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Phobos 2

Soviet Mars moon probe (1988–1989)


Soviet Mars moon probe (1988–1989)

FieldValue
name*Phobos 2*
image[[Image:Phobos Marte.jpg300px]]
image_captionIllustration of the Phobos spacecraft
image_alt
mission_typeOrbiter
operatorSoviet Union
COSPAR_ID1988-059A
SATCAT19287
website
mission_duration8 months, 15 days (launch until comm failure)
distance_travelled
orbits_completed
suborbital_range
suborbital_apogee
spacecraft
spacecraft_type
spacecraft_bus
manufacturer
launch_mass6,220 kg (with orbital insertion hardware)
BOL_mass
dry_mass
payload_mass
dimensions
power
launch_date
launch_rocketProton-K rocket
launch_site
launch_contractor
deployment_from
deployment_date
entered_service
disposal_type
deactivated
destroyed
last_contact27 March 1989 (spacecraft signal failed to be reacquired).
recovery_by
recovery_date
decay_date
landing_date
landing_site
{{end dateYYYYMMDDhhmmssTZZ}} (for Zulu/UTC) or (if time unknown)
orbit_referenceAreocentric
orbit_regime
orbit_longitude
orbit_slot
orbit_semimajor
orbit_eccentricity
orbit_periapsis
orbit_apoapsis
orbit_inclination
orbit_period
orbit_RAAN
orbit_arg_periapsis
orbit_mean_anomaly
orbit_mean_motion
orbit_repeat
orbit_velocity
orbit_epoch
orbit_rev_number
apsisareion
interplanetary
typeorbiter
objectMars
orbits
component
arrival_date29 January 1989
departure_date
location
distance
sample_mass
surface_EVAs
surface_EVA_time
periapsis
apoapsis
inclination
apsisareion
trans_band
trans_frequency
trans_bandwidth
trans_capacity
trans_coverage
trans_TWTA
trans_EIRP
trans_HPBW
programmePhobos program
previous_mission*Phobos 1*
insignia
insignia_caption
insignia_alt
insignia_size

The following template should be used for ONE of the three above fields "end_of_mission", "decay" or "landing" if the spacecraft is no longer operational. If it landed intact, use it for the landing time, otherwise for the date it ceased operations, or the decay date if it was still operational when it re-entered. (for Zulu/UTC) or (if time unknown)

If in doubt, leave it out--

Phobos 2 was the last space probe designed by the Soviet Union. It was designed to explore the moons of Mars, Phobos and Deimos. It was launched on 12 July 1988, and entered orbit on 29 January 1989.

Phobos 2 operated nominally throughout its cruise and Mars orbital insertion phase on 29 January 1989, gathering data on the Sun, interplanetary medium, Mars, and Phobos. Phobos 2 investigated the Mars surface and atmosphere and returned 37 images of Phobos with a resolution of up to 40 meters.

Shortly before the final phase of the mission, during which the spacecraft was to approach within of Phobos's surface and release two landers (one, a mobile hopper, the other, a stationary platform) contact with Phobos 2 was lost. The mission ended when the spacecraft signal failed to be reacquired on 27 March 1989. The cause of the failure was determined to be a malfunction of the on-board computer.

Background

The mission to Phobos was announced on 14 November 1984.

Mission profile

Phobos 2 started to develop problems during the interplanetary flight phase of the mission.

Phobos 2 successfully carried out three preliminary encounters with Phobos by using its Videospectrometric Camera, the Combined Radiometer and Photometer for Mars and the Imaging Spectrometer for Mars.

Spacecraft design

Instruments

The Phobos 2 infrared spectrometer (ISM) obtained 45000 spectra in the near infrared (from ) in the equatorial areas of Mars, with a spatial resolution ranging from , and 400 spectra of Phobos at 700 m resolution. These observations made it possible to generate the first mineralogical maps of the planet and its satellite, and to study the atmosphere of Mars. ISM was developed at IAS and DESPA (Paris Observatory) with support from CNES.

List of instruments:

  • "VSK" TV imaging system
  • PROP-F "hopping" lander.
    • ARS-FP automatic X-ray fluorescence spectrometer
    • ferroprobe magnetometer
    • Kappameter magnetic permeability / susceptibility sensor
    • gravimeter
    • temperature sensors
    • BISIN conductometer / tiltmeter
    • mechanical sensors (penetrometer, UIU accelerometer, sensors on hopping mechanism)
  • "DAS" (long-lived autonomous station) lander
    • TV camera
    • ALPHA-X Alpha-Proton-X-Ray Spectrometer
    • LIBRATION Sun sensor (also known as STENOPEE)
    • Seismometer
    • RAZREZ anchor penetrometer
    • Celestial mechanics experiment
  • "ISM" thermal infrared spectrometer/radiometer – resolution
  • near-infrared imaging spectrometer
  • thermal imaging camera; magnetometers
  • gamma-ray spectrometers
  • X-ray telescope
  • radiation detectors
  • radar and laser altimeters
  • Lima-D laser experiment – designed to vaporize material from the Phobos surface for chemical analysis by a mass spectrometer
  • Automatic Space Plasma Experiment with Rotating Analyzer (ASPERA), an electron spectrometer and ion mass analyzer from the Swedish Institute of Space Physics.

Results

The craft took 37 photos of Phobos imaging the majority (80%) of the moon.

Legacy

The Phobos design was used again for the long delayed Mars 96 mission which ended in failure when the launch vehicle's fourth stage misfired. In addition, the Fobos-Grunt mission, also designed to explore Phobos, failed in 2011. There has yet to be a completely successful probe to Phobos.

References

References

  1. [http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/phobos.html nasa.gov: Phobos Project Information]
  2. "Fobos 2". NASA.
  3. [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v341/n6243/abs/341585a0.html Nature Publishing Group, Television observations of Phobos]
  4. Harvey, Brian. (2007). "Russian Planetary Exploration History, Development, Legacy and Prospects". Springer-Praxis.
  5. Harvey, Brian. (2007). "Russian Planetary Exploration History, Development, Legacy and Prospects". Springer-Praxis.
  6. (September 1996). "Spectral Properties and Heterogeneity of Phobos from Measurements by Phobos 2". Icarus.
  7. Harvey, Brian. (2007). "Russian Planetary Exploration History, Development, Legacy and Prospects". Springer-Praxis.
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