Image of Pioneer spacecraft
NASA

Pioneer

The many Pioneer missions were designed to study our Sun's environment and the planets. Although some of the launches failed, the Pioneer program can still be considered a success.

Pioneer 1 was launched in 1958 and Pioneer 13 was launched in 1978. So, you can see that the Pioneer program spanned many years.

The early Pioneer missions studied the area around Earth and the Moon. Later missions looked farther than the Earth and the Moon.

Pioneer 10, launched in 1972, was very different from the previous Pioneer missions. It was the first spacecraft to pass through the Asteroid Belt and the first spacecraft to take close-up pictures of Jupiter. This Pioneer mission technically ended on March 31, 1997. Its weak signal is still tracked though. Pioneer 10 is headed in the direction of the constellation Taurus. It will take over 2 million years for Pioneer to pass one of the stars of Taurus!

The Pioneer 11 spacecraft was launched in 1973. It returned pictures of Jupiter's Great Red Spot, the first close-up photographs of Saturn and its rings, and information that Titan is too cold to support life. The Pioneer 11 mission ended on September 20, 1995. It hasn't been heard from since that day!

The Pioneer missions carry a gold plaque with a graphic message in case extraterrestrial life were ever to find the spacecraft.

Pioneer 12 & 13 were part of a project called Pioneer Venus. Pioneer 12 was launched in May 1978. It was an orbiter. Pioneer 13 was launched in August 1978 and consisted of 3 small probes and 1 large probe. Pioneer 12 used radar to map the planet's surface, while Pioneer 13 deployed its four probes that were carried through the atmosphere by parachutes. The spacecrafts found evidence of lightning and distinct differences in atmosphere layers. Pioneer 12 orbited Venus for 14 years until it entered the atmosphere of Venus in 1992 and was destroyed.

Last modified March 7, 2001 by Jennifer Bergman.

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