Search Helium

Home > Sciences > Physical Science > Astronomy

Past missions to Saturn

by D. Vogt

Created on: March 12, 2010

Saturn has become one of the best-known of the gas giants because of the lengthy and continuing Cassini mission, so in a way it is surprising that relatively few space probes have actually reached this majestic planet. On the other hand, of course, the challenges are much greater: Saturn is roughly twice as far away from Earth as Jupiter. In the history of space flight, only four spacecraft have visited this planet, only one of which entered orbit: Pioneer 11, Voyager 1 and 2, and Cassini-Huygens.


- Pioneer 11 (1979) -

One of the last of NASA's successful Pioneer series of probes, Pioneer 11 passed Saturn in September 1979, at a perilously close altitude of just under 15,000 miles from its atmospheric clouds. Mission planners had not originally intended to take such a route but, since both Voyager probes were also en route, decided to send the older and cheaper Pioneer spacecraft on a dangerous close flyby to see whether buildups in particles near Saturn would pose a risk to the incoming spacecraft. (Fortunately, they did not.)

In doing so, however, Pioneer 11 did unknowingly veer perilously close to a different fate: collision with the previously undiscovered moon of Epimetheus, which it ultimately missed by a few thousand miles. In addition to spotting a few other undiscovered moons (at a much safer distance), Pioneer 11 then made a groundbreaking and unexpected discovery: Saturn's large moon Titan had an atmosphere thick enough that it could plausibly support life, if not for the fact that it was so extremely cold.

Pioneer was not intended to orbit Saturn, merely to visit it. After this flyby it continued on its path out of the solar system. Contact was lost in 1995 after the onboard nuclear generator was exhausted.


- Voyager 1 (1980) -

In November, Voyager 1 sped by Saturn, coming closer than 100,000 miles to the edge of the massive gaseous atmosphere and taking beautiful pictures of the planet's rings and moons. The decision to send Voyager so close to Saturn was a fateful one: the gravity well disrupted its trajectory so that it could no longer continue on to Uranus and Neptune as originally intended. Mission operators had been aware of this risk, but considered it worthwhile: a close approach meant new pictures of Titan (whose atmosphere had just been discovered by Pioneer), and Voyager 2 would still be able to make the intended trip to the outer planets.


- Voyager 2 (1981) -

Voyager 1's sister probe reached Saturn in August of the following year.

Helium Debate

Cast your vote!

Do oxo-degradable additives really make plastic bags biodegradable?

Click for your side.

246163

Featured Partner

Arts For All Ages

Arts for All Ages is a non-profit organization that travels to schools, extended-day programs, daycare's, homeless shelters, and foster homes with the intent of giving children the opportunity to experience and experiment with the perfor...more


CONNECT WITH US

Read
our blog
Helum for writers

Write and get published
Share with other writers
Polish your freelancing skills

Join our active writing community
Helium Content Source for Publishers

Quality articles from proven freelancers
Exclusive rights, fast turnaround
Brand engagement, business blogging -- our writers do it all

Get custom content today!

INFORMATION


Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA
#