List of missions to Venus

(Redirected from Venus missions)

Launches to Venus
Decade
1960s
18
1970s
11
1980s
8
1990s
1
2000s
2
2010s
5
2020s
1

There have been 46 (including gravity-assist flybys) space missions to the planet Venus. Missions to Venus constitute part of the exploration of Venus. The Soviet Union followed by the United States have soft landed probes on the surface. Venera 7 was the first lander overall and first for the Soviet Union, touching down on 15 December 1970. Pioneer Venus 2 contained the first spacecraft to land from the United States, the Day Probe. Soft landing on 9 December 1978.[1][2][3][4][5][6] The most recent lander was the part of the Vega 2 mission, which soft landed on 15 June 1985.

Global topographic map of Venus, with all probe landings marked (red: returned images; with additional black dot: analyzed samples).

List

As of 2020, the Soviet Union, United States, European Space Agency and Japan have conducted missions to Venus.

Mission Type Legend
  Mission to Venus
  Gravity assist, destination elsewhere
SpacecraftLaunch date[7]OperatorMissionOutcomeRemarksCarrier rocket[8]
Tyazhely Sputnik
(1VA No.1)
4 February 1961OKB-1
 Soviet Union
Impactor[9]Launch failurePower transformer failure, upper stage failed to ignite, never left LEO[9]Molniya
Venera 1
(1VA No.2)
12 February 1961OKB-1
 Soviet Union
Impactor[9]Spacecraft failureCommunications failure. First flyby past another planet, on 19 May 1961 at less than 100,000 kilometres (62,000 mi); no data returnedMolniya
Mariner 1
(P-37)
22 July 1962NASA
 United States
FlybyLaunch failureFailed to orbit Earth; destroyed by range safety following guidance failure[10]Atlas-LV3 Agena-B
2MV-1 No.125 August 1962OKB-1
 Soviet Union
LanderLaunch failurePremature upper stage cutoff due to ullage motor malfunction; never left LEO[10]Molniya
Mariner 2
(P-38)
27 August 1962NASA
 United States
FlybySuccessfulFirst successful flyby past another planet on 14 December 1962Atlas-LV3 Agena-B
2MV-1 No.21 September 1962OKB-1
 Soviet Union
LanderLaunch failureUpper stage fuel valve failed to open, resulting in failure to ignite; never left LEO[10]Molniya
2MV-2 No.112 September 1962OKB-1
 Soviet Union
FlybyLaunch failureAnomalous third stage cutoff resulted in air bubbles forming in fourth stage fuel; fourth stage shut down less than a second after ignition; failed to leave LEO[10]Molniya
3MV-1 No.219 February 1964OKB-1
 Soviet Union
FlybyLaunch failureThird stage oxidizer leak caused propellant to freeze in feed lines, which subsequently cracked; failed to orbit[11]Molniya-M
Kosmos 27
(3MV-1 No.3)
27 March 1964OKB-1
 Soviet Union
Flyby/LanderLaunch failureUpper stage attitude control failure, never left LEO[11]Molniya-M
Zond 1
(3MV-1 No.4)
2 April 1964OKB-1
 Soviet Union
Flyby/LanderSpacecraft failureElectronics shorted out, communications lost before flyby.[11] Flew past Venus on 14 July 1964.Molniya-M
Venera 2
(3MV-4 No.4)
12 November 1965OKB-1
 Soviet Union
FlybySpacecraft failureFlew past Venus on 27 February 1966, closest approach at 02:52 UTC. Communications lost after flyby, before any data could be returned.[12]Molniya-M
Venera 3
(3MV-3 No.1)
16 November 1965OKB-1
 Soviet Union
LanderSpacecraft failureCommunications lost as soon as spacecraft entered atmosphere on 1 March 1966, no data returned. First atmospheric entry and impact on another planet.Molniya-M
Kosmos 96
(3MV-4 No.6)
23 November 1965OKB-1
 Soviet Union
FlybyLaunch failureThird stage combustion chamber exploded, resulting in loss of control, upper stage failed to ignite; Never left LEO[12]Molniya-M
Venera 4
(4V-1 No.310)
12 June 1967Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
AtmosphericSuccessfulReturned atmospheric data during entry on 18 October 1967. First successful atmospheric entry. Never intended to work on surface[13]Molniya-M
Mariner 514 June 1967NASA
 United States
FlybySuccessfulFlyby on 19 October 1967, closest approach at 17:34:56 UTC[14]Atlas SLV-3 Agena-D
Kosmos 167
(4V-1 No.311)
17 June 1967Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
LanderLaunch failureUpper stage failed to ignite; turbopump cooling malfunction. Never left LEO[14]Molniya-M
Venera 5
(4V-1 No.330)
5 January 1969Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
AtmosphericSuccessfulEntered atmosphere on 16 May 1969, operated for 53 minutesMolniya-M
Venera 6
(4V-1 No.331)
10 January 1969Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
AtmosphericSuccessfulEntered atmosphere on 17 May 1969, operated for 51 minutesMolniya-M
Venera 7
(4V-1 No.630)
17 August 1970Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
LanderPartial successLanded at 05:37:10 UTC on 15 December 1970, rolled upon landing and returned severely limited data. First soft landing on another planet.Molniya-M
Kosmos 359
(4V-1 No.631)
22 August 1970Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
LanderLaunch failureNever left LEOMolniya-M
Venera 8
(4V-1 No.670)
27 March 1972Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
