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Planetary Science

MARINER 2

activePlanetary ScienceHeliocentric

Mariner 2, an American space probe to Venus, was the first robotic space probe to report successfully from a planetary encounter. The first successful spacecraft in the NASA Mariner program, it was a simplified version of the Block I spacecraft of the Ranger program and an exact copy of Mariner 1. The missions of the Mariner 1 and 2 spacecraft are sometimes known as the Mariner R missions. Original plans called for the probes to be launched on the Atlas-Centaur, but serious developmental problems with that vehicle forced a switch to the much smaller Agena B second stage. As such, the design of the Mariner R vehicles was greatly simplified. Far less instrumentation was carried than on the Soviet Venera probes of this period—for example, forgoing a TV camera—as the Atlas-Agena B had only half as much lift capacity as the Soviet 8K78 booster. The Mariner 2 spacecraft was launched from Cape Canaveral on August 27, 1962, and passed as close as 34,773 km (21,607 mi) to Venus on December 14, 1962.

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Launch

Launch date
August 27, 1962 at 06:53 AM UTC
Launch site
Cape Canaveral SFS, USA
Launched by
Atlas LV-3 Agena B →
Operator
United States Air Force
Mission
Mariner 2
Launch record
View full launch →

Trajectory

Regime
Interplanetary — Heliocentric
Reference body
Heliocentric

Identity

COSPAR (Int'l)
1962-041A
NORAD catalog №
374
Object type
Payload
Owner / operator
United StatesUnited States
Radar cross-section
0.0005 m²
Status
active