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Mariner 4 - First Primitive Mars Image

High Res TIFF (5.2 MB)

Mariner 4 - First Primitive Mars Image

Mariner 4 gave scientists their first glimpse of Mars at close range, passing over the planet at an altitude of 9,846 kilometers (6,118 miles) above the surface and putting to rest the myths of the late 19th century that the planet may have harbored an advanced civilization. Launched on November 28, 1964, Mariner 4 carried a television camera and six other science instruments to study interplanetary space between the orbits of Earth and Mars and in the vicinity of Mars itself. The spacecraft took 22 television pictures covering about 1 percent of Mars's surface, which revealed a vast, barren wasteland of craters strewn about a rust-colored carpet of sand.

The canals that Percival Lowell spied with his telescope in 1890 proved to be an optical illusion, but natural waterways of some kind seemed to be evident in some regions of the planet. Other experiments measured atmospheric density and the interplanetary medium.

Once past Mars, Mariner 4 journeyed on to the far side of the Sun before returning to the vicinity of Earth again in 1967. Nearly out of power by then, engineers decided to use the aging craft for a series of operational and telemetry tests to improve their knowledge of the technologies that would be needed for future interplanetary spacecraft. All operations of the spacecraft ceased on December 20, 1967.

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