LanderSuccessfulLanded at 09:32 UTC on 22 July 1972. First fully successful landing on another planet.Molniya-M
Kosmos 482
(4V-1 No.671)
31 March 1972Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
LanderLaunch failureNever left LEOMolniya-M
Mariner 103 November 1973NASA
 United States
FlybySuccessfulFlyby on 5 February 1974; closest approach at 17:01 UTC; observed Venus and performed gravity assist to reach MercuryAtlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1A
Venera 9
(4V-1 No.660)
8 June 1975Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
Orbiter/LanderSuccessfulEntered orbit on 20 October 1975; lander landed at 05:13 UTC on 22 October. First orbiter of Venus and first images from the surface of another planet.Proton-K/D
Venera 10
(4V-1 No.661)
14 June 1975Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
Orbiter/LanderSuccessfulEntered orbit on 23 October 1975; lander landed at 05:17 UTC on 25 OctoberProton-K/D
Venera 11
(4V-1 No.360)
9 September 1978Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
Flyby/LanderMostly successfulFlyby on 25 December; Lander landed at 03:24 UTC the same day. Multiple instrument failures on landerProton-K/D-1
Venera 12
(4V-1 No.361)
14 September 1978Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
Flyby/LanderMostly successfulLander landed at 03:20 UTC on 21 December 1978. Both cameras on lander failedProton-K/D-1
Pioneer Venus 1
(PV Orbiter)
20 May 1978NASA
 United States
OrbiterSuccessfulEntered orbit on 4 December 1978, decayed on 22 October 1992Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR
Pioneer Venus 2
(PV Multiprobe)
8 August 1978NASA
 United States
AtmosphericSuccessfulEntered the atmosphere on 9 December 1978; consisted of five spacecraft, two of which continued transmitting after reaching the surface[4][1][2][3][5][6]Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR
Venera 13
(4V-1M No.760)
30 October 1981Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
Flyby/LanderSuccessfulLander landed at 03:20 UTC on 1 March 1982. First recording of sounds from another planet.Proton-K/D-1
Venera 14
(4V-1M No.761)
4 November 1981Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
Flyby/LanderSuccessfulLander landed on 5 March 1982.Proton-K/D-1
Venera 15
(4V-2 No.860)
2 June 1983Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
OrbiterSuccessfulEntered orbit 10 October 1983, operated until July 1984Proton-K/D-1
Venera 16
(4V-2 No.861)
7 June 1983Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
OrbiterSuccessfulEntered orbit 11 October 1983, operated until July 1984Proton-K/D-1
Vega 1
(5VK No.901)
15 December 1984Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
Flyby/Atmospheric/LanderMostly successfulLanded 11 June 1985. Atmospheric probe deployed during entry operated for two days. Main bus continued to explore comet 1P/HalleyProton-K/D-1
Vega 2
(5VK No.902)
21 December 1984Lavochkin
 Soviet Union
Flyby/Atmospheric/LanderSuccessfulLanded 15 June 1985. Atmospheric probe deployed during entry operated for two days. Main bus continued to explore comet 1P/HalleyProton-K/D-1
Magellan4 May 1989NASA
 United States
OrbiterSuccessfulEntered orbit 10 October 1990, deorbited 13 October 1994Space Shuttle Atlantis
STS-30 / IUS
Galileo18 October 1989NASA
 United States
Gravity assist at VenusSuccessfulFlyby on 10 February 1990 en route to Jupiter; observed Venus during closest pass.Space Shuttle Atlantis
STS-34 / IUS
Cassini15 October 1997NASA
 United States
Gravity assistSuccessfulFlybys on 26 April 1998 and 24 June 1999 en route to Saturn; observed Venus during closest pass.Titan IV(401)B
MESSENGER3 August 2004NASA
 United States
Gravity assistSuccessfulFlybys on 24 October 2006 and 5 June 2007 en route to Mercury; observed Venus during closest pass.Delta II 7925H
Venus Express9 November 2005ESA
OrbiterSuccessfulEntered orbit 11 April 2006. Full communications lost on 28 November 2014 [15]Soyuz-FG/Fregat
Akatsuki20 May 2010JAXA
 Japan
OrbiterOperationalFlew past Venus on 6 December 2010 after failing to enter orbit. Insertion was successfully reattempted on 7 December 2015.H-IIA 202
IKAROS20 May 2010JAXA
 Japan
FlybySuccessfulExperimental solar sail released from the Akatsuki spacecraft. Flew past Venus on 8 December 2010 but did not make observations.H-IIA 202
Shin'en20 May 2010UNISEC
 Japan
FlybySpacecraft failureCommunications never established after launch. Flew past Venus in December 2010H-IIA 202
Parker Solar Probe12 August 2018NASA
 United States
Gravity assistOperationalFlybys on 10 October 2018, 26 December 2019, 11 July 2020, 20 February 2021, 16 October 2021, 21 August 2023, and 6 November 2024 to lower perihelion for solar observation.Delta IV Heavy/Star 48BV
BepiColombo20 October 2018ESA
Gravity assistSuccessfulFlybys on 15 October 2020 and 11 August 2021 en route to Mercury; observed Venus during closest pass.Ariane 5 ECA
Solar Orbiter10 February 2020ESA
Gravity assistOperationalFlybys on 27 Dec 2020, 8 Aug 2021, 3 Sep 2022, 18 Feb 2025, 24 Dec 2026, 17 Mar 2028, 10 Jun 2029, and 2 Sep 2030 to adjust orbital inclination.Atlas V 411

