Mariner 2
Mariner 2 was the first successful
spacecraft
in the
NASA Mariner
program, which began by sending spacecraft to
Venus.
The rocket carrying Mariner
1 went off-course during launch on July
22, 1962,
and the spacecraft was destroyed. A month later, Mariner 2 was
launched successfully on August
27, 1962,
sending it on a 3½-month flight to Venus. On the way it
measured for the first time the solar
wind, a constant stream of charged particles flowing outward
from the Sun. It
also measured interplanetary dust, which turned out to be more
scarce than predicted. In addition, Mariner 2 detected high-energy
charged particles coming from the Sun, including several brief
solar flares, as well as cosmic rays from outside the Solar
system. As it flew by Venus on December
14, 1962,
Mariner 2 scanned the planet with infrared and microwave radiometers,
revealing that Venus has cool clouds and an extremely hot surface
(because the bright, opaque clouds hide the planet's surface,
Mariner 2 was not outfitted with a camera).