Venus

Mariner 2 expedition profile.

The first successful planetary spacecraft measured the Venus environment during a close flyby and proved that deep-space telemetry, tracking, and thermal design could work beyond the Moon.

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Mission facts

Launch, target, and status

Target
Venus
Agency
NASA / JPL
Launch
August 27, 1962
Arrival / encounter
December 14, 1962
Mission type
Flyby
Current status
Successful Venus flyby
Launch vehicle
Atlas-Agena
Reference target orbit
0.723 AU from Sun

Expedition path

How the spacecraft travelled

Direct interplanetary transfer from Earth to a Venus encounter.

Confirmed an extremely hot Venus and helped define the modern planetary flyby mission pattern.

Science Payload

What this mission measured

Measurements

Microwave radiometry, infrared radiometry, magnetometer, plasma, charged-particle, and cosmic-dust measurements.

Target environment

The target reference is 0.723 AU in the compact simulator; solar-probe entries use close-solar perihelion distance while planet entries use the target world's solar orbit.

Review note

The canvas shows a clean teaching transfer and mission class. Exact flight dynamics require full ephemerides, maneuvers, launch energy, spacecraft mass properties, and operations timelines.

Expedition review

Why Mariner 2 matters

Confirmed an extremely hot Venus and helped define the modern planetary flyby mission pattern.

Mathematical model

Mission trajectory and spacecraft model

Mission visuals combine catalog dates, distance vectors, speed estimates, and schematic spacecraft geometry. They are not CAD-certified vehicle meshes unless a source model is explicitly loaded.

Vector propagation

\[\mathbf{r}(t)=\mathbf{r}_0+\mathbf{v}(t-t_0)\]

For live-distance spacecraft pages, current position is propagated from epoch vector and velocity when high-precision ephemerides are not bundled.

Transfer curve

\[\mathbf{r}_{\mathrm{curve}}(u)=\operatorname{Bezier}\!\left(\mathbf{r}_{\mathrm{launch}},\mathbf{r}_{\mathrm{mid}},\mathbf{r}_{\mathrm{target}}\right)\]

Mission path arcs are schematic transfer curves anchored at meaningful endpoints, not claims of exact reconstructed trajectories.

Dimensional hierarchy

\[T_{\mathrm{world}}=T_{\mathrm{parent}}RS\]

Spacecraft parts are placed with transformation matrices. This proves the generated geometry is internally consistent even when simplified.

Verification standard: the rendered object must be reproducible from stated equations, catalog parameters, or explicit geometric transforms. Visual reference images may inform presentation only; they are not the source of orbital positions, field vectors, accretion-disk gradients, timing, or engineering layout.

Limitations: browser scenes may use bounded scale, compressed distances, simplified two-body dynamics, schematic transfer curves, or educational approximations where full numerical ephemerides, CFD, finite-element models, or general-relativistic ray tracing are outside the page scope. Those simplifications are part of the model contract, not hidden image-based construction.

Open the full site-wide mathematical verification policy