Mariner 6 and 7 comprised a dual-spacecraft mission to Mars. The primary objectives of the missions were to study the
surface and atmosphere of Mars during close flybys to establish the basis for future investigations, particularly those relevant
to the search for extraterrestrial life, and to demonstrate and develop technologies required for future Mars missions and other
long-duration missions far from the Sun. Each spacecraft carried a wide- and narrow-angle television camera, an infrared
spectroscope, an infrared radiometer, and an ultraviolet spectroscope. The spacecraft were oriented entirely to planetary data
acquisition, and no data were obtained during the trip to Mars or beyond Mars. Mariners 6 and 7 were designed to fly over the
equator and southern hemisphere of Mars. Mariner 6 encountered Mars on July 31,1969 and was quickly followed by Mariner 7 on
August 4, 1969. The two spacecraft returned a combined total of 143 approach pictures of the planet and 55 close-up pictures.
These images, from the vehicles' television cameras, included pictures of the northern and southern polar caps as well as Phobos,
one of Mars' two moons. The spacecraft also studied the Martian atmosphere and profiled its chemical composition. Closest approach
to Mars for both spacecraft was approximately 3,550 kilometres. The cost of the two missions was $148 million.
Spacecraft and Subsystems:
The Mariner 6 and 7 spacecraft were identical, consisting of an octagonal magnesium frame base, 138.4 cm diagonally and 45.7 cm
deep. A conical superstructure mounted on top of the frame held the high-gain 1 meter diameter parabolic antenna and four solar
panels, each measuring 215 x 90 cm, were affixed to the top corners of the frame. The tip-to-tip span of the deployed solar panels
was 5.79 m. A low-gain omnidirectional antenna was mounted on a 2.23 m high mast next to the high-gain antenna. Underneath the
octagonal frame was a two-axis scan platform which held scientific instruments. Overall science instrument mass was 57.6 kg. The
total height of the spacecraft was 3.35 m.
The spacecraft was attitude stabilized in three axes (referenced to the sun and the star, Canopus) through the use of 3
gyros, 2 sets of 6 nitrogen jets mounted on the ends of the solar panels, a Canopus tracker, and two primary and four secondary
sun sensors. Propulsion was provided by a 223 N rocket motor mounted within the frame which used monopropellant hydrazine. The
nozzle with 4-jet vane vector control protruded from one wall of the octagonal structure. Power was supplied by 17,472
photovoltaic cells covering an area of 7.7 square meters on the four solar panels. These could provide 800 W of power near Earth
and 449 W at Mars. The maximum power requirement was 380 W at Mars encounter. A 1200 W-hr rechargeable silver-zinc battery was
used to provide backup power. Thermal control was achieved through the use of adjustable louvers on the sides of the main
compartment.
Three telemetry channels were available for telecommunications. Channel A carried engineering data at 8 1/3 or 33 1/3 bps, channel B carried
scientific data at 66 2/3 or 270 bps and channel C carried science data at 16,200 bps. Communications were accomplished via the high- and low-gain
antennas via dual S-band travelling wave tube 10/20 W amplifiers for transmission and a single receiver. An analog tape recorder with a capacity of
195 million bits could store television images for subsequent transmission. Other science data was stored on a digital recorder. The command system,
consisting of a central computer and sequencer (CC&S), was designed to actuate specific events at precise times. The CC&S was programmed with a
standard mission and a conservative backup mission befire launch, but could be commanded and reprogrammed in flight. It could perform 53 direct
commands, 5 control commands, and 4 quantitative commands.
Payload:
The planetary experiments (59 kg) included two television cameras, an infrared radiometer, an infrared spectrometer, and an ultraviolet
spectrometer. These sensors took TV pictures of Mars and measured the ratio of refractivity and UV and IR emissions of the atmosphere.
Mission details:
Mars flyby 31 July 1969; returned 75 images of Martian surface.
Ten days before the scheduled launch, a faulty switch opened the main valves
on the Atlas stage. This released the pressure which supported the Atlas structure, and as the booster deflated it began to crumple. Two ground
crewman started pressurizing pumps, saving the structure from further collapse. The two ground crewman, who had acted at risk of the 12-story rocket
collapsing on them, were awarded Exceptional Bravery Medals from NASA.
The Mariner 6 spacecraft was removed, put on another Atlas/Centaur, and launched on schedule. The main booster was jettisoned 4 min. 38 sec.
after launch, followed by a 7.5 minute Centaur burn to inject the spacecraft into Mars direct trajectory. After Mariner 6 separated from the Centaur
the solar panels were deployed. A midcourse correction involving a 5.35 second burn of the hydrazine rocket occurred on 1 March 1969. A few days
later explosive valves were deployed to unlatch the scan platform. Some bright particles released during the explosion distracted the Canopus sensor,
and attitude lock was lost temporarily. It was decided to place the spacecraft on inertial guidance for the Mars flyby to prevent a similar
occurrence.
On 29 July, 50 hours before closest approach, the scan platform was pointed to Mars and the scientific instruments turned on. Imaging of Mars
began 2 hours later. For the next 41 hours, 49 approach images (plus a 50th fractional image) of Mars were taken through the narrow-angle camera. At
05:03 UT on 31 July the near-encounter phase began, including collection of 26 close-up images. Due to a cooling system failure, channel 1 of the IR
spectrometer did not cool sufficiently to allow measurements from 6 to 14 micrometers so no infrared data were obtained over this range. Closest
approach occurred at 05:19:07 UT at a distance of 3431 km from the martian surface. Eleven minutes later Mariner 6 passed behind Mars and reappeared
after 25 minutes. X-band occultation data were taken during the entrance and exit phases. Science and imaging data were played back and transmitted
over the next few days. The spacecraft was then returned to cruise mode which included engineering and communications tests, star photography TV
tests, and UV scans of the Milky Way and an area containing comet 1969-B. Periodic tracking of the spacecraft in its heliocentric orbit was also
done.
Science Results:
Mariner 6 returned 49 far encounter and 26 near encounter images of Mars. Close-ups from the near encounter phases covered 20% of the surface. The
spacecraft instruments measured UV and IR emissions and radio refractivity of the Martian atmosphere. Images showed the surface of Mars to be very
different from that of the Moon, in some contrast to the results from Mariner 4. The south polar cap was identified as being composed predominantly
of carbon dioxide. Atmospheric surface pressure was estimated at between 6 and 7 mb. Radio science refined estimates of the mass, radius and shape of
Mars.