Statistics

Mission milestone by country

Legend

  Achieved
  Failed attempt
† First to achieve

CountryFlybyOrbitAtmospheric entryImpactLanderRover
Soviet UnionVenera 1, 1961Venera 9, 1975Venera 3, 1966Venera 3, 1966 †Venera 7, 1970
United StatesMariner 2, 1962Pioneer Venus 1, 1978Pioneer Venus 2, 1978Pioneer Venus 2, 1978Pioneer Venus 2, 1978
ESAVenus Express, 2006Venus Express, 2006
JapanAkatsuki, 2010Akatsuki, 2015

By organization

CountryAgency
or company
SuccessfulPartial failureFailureOperationalGravity assistTotal
USSREnergia--11--11
Lavochkin1413--18
 USANASA6-1-411
ESAESA1---23
 JapanJAXA1--1-2
UNISEC--1--1

Future missions

Under development

NameOperatorProposed
launch year
TypeStatusReference
Venus Life FinderMIT/Rocket Lab  United States2025Atmospheric Probeunder development[16]
VOICE (Venus Volcano Imaging and Climate Explorer)CNSA  China2026Orbiterunder development[17]
DAVINCINASA  United States2028Atmospheric Probeunder development[18]
Venus Orbiter MissionISRO  IndiaNET 2028Orbiter/atmospheric probeunder development[19]
Venera-DRoscosmos  Russia2029Orbiter/Landerunder development[20]
EnVisionESA2032Orbiterunder development[21]
VERITASNASA  United States2028Orbiterunder development[22]

Proposed missions

NameOperatorProposed
launch year
TypeStatusReference
CUVENASA  United Statesorbiterproposed[23][24]
EVEESAorbiterproposed[25]
HAVOCNASA  United Statescrewed aircraftconceptual[26]
VAMPNASA  United States2029atmospheric balloonproposed as a secondary payload
on Venera D lander
[27][28]
VICINASA  United States2027landerproposed[29][30]
VISAGENASA  United States2027landerproposed[31][32][33]
VISENASA  United States2024lander and balloonproposed[34]
VOXNASA  United States2027orbiterproposed[35][36]
UAESA  United Arab Emirates2028Flybyproposed
ZephyrNASA  United States2039roverFeasibility study[37]

See also

References