During the course of over half a century, we have sent spacecraft to encounter every planet known in the Solar System. Having grown up in the 1970s and an enthusiastic observer of planetary missions in the decades afterwards, I always watched in wonder as a new world was seen closeup for the first time often revealing many unexpected discoveries. I often wondered what it would be like to explore Earth for the first time using a highly instrumented planetary spacecraft and what it would find.
Since the launching of the first planetary spacecraft in 1961 (see “Venera 1: The First Venus Mission Attempt”), departing probes have observed the Earth and its environment as they began their journeys to worlds beyond. Some of these probes have even taken images of the Earth and Moon the first being NASA’s Mariner 10 after its launch in November 1973. Four years later, Voyager 1 took one of the more famous images from a departing planetary spacecraft showing the Earth and Moon (see “First Pictures: Voyager 1 Portrait of the Earth & Moon – September 18, 1977”).
But what about a spacecraft approaching the Earth from interplanetary space for a close flyby before heading out once again as happens with encounters with other worlds? The first opportunity for such a full encounter with the Earth did not happen until December 8, 1990 when NASA’s Jupiter-bound Galileo spacecraft first flew by the Earth.
The Galileo Mission
Approved in 1977 (when it was called JOP for “Jupiter Orbiter Probe”), the objective of NASA’s Galileo mission was to drop a probe for a parachute-assisted descent through the atmosphere of Jupiter followed by entering into orbit to study the giant planet, its environment and its varied collection of planet-sized moons. In addition to its 340-kilogram entry probe, the 2,560-kilogram Galileo spacecraft carried 118 kilograms of instrument including a Solid State Imager (SSI) incorporating a 800×800 pixel CCD array – the first NASA planetary spacecraft to employ a solid state camera instead of the vidicon-based technology flown on earlier missions.
Galileo used a unique dual-spin design with the upper part of the spacecraft spinning at a rate of 3 RPM while the lower part remained fixed in inertial space. The spinning portion, in addition to providing stability, allowed the particles and fields instruments to scan their surroundings more effectively. The fixed portion supported most of the optical instruments, including the SSI, mounted on a scan platform to provide stable pointing for this hardware.
Because of a 1975 NASA policy decision, Galileo was meant from the start to be launched using the Space Shuttle. In order to send the spacecraft on its way to Jupiter, Galileo would use the new Centaur G-Prime stage whose dimensions and mass were optimized for deployment from the Space Shuttle cargo bay compared to the earlier Centaur variants flown. But because of the longer than planned development of the Space Shuttle (and, to a lesser extent, delays in the development of the Centaur G and Galileo spacecraft), the launch of Galileo had been pushed out years beyond its initially planned 1982 launch date. Eventually, Galileo was added to the launch manifest for the STS-61G mission onboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis scheduled for liftoff on May 6, 1986 with Galileo arriving at Jupiter 30 months later. The tragic Challenger accident on January 26, 1986 put any further Shuttle missions on hold adding further delays to Galileo’s launch
In the wake of the investigation of the Challenger accident and a reevaluation of the risks inherent in Space Shuttle launches, the decision was made on June 19, 1986 to cancel the development of the Shuttle-Centaur due to the risks associated with carrying a huge load of liquid hydrogen and LOX in the cargo bay. With only the less capable, all-solid Interim Upper Stage (IUS) available to launch Galileo, NASA engineers and scientists came up with an innovative VEEGA (Venus-Earth-Earth gravity assist) trajectory that used multiple planetary flybys to increase the velocity of the spacecraft so it could eventually reach Jupiter even with the IUS. While the new, less direct trajectory would double the transit time to Jupiter to five years, it did open the door to making scientific observations of Venus and Earth as well as flyby opportunities for the main belt asteroids, 951 Gaspra and 243 Ida.
Galileo, mounted atop of a two-stage IUS, was finally sent on its way on October 18, 1989 by the Space Shuttle Atlantis during the first day of the STS-34 mission. The IUS successfully sent Galileo on its way to its first target, Venus, which was reached on February 10, 1990. The flyby, at a range of 16,106 kilometers, added 2.2 kilometers per second to the spacecraft’s heliocentric velocity changing Galileo’s solar orbit from 0.67 by 1.00 AU to a larger 0.70 by 1.29 AU orbit. Since Galileo’s umbrella-like high gain antenna was not designed to withstand the punishing thermal environment this close to the Sun, it remained furled behind a sunshade during this stage of the mission. This forced Galileo to delay the transmission of its recorded Venus observations until it was closer to Earth when the data could be transmitted home using a low gain antenna – a task which was completed by mid-November 1990.
The First Encounter with Earth
With the 952-kilometer flyby of the Earth scheduled for December 8, 1990, the Galileo science team took advantage of the opportunity to observe the Earth and Moon. This was not only to checkout the performance of Galileo’s instruments, but to gather new data for this pair of worlds. With Galileo approaching the Earth from almost the center of its dark side (preventing any imagery or other observations requiring solar illumination), it was in a unique position to observe the Earth’s magnetotail. With nearly continuous contact between Galileo and NASA’s Deep Space Network established, the spacecraft started gathering particles and fields data 30 days before its flyby. At a range of 560,000 kilometers, Galileo’s instruments entered Earth’s magnetotail. As Galileo continued to close in of the Earth, its Plasma Wave experiment detected radio emissions known as “whistlers” created by lighting in the atmosphere as well as from phenomena related to auroras.
