Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - A History of Mars Exploration
Episode Date: February 24, 2021Ever since humans looked up at the stars they noticed that a few of them were different from the others. They moved. These moving points of light were planets. One of those points of light was, of cou...rse, the planet Mars. This first observation of Mars by early humans slowly and inexorably lead to landing robots on the surface of the planet. Learn more about our exploration of Mars on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Ever since humans looked up at the stars, they noticed that a few of them were different from others.
They moved.
These moving points of light were planets, and one of those points of light was, of course, the planet Mars.
This first observation of Mars by early humans slowly and inexorably led to landing robots on the surface of the planet.
Learn more about our exploration of Mars on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover
the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed. It effectively turned day into night and how it
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As I mentioned in the introduction, the exploration of Mars can be considered to have begun in pre-history.
As far as we know, every civilization was aware of Mars and was able to track its position in the sky.
The first written mention of Mars was by the Egyptians, and even then they were aware of its retrograde motion,
which is sometimes when the planet appears to move backwards in the sky, which is caused by the Earth passing the slower planet in its orbit.
The Samarians, Greeks, and Romans all associated Mars with their gods of war.
The ancient Chinese associated it with the element of fire.
Beyond tracking the point of light in the sky, there wasn't much more that ancient people could really do.
The next big advance came with the development of telescopes.
The first person to view Mars with a telescope was Galileo in the early 17th century.
His telescopes weren't powerful enough to get a clear image of the planet,
so he just wanted to know if Mars exhibited phases like Venus and the moon did.
He didn't see faces, but what he did discover is that Mars would grow bigger and smaller in size depending on the time of the year.
Later in the century, as telescopes improved, astronomers began to report seeing dark blotches on the planet and even light areas around its poles.
During this time, they were able to get good approximations for the length of a Martian day and the size of Mars relative to Earth.
As telescopes improved, our knowledge of Mars really didn't.
If anything, it might have gone backwards.
The telescopes were big enough to denote patches of light and dark on the surface,
but it wasn't big enough to get any real detail.
In fact, the sketches and maps of the planet which were made by astronomers through the 19th century
were all found to be horribly wrong.
The best example of this came from the astronomer Percival Lowell,
who claimed to have seen canals on the surface of Mars.
He believed these canals had to have been created by some sort of intelligence,
and this was the origin of all the stories of Martians living on Mars.
The next big leap in our knowledge of Mars came with the advent of the space age.
It wasn't soon after Sputnik was put into orbit that there were attempts to reach the red planet.
Believe it or not, the 1960s saw the most launches for missions trying to reach Mars.
It was also the decade that had the worst results for trying to reach Mars.
The first attempt to reach Mars was in 1960.
Only three years after Sputnik was Marsnik 1 launched by the Soviet Union.
And it failed.
Two weeks later, they launched Marsnick 2, and it failed.
Then they waited two years for their next attempt in 1962,
when they launched Sputnik 22, and it failed.
Then in the next week, they launched two more probes,
Mars 1 and Sputnik 24.
And they both failed.
The Soviets were 0 for 5 at the end of 1962 in their attempts to reach Mars.
Now, it isn't as if the Americans could really brag about their accomplishments at this point in the space race.
They had a series of very public failures in their attempts just to get into it.
orbit. The Americans made their first attempt to reach Mars in November 1964 with Mariner 3,
and it failed. And then they tried a few weeks later with Mariner 4, and it finally succeeded.
In July 1965, Mariner 4 flew by Mars and sent back some extremely low-res photos.
I can't stress how bad these photos were. Digital photography wasn't really good back then,
nor was the ability to send radio signals over interplanetary distances.
The first image from Mars looks like an out-of-focused photo that you might take of your thumb if you accidentally took it with your smartphone.
They did have a few good photos where you could actually see craters on the surface, but that was about it.
You might have noticed that this list of Mars attempts consisted of several launches a few weeks apart and then about two years between the next attempts.
That was because there is a window for when you can launch something to Mars.
That's because both the Earth and Mars are orbiting the sun, and they don't orbit at the same.
same speeds. It takes about 2.1 years for the planets to be in the right position to send
probes. It isn't just waiting for the two planets to be at their closest point to each other.
They use what's called a Homan transfer orbit, which is the trajectory that uses the minimum
amount of fuel. You basically launch a rocket into an orbit around the sun, and then it meets
up with Mars when it reaches that point in the Martian orbit. The Soviets tried another launch in
1964, the Zond 2, and it failed again. The next launch window was in 1969, and the Americans sent
two more probes, Mariner 6 and 7, both of which did successful flybys of Mars. The Soviets tried two
more attempts, both of which failed. They were now 0 for 8 in trying to get to Mars. There's something
called the Mars Curse. That's because such a high percentage of all missions to Mars have failed. To be
fair, most of those missions came in the 1960s and 70s when technology and interplanetary mission
experience were at their lowest. And also sending robots to Mars is really, really hard.
1971 saw a new launch window and a couple of attempts. The Americans sent up Mariner 8,
and it failed. The Soviets sent up Cosmos 419, and it failed. Then the Soviets sent up one called
Mars 2, and it sort of succeeded. Mars 2 was an attempt.
at the first soft landing on the surface.
The brakes on the lander didn't work,
so it smashed into the surface,
but it was the first human object on Mars.
So we'll give them partial credit for that one.
Also, the orbital part of Mars 2
became the first artificial satellite in orbit around Mars.
After nine failures,
the Soviets had their first success,
and the future for Mars exploration
was starting to look brighter.
Just a week after Mars 2 was launched,
the Soviets sent Mars 3,
which did manage to land softly on Mars,
becoming the first lander to do so.
The Americans sent up Mariner 9, which was the first American satellite to orbit Mars.
