Thursday, November 9, 2017

Venus Express, ESA's first mission to Venus, launched 2005


The European Space Agency's first probe to our sister planet, Venus Express (VEX), was launched November 9, 2005 to explore the planet's atmosphere.  It arrived the following April for a two-year mission, but it kept going.  The ESA extended the mission five times, the last in 2013 through 2015 but they lost contact with VEX in November 2014. 

Basically, she ran out of gas.  VEX probably succumbed to Venus' gravity and burned up in the atmosphere in January or February 2015.

This was the first mission to make observations of Venus over a long period of time.  Previous missions by the U.S. or the Soviet Union were landers who transmitted data for very short times before being destroyed by the planet's harsh conditions.

Perhaps the data sent to Earth for eight and a half years will give us an idea of how the Venusian atmoshpere became such a runaway greenhouse effect, which in turn will help us contribute to our study of climate change on Earth.


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