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  • Navigating
    at Sea
    • Challenges of Sea Navigation
    • Navigating Without a Clock
    • The Longitude Problem
    • The U.S. Goes to Sea
    • Navigate at Sea! Activity
  • Navigating
    in the Air
    • Challenges of Air Navigation
    • Early Air Navigators
    • Navigation at War
    • Navigate the Skies! Activity
  • Navigating
    in Space
    • Challenges of Space Navigation
    • Reaching for the Moon
    • Navigating in Deep Space
    • Navigate in Space! Activity
  • Satellite Navigation
    • Challenges of Satellite Navigation
    • Reliable Global Navigation
    • Global Positioning System (GPS)
    • Who Uses Satellite Navigation
  • Navigation
    for Everyone
    • Meet a Professional Navigator
    • Personal Navigation Stories
  • Timeline of Innovation
  • Artifacts
  • Learning Resources
  • Multimedia Gallery
  • Research
  • Visit the Exhibition

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Time and Navigation Home
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Time and Navigation
The untold story of getting from here to there.
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Search form

  • Navigating at Sea
  • Navigating in the Air
  • Navigating in Space
  • Satellite Navigation
  • Navigation for Everyone
  • Timeline of Innovation
  • Artifacts
  • Learning Resources
  • Multimedia Gallery
  • Research Journal
  • Visit the Exhibition
  • Challenges of Space Navigation
    • Navigation Gone Wrong: Mariner 1
    • Navigate in Space! Activity
  • Reaching for the Moon
    • First Attempts
    • Hitting the Moon
    • Human Steps
      • Meet the Navigator: James A. Lovell, Jr.
  • Navigating in Deep Space
    • Gravity Assist
    • Radio Network
    • Visiting Other Worlds
    • Meet the Navigator: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
  • Navigate in Space! Activity

Explore More

Landing Ellipse for the Curiosity Rover Mars mission »
Mercury Control Room »
Deep Space »
Navigation in Space »
70 Meter Antenna at Goldstone Facility »
Navigation Gone Wrong

Mariner 1 Destroyed

The first American spacecraft sent to explore another planet, Mariner 1 was launched on July 22, 1962. But it never reached Venus. It never even reached space.

WHAT HAPPENED

Unbeknownst to its operators, the launch computer that controlled the Atlas rocket carrying Mariner 1 contained a tiny programming error. A single character had been left out of the guidance equations.

THE CONSEQUENCES

About four minutes into its flight, the Atlas rocket carrying Mariner 1 began behaving erratically. The rocket had to be destroyed, and with it Mariner 1.

LESSONS LEARNED

The disaster revealed a critical need to thoroughly debug software before launch. NASA also learned that software can be engineered so that small errors do not impact safety. Thanks to NASA's corrective actions, several Apollo lunar modules safely landed on the Moon despite minor software "bugs."

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Mariner 1 Launch
Launch of Mariner 1 on July 22, 1962.
Credit: NASA Kennedy Space Center via National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution

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Mariner 1 Control/Testing Room
Engineers testing systems before the launch of Mariner 1 in 1962.
Credit: National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution

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Mariner 2
A backup Mariner spacecraft hangs in the National Air and Space Museum’s Milestones of Flight gallery.
Credit: National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution

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Mercury Control Room
Beginning in 1961, U.S. manned space missions were controlled from this room, "Mercury Control," at Cape Canaveral, Florida.
Credit: National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution
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  • Navigating at Sea
    • Challenges of Sea Navigation
    • Navigating Without a Clock
    • The Longitude Problem
    • The U.S. Goes to Sea
    • Navigate at Sea! Activity
  • Navigating in the Air
    • Challenges of Air Navigation
    • Early Air Navigators
    • Navigation at War
    • Navigate the Skies! Activity
  • Navigating in Space
    • Challenges of Space Navigation
      • Navigation Gone Wrong: Mariner 1
      • Navigate in Space! Activity
    • Reaching for the Moon
    • Navigating in Deep Space
    • Navigate in Space! Activity
  • Satellite Navigation
    • Challenges of Satellite Navigation
    • Reliable Global Navigation
    • Global Positioning System (GPS)
    • Who Uses Satellite Navigation
  • Navigation for Everyone
    • Meet a Professional Navigator
    • Personal Navigation Stories
  • Timeline of Innovation
  • Artifacts
  • Learning Resources
  • Multimedia Gallery
  • Research
  • Visit the Exhibition
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  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • Sponsors
  • Press
  • Donate
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