiments
  1. Helium Vector Magnetometer
  2. Plasma Analyzer
  3. Charged Particle Instrument
  4. Cosmic Ray Telescope
  5. Geiger Tube Telescope
  6. Trapped Radiation Detector
  7. Meteoroid Detector
  8. Asteroid-Meteoroid Experiment
  9. Ultraviolet Photometer
  10. Imaging Photopolarimeter
  11. Infrared Radiometer

Pioneer 10 was the first spacecraft to travel through the asteroid belt, and was the first spacecraft to make direct observations of Jupiter. It was launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station's Launch Complex 36A on March 2, 1972. By some definitions, Pioneer 10 has become the first artificial object to leave the solar system. However, it still has not passed the heliopause or Oort cloud.

Contents

[edit] Construction

Pioneer 10 was built by TRW.<ref>NASA mission profile</ref>

Its central computer was based on an Intel 4004 processor.<ref>Mary Bellis. Intel 4004 - The World's First Single Chip Microprocessor. Inventors of the Modern Computer. Retrieved on 2006-10-29.</ref>

Pioneer 10 was fitted with a plaque to serve as a message for extraterrestrial life, in the event of its discovery.

[edit] Mission

The spacecraft made valuable scientific investigations in the outer regions of our solar system until the end of its mission on March 31, 1997.

[edit] Further Contact

The Pioneer 10's weak signal continued to be tracked by the Deep Space Network as part of a new advanced concept study of chaos theory. After 1997 the probe was used in the training of flight controllers on how to acquire radio signals from space.

The last, very weak, signal from Pioneer 10 was received on January 23, 2003. A contact attempt on February 7, 2003 was not successful. The last successful reception of telemetry was on April 27, 2002; subsequent signals were barely strong enough to detect. Loss of contact was probably due to a combination of increasing distance and the spacecraft's steadily weakening power source, rather than failure of the craft. One final attempt was made on the evening of March 4, 2006, the last time the antenna would be correctly aligned with Earth. No response was received from Pioneer.<ref>The final attempt to contact Pioneer 10</ref>

Image:Outersolarsystemprobes 2006.jpg Pioneer 10 is heading in the direction of the star Aldebaran in the constellation Taurus at roughly 2.6 AUs per year. If Aldebaran had zero relative velocity, it would take Pioneer about 2 million years to reach it.<ref>Spacecraft escaping the Solar System</ref>

[edit] Timeline

March 2, 1972 Spacecraft launched.

July 15, 1972 Entered the Asteroid Belt.

December 3, 1973 Pioneer 10 sent back the first close-up images of Jupiter.

June 13 1983 Pioneer 10 passed the orbit of Neptune, the outermost planet. (Although Pluto was considered to be a planet at the time, it was closer to the sun than Neptune due to its highly eccentric orbit.)

March 31, 1997 End of mission.

February 17, 1998 Famed for a time as the most remote object ever made by man, at last contact Pioneer 10 was over 7.60 billion miles away from Earth. (Until February 17, 1998, the distance of Pioneer 10 from the sun had been greater than that of any other man-made object. But on that date, Voyager 1's distance from the sun, in the approximate apex direction, equalled that of Pioneer 10 at 69.419 AU. From that date on, Voyager 1's distance continues to exceed that of Pioneer 10 at the approximate rate of 1.016 AU per year.)

March 2, 2002 Successful reception of telemetry. 39 minutes of clean data received from a distance of 79.83 AU.

April 27, 2002 The last successful reception of telemetry. 33 minutes of clean data received from a distance of 80.22 AU.

January 23, 2003 The last, very weak, signal from Pioneer 10 was received. Subsequent signals were barely strong enough to detect.

February 7, 2003 Unsuccessful contact attempt.

December 30, 2005 Pioneer 10 was 89.7 AU away from the Sun.

March 4, 2006 Final attempt at contact. No response was received from Pioneer.

[edit] Pioneer anomaly

Main article: Pioneer anomaly

Analysis of the radio tracking data from the Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecraft at distances between 20–70 AU from the Sun has consistently indicated the presence of a small but anomalous Doppler frequency drift. The drift can be interpreted as due to a constant acceleration of (8.74 ± 1.33) × 10−10 m/s2 directed towards the Sun. Although it is suspected that there is a systematic origin to the effect, none has been found. As a result, there is growing interest in the nature of this anomaly.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] Fictional references

Pioneer 10 was used for target practice and easily destroyed by a Klingon Bird of Prey in the movie Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.

Pioneer 10 was also seen in episode 1.12 of Futurama in a quick pull from Earth to the planet Omicron Persei 8.

Pioneer 10 was mentioned in L. Ron Hubbard's novel Battlefield Earth. The race that invaded earth, the Psychlos, found the plaque on board the spacecraft, guiding them to Earth. Apparently the plaque was made of a metal that was very valuable on the galactic commodity market; the pioneer plaque is, in fact, made of gold-anodized aluminium. The novel begins in the year 3000, a millennium after finding Pioneer 10 and the subsequent invasion of Earth.

[edit] References

<references/>

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


 

Pioneer
Previous mission: Pioneer 6, 7, 8 and 9 Next mission: Pioneer 11
Pioneer 0 | Pioneer 1 | Pioneer 2 | Pioneer 3 | Pioneer 4 | Pioneer P-1 (W) | Pioneer P-3 (X) | Pioneer P-30 (Y) | Pioneer P-31 (Z)
Pioneer 5 (P-2) | Pioneer 6, 7, 8 and 9 | Pioneer 10 | Pioneer 11 | Pioneer H | Pioneer Venus project


edit Jupiter Spacecraft Missions
Flybys: Pioneer 10 | Pioneer 11 | Voyager 1 | Voyager 2 | Ulysses | Cassini
Orbiters: Galileo
Atmospheric probes: Galileo probe
Future: New Horizons | Juno
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