In the 1973 launch window, the Soviets sent four more probes, and the Americans sent zero.
Only one of the Soviets' four attempts could really be considered as success.
Two failed to orbit, and one crashed the lander again.
This ended what I would call the first phase of Martian exploration.
It was a whole bunch of probe sent to Mars, with most of them failing.
The technology on the probes was poor, and just getting to Mars was really the point of most of the missions.
The Americans skipped the 1973 window because they had something much bigger in mind.
In 1975, the Americans launched Viking 1 and Viking 2.
These were both orbiting satellites and landers.
The landers were much larger than anything, which had ever been attempted before.
They were fueled with plutonium, they had color cameras, and the ability to sample and test the soil.
each lander was the size of a Jeep.
I'd say these were the first proper landers
and the real start of phase two of exploration of Mars.
Vikings 1 and 2 were both smashing successes
in terms of both science and exploration.
There is a full-scale version of the Viking lander
on display at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum in Washington.
One of the soil sample tests run by both the Viking landers
had a result that was consistent with organic life.
The rest of the results were negative,
but scientists have been arguing about it for over
40 years. Viking 1 last for five years and Viking 2 lasted for two years before they ran out of power.
There were only two missions sent to Mars in the entire decade of the 1980s. Both were Soviet missions
to the Martian Moon Phobos, and both of them failed. The 1990s saw a renewed interest in Mars
and the most launches since the 1970s. In 1992, NASA launched the Mars Observer Mission, and it failed.
In 1996, they launched the Mars Global Surveyor Mission, which was to orbit Mars and
map the surface. It succeeded and was functional for 10 years returning the best images of Mars to date.
The Russians launched the Mars 96 mission, which crashed into the Pacific Ocean and failed.
The big success of the 90s was the Pathfinder mission. This was the first rover to land on the surface,
and the mission was a huge success. Moreover, it was done for under $200 million, which was way
less than the $3 billion of the Viking program in inflation-adjusted dollars. The rest of the 90s
was pretty much a disaster. The Japanese failed on their first attempt, and the Americans botched
their next two missions, the Mars Climate Orbiter and the Mars Polar Lander. The polar lander
famously failed because the engineers were using both metric and imperial units and didn't convert
them. After these failures, things really started to turn around. In 2001, the Mars Odyssey was
launched into orbit around the planet, and it's still there today functioning. In addition to
observing the surface, it also serves as a communication relay for landers.
The European Space Agency sent their Mars Express mission in 2003.
The orbiter was successful, but their lander known as Beagle II failed.
In 2003, the Spirit and Opportunity Rovers were launched,
and these were probably the best performing space missions of any sort in history.
Their original mission was only scheduled for 90 days.
However, Spirit lasted until 2011, and Opportunity lasted all the way until 2019.
Opportunity ended up driving over 45 kilometers on the surface of Mars,
which is a record for any rover on any extraterrestrial surface.
The Mars reconnaissance orbiter was launched in 2005, and it too is still functioning today.
2011 saw a failure of a joint Russian-Chinese mission, but it saw the success of the American
Curiosity rover, which is still operating on the surface of Mars right now.
In 2013, India launched its first mission to Mars, and it was successful.
The Indian Mars Orbiter mission is still functioning.
The 2010s ended with two more successful missions.
The NASA Maven Orbiter is currently analyzing Mars upper atmosphere, and the joint Russian-European
XOMars Trace Gas Orbiter is doing the same.
The impetus for this episode was that 2020 saw another launch window, and several nations
took advantage of it.
The probes launched in 2020 have been arriving in Mars in February 2021.
The United Arab Emirates sent their very first space mission to Mars, dubbed the Hope Orbiter,
it successfully entered Martian orbit on February 9th.
NASA's Perseverance lander landed just a few days ago as I record this.
It's the first lander with both a video camera and a microphone.
It also has a small helicopter drone with it as well,
which will be the first object to fly in an extraterrestrial atmosphere.
Finally, the Chinese Tian Wen I just entered Martian orbit a few days ago.
It's currently checking out the surface and is scheduled to attempt a landing with a rover in a few weeks.
This is a really exciting time for Mars exploration right now.
now. As I speak, there are currently eight working satellites in orbit around Mars and two
functioning landers with the possibility of a third in just a few days. You'll have noticed there
hasn't been a failed mission in a decade, with more countries joining the ranks of Mars explorers.
We're getting better at exploring Mars. The next launch window will appear in 2022. The European
Space Agency in Russia will jointly be sending a mission that will land the Rosalind Franklin
rover, which will be equipped to check for signs of life. India is planning on
sending another orbiter and possibly a rover in 2024. There are a whole bunch of proposals
for other missions, but nothing has been firmly scheduled beyond 2024 at this point. The real
goal, however, is to send humans to Mars. That's still a long ways off, but it has been pretty
much assumed that that would be the next big step ever since humans landed on the moon 50 years
ago. Right now, all of the robotic missions to Mars are gathering data and paving the way for a future
mission with humans. We still have problems to figure out, like how long it would take,
how do we get them back, and how long do they stay on Mars. Over the next several months,
we should be getting a steady stream of images, video, and even sound from the surface of
Mars. And over the next few years, we should be seeing even more ambitious missions to the
red planet. Executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is James McAula. The associate producer
is Thor Thompson. Today's five-star review comes from Apple Podcasts in the United Kingdom.
listener Folly Remy writes,
I look forward to each new episode.
The range of topics is huge and frequently
touches upon areas of my interest,
as well as engaging me in areas I've never given any thought to.
My 13-year-old son constantly gives comments like,
you really must listen to this one.
Keep up the great work.
There's nothing else out there like this.
Well, thank you very much, Fawley, Remy,
and also a big thanks to your son.
I hope you find some of the episodes a starting point
to learning more about some of the subjects I cover.
