National Aeronautics and Space Administration Logo
Follow this link to skip to the main content NASA Banner
Solar System Exploration
Missions
Pioneer Venus 1
 By Target   By Name   By Decade 
Pioneer Venus 01
Pioneer Venus 1 Mission to Comets Pioneer Venus 1 Mission to Venus

Goals: The Pioneer Venus project called for two spacecraft to explore the atmosphere and surface of Venus. Pioneer Venus 1 was designed to make a radar map of Venus's surface during an eight month mission. Its twin, Pioneer Venus 2, also carried atmospheric probes.

Accomplishments: Pioneer Venus 1 used its ultraviolet spectrometer to study comet Halley as the comet became unobservable from Earth.

   

Key Dates
20 May 1978:  Launch
4 Dec 1978:  Venus Orbit Insertion
Status: Successful
Fast Facts
Pioneer Venus 01 Facts Pioneer Venus 1 was the first spacecraft to map the surface of Venus (right).

Though it found Venus to be generally smoother than Earth, it found a mountain 2 km (about one mile) higher than Mt. Everest and a canyon about 1.1 km (about 2/3 of a mile) deeper than the Grand Canyon.

The International Astronomical Union named almost all of the features discovered by Pioneer Venus 1 and subsequent missions after historical or mythological women.
People Spotlight
David Grinspoon David Grinspoon
"Planetary encounters are always exciting... watching the first close-up pictures of Triton come down with my colleagues. Now that was unforgettable!" Read More...
Charles Hall - (1920 - 1999)
Project Manager
Links
Awards and Recognition   Solar System Exploration Roadmap   Contact Us   Site Map   Print This Page
NASA Official: Kristen Erickson
Advisory: Dr. James Green, Director of Planetary Science
Outreach Manager: Alice Wessen
Curator/Editor: Phil Davis
Science Writers: Samantha Harvey & Autumn Burdick
Producer: Greg Baerg
Webmaster: David Martin
> NASA Science Mission Directorate
> Budgets, Strategic Plans and Accountability Reports
> Equal Employment Opportunity Data
   Posted Pursuant to the No Fear Act
> Information-Dissemination Policies and Inventories
> Freedom of Information Act
> Privacy Policy & Important Notices
> Inspector General Hotline
> Office of the Inspector General
> NASA Communications Policy
> USA.gov
> ExpectMore.gov
> NASA Advisory Council
> Open Government at NASA
Last Updated: 1 Dec 2010