NASA Viking Missions

  • Viking 1 Launch

    Viking 1 Launch
    Mass: 576 kilograms (1,270 pounds)
    Science instruments: Biology instrument, gas chromatograph/mass spectrometer, X-ray fluorescence spectrometer, seismometer, meteorology instrument, stereo color cameras, physical and magnetic properties of soil, aerodynamic properties and composition of Martian atmosphere with changes in altitude
  • Viking 2 Launch

    The two Landers had the same payload
  • Viking 1 Orbiter Arrival

    The Viking 1 arrived to the designated area above the martian atmosphere
  • Viking 1 Lander Arrives

    The Viking 1 Lander lands on the western slope of Chryse Planitia (the Plains of Gold)
  • First Image From Mars Surface

    The Viking 1 took the very first colored image of the Martian surface
  • Viking 2 Orbiter Arrival

    Viking 2 Orbiter Arrival
    The Viking 2 Orbiter arrived to the orbit shortly after Viking 1 approximately 4,600 miles from the other lander
  • Viking 2 Lander Arrives

    The Viking 2 lander touched down at the Utopia Planitia
  • Estimated Viking 1 Lifespan

    NASA had anticipated that the orbiter and lander would only last for 90 days, but in reality it lasted much longer.
  • Estimated Viking 2 Lifespan

    The Viking 2 was also estimated to only last for 90 days, but like the Viking 1, it lasted much longer than anticipated.
  • Viking 2 Stops Functioning

    The Viking 2 only lasted about half the amount of time that the Viking 1 did. This was mostly due to "variations in sunlight" which caused the power source of the Viking 2 to decay much quicker.
  • Viking 2's Last Transmission

    Though it stopped fully functioning in 1978, the Viking 2 continued to transmit data to NASA research centers on Earth for about two more years.
  • Viking 1 Mission Conclusion

    The Viking 1 lasted about four years and completed a total of 1,489 orbits of Mars.
  • Last Transmission from the Viking 1

    The last transmission from the Viking 1, much like the Viking 2, came two years after it stopped fully functioning.
  • Possibility of Water on Mars

    The Spirit and Opportunity rovers, inspired by the Viking missions, made major headway to finding life on Mars when they discovered a region that had a wet and possibly habitable environment many years ago.
  • NASA's Phoenix Lander

    The Phoenix Mars Lander finds that Martian soil that was examined by the Viking 1 lander in 1980 may have contained carbon based chemical building blocks of life