Pioneer 11
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Early Mission
Pioneer 11, also called Pioneer G, was a robotic space probe sent up by NASA on April 5, 1973. Its job was to study the asteroid belt, look at Jupiter and Saturn, and check the solar wind and cosmic rays. It was the first probe to visit Saturn and the second to fly through the asteroid belt and past Jupiter.
Journey Beyond the Solar System
Pioneer 11 kept going after its main mission. It became the second of five human-made things to leave our Solar System completely, reaching an escape velocity. Because it was very far away and had little power, scientists stopped hearing from it regularly on September 30, 1995. The last clear messages came on November 24, 1995. Even now, Pioneer 11 stands out as a big success for space exploration.
Mission background
History
In February 1969, NASA approved Pioneer 11 and its twin probe, Pioneer 10, to explore the outer Solar System. These were the first probes made for this purpose. Early goals included studying the space between planets beyond Mars, checking the asteroid belt, and exploring the environment of Jupiter. Later, they added goals for when the probe would reach Saturn, like mapping Saturn’s magnetic field and studying its atmosphere.
Spacecraft design
Pioneer 11 was built to travel far from Earth. It was about 36 centimeters deep and had a hexagonal shape. The spacecraft weighed 259 kilograms and carried tools to study space. It used special fuel called hydrazine to stay pointed in the right direction and had sensors to know where Earth and the Sun were.
The probe could send messages back to Earth using antennas and powerful transmitters. It was powered by four special generators that turned heat from radioactive material into electricity. Pioneer 11 also carried computers to store and send back information from its science tools.
| Helium Vector Magnetometer (HVM) | |
|---|---|
| Measures the fine structure of the interplanetary magnetic field, mapped the Jovian magnetic field, and provides magnetic field measurements to evaluate solar wind interaction with Jupiter. Principal investigator: Edward Smith / JPL | |
| Peer through a hole in the large dish-shaped antenna to detect particles of the solar wind originating from the Sun. Principal investigator: Aaron Barnes / NASA Ames Research Center (PDS/PPI data catalog, Charged Particle Instrument (CPI) | |
| Detects cosmic rays in the Solar System. Principal investigator: John Simpson / University of Chicago Data: Cosmic Ray Telescope (CRT) | |
| Collects data on the composition of the cosmic ray particles and their energy ranges. Principal investigator: Frank B. McDonald / NASA Goddard Space Flight Center | |
| Surveys the intensities, energy spectra, and angular distributions of electrons and protons along the spacecraft's path through the radiation belts of Jupiter and Saturn. Principal investigator: James A. Van Allen / University of Iowa (website) | |
| Trapped Radiation Detector (TRD) | |
Includes an unfocused Cerenkov counter that detects the light emitted in a particular direction as particles passed through it recording electrons of energy, 0.5 to 12 MeV, an electron scatter detector for electrons of energy, 100 to 400 keV, and a minimum ionizing detector consisting of a solid-state diode that measured minimum ionizing particles ( Principal investigator: R. Fillius / University of California San Diego | |
| Meteoroid Detectors | |
| Twelve panels of pressurized cell detectors mounted on the back of the main dish antenna record penetrating impacts of small meteoroids. Principal investigator: William Kinard / NASA Langley Research Center Data: NSSDC data archive list | |
| Asteroid/Meteoroid Detector (AMD) | |
| Meteoroid-asteroid detector looks into space with four non-imaging telescopes to track particles ranging from close by bits of dust to distant large asteroids. Principal investigator: Robert Soberman / General Electric Company Data: NSSDC data archive list | |
| Ultraviolet Photometer | |
| Ultraviolet light (200 to 800 Å) is sensed to determine the quantities of hydrogen and helium in space and on Jupiter and Saturn. Principal investigator: Darrell Judge / University of Southern California | |
| The imaging experiment relies upon the spin of the spacecraft to sweep a small telescope across the planet in narrow strips only 0.03 degrees wide, looking at the planet in red (5800 to 7000 Å) and blue (3900 to 4900 Å) light. These strips are then processed to build up a visual image of the planet. Principal investigator: Tom Gehrels / University of Arizona Data: NSSDC data archive list | |
| Infrared Radiometer | |
| Provides information on cloud temperature and the output of heat from Jupiter and Saturn. Principal investigator: Andrew Ingersoll / California Institute of Technology | |
| Triaxial Fluxgate Magnetometer | |
| Measures the magnetic fields of both Jupiter and Saturn. This instrument is not carried on Pioneer 10. Principal investigator: Mario Acuna / NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Data: NSSDC data archive list | |
Mission profile
Launch and trajectory
The Pioneer 11 probe was launched on April 6, 1973, by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration from Cape Canaveral, Florida. It was sent to study the asteroid belt, Jupiter, Saturn, the solar wind, and cosmic rays. It was the first probe to visit Saturn and the second to visit Jupiter and the asteroid belt.
Encounter with Jupiter
Main article: Exploration of Jupiter
Pioneer 11 flew past Jupiter in late 1974. It passed very close to the planet, about 42,828 kilometers above the clouds. It sent back the first images of Jupiter's polar regions and helped scientists learn more about Jupiter's moon Callisto.
Encounter with Saturn
Main article: Exploration of Saturn
Pioneer 11 passed by Saturn on September 1, 1979. It came within 21,000 kilometers of Saturn. It also came close to one of Saturn's small moons and sent back pictures of Saturn's rings.
Interstellar mission
On February 25, 1990, Pioneer 11 became the fourth human-made object to travel beyond the orbit of the planets. By 1995, it could no longer power its instruments, so NASA stopped regular contact with the spacecraft.
Timeline
Current status
The last time we talked to Pioneer 11 was on September 30, 1995. Since then, it has traveled very far away from Earth. As of June 24, 2024, Pioneer 11 is about 113 AU from Earth and 114 AU from the Sun. It moves at a speed of 11.155 km/s and heads toward the constellation Scutum.
Later, Pioneer 11 was passed by the Voyager probes launched in 1977. Voyager 1 is now the farthest human-made object in space.
Pioneer anomaly
Main article: Pioneer anomaly
Scientists found something odd in the signals from the Pioneer 10 and 11 space probes when they were far from the Sun. The signals changed in a way that made it look like the probes were being pulled a little toward the Sun. For a long time, they didn’t know why. Later, they learned that heat from parts of the probes was pushing them just a tiny bit, causing this effect called the "Pioneer anomaly."
Pioneer plaque
Main article: Pioneer plaque
The Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 spacecraft each carried a special plaque made of gold-coated aluminum. This was in case the spacecraft were ever found by intelligent life from other planets. The plaques showed a man and a woman with symbols to tell where the spacecraft came from.
Commemoration
In 1991, Pioneer 11 was shown on a stamp made by the United States. The stamp honored spacecraft that explored planets and the Moon. Pioneer 11 was pictured with Jupiter, and Pluto was noted as "Not yet explored."
Images
Related articles
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