Venera 8
Venera 8 |
Mission type |
Venus lander |
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COSPAR ID |
1972-021A |
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SATCAT № |
5912 |
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Mission duration |
117 days |
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Spacecraft properties |
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Spacecraft |
4V-1 No.670 |
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Manufacturer |
Lavochkin |
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Launch mass |
1,180 kilograms (2,600 lb) |
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Start of mission |
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Launch date |
17 March 1972, 04:15:01 (1972-03-17UTC04:15:01Z) UTC |
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Rocket |
Molniya-M/MVL |
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Launch site |
Baikonur 31/6 |
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End of mission |
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Last contact |
22 July 1972 (1972-07-23) |
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Orbital parameters |
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Reference system |
Heliocentric |
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Venus lander |
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Landing date |
22 July 1972, 09:32 UTC |
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Venera 8 (Russian: Венера-8 meaning Venus 8) (manufacturer's designation: 3V (V-72)) was a probe in the Soviet Venera program for the exploration of Venus.
Venera 8 was a Venus atmospheric probe and lander. Its instrumentation included temperature, pressure, and light sensors as well as an altimeter, gamma ray spectrometer, gas analyzer, and radio transmitters. The spacecraft took 117 days to reach Venus with one mid-course correction on 6 April 1972, separating from the bus (which contained a cosmic ray detector, solar wind detector, and ultraviolet spectrometer) and entering the atmosphere on 22 July 1972 at 08:37 UT. A refrigeration system attached to the bus was used to pre-chill the descent capsule's interior prior to atmospheric entry in order to prolong its life on the surface. Descent speed was reduced from 41,696 km/h to about 900 km/h by aerobraking. The 2.5 meter diameter parachute opened at an altitude of 60 km.
Descent
Venera 8 transmitted data during the descent. A sharp decrease in illumination was noted at 35 to 30 km altitude and wind speeds of less than 1 km/s were measured below 10 km. Venera 8 landed at 09:32 UT in what is now called Vasilisa Region, within 150 km radius of 10°42′S 335°15′E / 10.70°S 335.25°E / -10.70; 335.25, in sunlight, about 500 km from the morning terminator. The lander mass was 495 kg.
Lander
Lander continued to send back data for 50 minutes, 11 seconds after landing before failing due to the harsh surface conditions. The probe confirmed the earlier data on the high Venus surface temperature and pressure (470 degrees Celsius, 90 atmospheres) returned by Venera 7, and also measured the light level as being suitable for surface photography, finding it to be similar to the amount of light on Earth on an overcast day with roughly 1 km visibility.
Venera 8's photometer measurements showed for the first time that the Venusian clouds end at a high altitude, and the atmosphere was relatively clear from there down to the surface. The on-board gamma ray spectrometer measured the uranium/thorium/potassium ratio of the surface rock, indicating it was similar to granite.
Payload experiments
- Temperature and pressure sensors - ITD
- Accelerometer - DOU-1M
- Photometers - IOV-72
- Ammonia analyser - IAV-72
- Gamma ray spectrometer - GS-4
- Radar altimeter
- Radio Doppler experiment
See also
External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Venera 8. |
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| Orbiters | | |
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| Flybys | |
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| Descent probes | |
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| Landers | |
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| Balloon probes | |
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| Failed at launch | |
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| Planned flybys | |
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| Proposed | |
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| Cancelled | |
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| Program overviews | |
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| Related | |
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- Italics indicates active current missions. † indicates failure en-route or before any data returned.
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| Kosmos 471 | OPS 1737 · OPS 7719 | Intelsat IV F-4 | Kosmos 472 | HEOS-2 | Kosmos 473 | Luna 20 | Kosmos 474 | OPS 1844 | Kosmos 475 | OPS 1570 | Kosmos 476 | Pioneer 10 | Kosmos 477 · Nauka-14KS No.1 | TD-1A | Kosmos 478 | OPS 1678 | Kosmos 479 | OPS 5058 | Kosmos 480 | Kosmos 481 | Venera 8 | Meteor-MV No.23 | Kosmos 482 | Kosmos 483 | Molniya-1 No.27 · SRET-1 | Kosmos 484 · Nauka-5KS No.3 | Interkosmos 6 | Kosmos 485 | Prognoz 1 | Kosmos 486 | Apollo 16 ( PFS-2) | OPS 5640 | Kosmos 487 | DS-P1-Yu No. 51 | Kosmos 488 | Kosmos 489 | Kosmos 490 · Nauka-1KS No.5 | Molniya-2-2 | OPS 6574 | Kosmos 491 | OPS 6371 | Kosmos 492 | Intelsat IV F-5 | Kosmos 493 | Kosmos 494 | Kosmos 495 | Kosmos 496 | Prognoz 2 | Interkosmos 7 | Kosmos 497 | Meteor-MV No.26 | Kosmos 498 | Kosmos 499 | OPS 7293 · OPS 7803 | Kosmos 500 | Kosmos 501 | Kosmos 502 | Kosmos 503 | Kosmos 504 · Kosmos 505 · Kosmos 506 · Kosmos 507 · Kosmos 508 · Kosmos 509 · Kosmos 510 · Kosmos 511 | ERTS-1 | Kosmos 512 | DOS No.122 | Kosmos 513 | Explorer 46 | Kosmos 514 | Kosmos 515 | Denpa | Copernicus | Kosmos 516 | Kosmos 517 | OPS 8888 | Unnamed | Triad 1 | Kosmos 518 | Kosmos 519 | Kosmos 520 | Explorer 47 | Kosmos 521 | Molniya-2-3 | Radcat 2 · Radsat | Kosmos 522 | Kosmos 523 | OPS 8314 · OPS 8314/2 | Kosmos 524 | Molniya-1 No.26 | NOAA-2 · OSCAR-6 | Unnamed | Kosmos 525 · Nauka-16KS No.1L | Kosmos 526 | Meteor-M No.25 | Kosmos 527 | Kosmos 528 · Kosmos 529 · Kosmos 530 · Kosmos 531 · Kosmos 532 · Kosmos 533 · Kosmos 534 · Kosmos 535 | Kosmos 536 | OPS 7323 | Anik A1 | Explorer 48 | ESRO-4 | Unnamed | Kosmos 537 | Interkosmos 8 | Molniya-1 No.28 | Apollo 17 | Nimbus 5 | Molniya-2-4 | Kosmos 538 | Aeros 1 | OPS 9390 | Kosmos 539 | OPS 3978 | Kosmos 540 | Kosmos 541 | Kosmos 542 | | Payloads are separated by bullets ( · ), launches by pipes ( | ). Manned flights are indicated in bold text. Uncatalogued launch failures are listed in italics. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are denoted in (brackets). |
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