During its final day before closest approach, Galileo began making multispectral observations of the Moon including the first images about 11 hours out from Earth. The Ultraviolet Spectrometer also started observations of the Earth’s tenuous geotail looking for emissions of hydrogen and other gases. Radio tracking during this time was used to help refine the mass of the Earth as well.
Galileo made its closest approach to Earth at 20:34:34 UT on December 8, 1990 as it passed the evening terminator at an altitude of 960 kilometers – within a half a second of the predicted time and only 8 kilometers off target. As Galileo sped away from its close encounter, it was afforded a nearly completely illuminated view of the Earth allowing it to make continuous global observations. In addition to a series of spectacular color images from the SSI, the spacecraft’s spectrometers made observations of mesospheric water vapor and ozone concentrations to study Earth “ozone hole” and the mechanism responsible for it.
As Galileo continued to pull away from the Earth, it acquired a series of distant, multispectral images of the Moon. Among the regions imaged was the western lunar hemisphere dominated by the Mare Orientale impact basin. These images supplemented older observations from the Apollo era about the variations in surface composition of the Moon as well as helped to refine the sequence of volcanic events in the region of Mare Orientale. These images also helped to fill in a small strip of the lunar far side near the southern polar region which had been unphotographed almost a quarter century earlier by NASA’s Lunar Orbiter missions (see “Lunar Orbiter 5: Filling the Gaps in the Maps”). Also confirmed by these global views of the Moon was the existence of the 2,500-kilometer South Pole Aitken basin – one of the largest impact features known in the Solar System.
Starting at 14:10 UT on December 11 when Galileo had receded to 2.1 million kilometers from the Earth, the SSI began taking a series of images through its six color filters once each minute for 25 hours. The images were then assembled into a time lapse color video of the Earth as it rotated and its dynamic cloud systems moved. Eight days after its closest approach, Galileo wrapped up its observations of our home world as it headed back into interplanetary space.
Afterwards
During its encounter with the Earth, Galileo responded to over 7,000 commands and transmitted 58 billion bits of data including 2,675 images from the SSI. As anticipated, the close flyby increased the spacecraft’s heliocentric velocity by a whopping 5.2 kilometers per second placing it into a larger 0.90 by 2.27 AU orbit with a slightly higher inclination. This new orbit would now penetrate the Asteroid Belt allowing Galileo’s encounter with 951 Gaspra in October 1991 and the subsequent second flyby of the Earth in December 1992 which would give the spacecraft the final boost it needed to reach Jupiter in December 1995.
With a treasure trove of data of the Earth from a modern planetary spacecraft at their disposal, Carl Sagan (1934-1996) and some of his colleagues decided to examine the data for signs of life. They argued that this analysis would serve as a control experiment for the search of extraterrestrial life using modern spacecraft. The Ultraviolet Spectrometer clearly detected free oxygen in the atmosphere in a concentration of 19±5% (compared to the actual value of 21%) while spectra from the Near Infrared Mapping Spectrometer revealed variable amounts of water vapor and carbon dioxide at a concentration of 500±25 parts per million (close to the value of 350 ppm at the time). Also detected, in nonequilibrium amounts, were traces of methane and N2O which we recognize as being potential biosignatures.
Multispectral global imagery showed that the Earth’s landscape is covered in a surface pigment with a sharp absorption edge at wavelengths redder than about 700 nm. We know that this is the result of chlorophyll contained in the plants that cover much of the Earth’s land surface. While all these findings are suggestive of life, probably the most definitive proof of life on Earth came from the radio emissions detected by Galileo’s Plasma Wave experiment. It clearly showed near-constant, modulated emissions at frequencies in the 4 to 5+ MHz range. The properties of these emissions make it unlikely that they are natural in origin but are instead artificial VLF transmissions suggesting intelligent life on Earth – perhaps we will one day locate this intelligence 😉 .
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Related Reading
“First Pictures: Voyager 1 Portrait of the Earth & Moon – September 18, 1977”, Drew Ex Machina, September 18, 2020 [Post]
“The Future That Never Came: Planetary Missions of the 1980s – II”, Drew Ex Machina, December 1, 2014 [Post]
General References
Theodore C. Clarke, “Galileo – The Encounter with Earth”, Proceedings of the Second Annual NASA Science Internet User Working Group Conference [San Mateo, CA; February 11-14, 1991], NASA Conference Publication 3117, pp 233-256, February 13, 1991
Torrence Johnson, “The Project Science Group”, The Galileo Messenger, NASA/JPL, Issue 25, pp 5-7, September 1990
Carl Sagan et al., “A Search for life on Earth from the Galileo spacecraft”, Nature, Vol. 365, pp 715-721, 21 October, 1993
Paolo Ulivi with David M. Harland, Robotic Exploration of the Solar System Part 2: Hiatus and Renewal 1983-1996, Springer Praxis, 2009
“A Closer Look at the Earth and Moon”, The Galileo Messenger, NASA/JPL, Issue 27, pp 1-6, April 1991