Deep Space Probes

For a comprehensive and up-to-date list of deep space craft, visit NASA's Solar System Exploration Missions page.

NOTE: This page is no longer maintained. I created this page as a result of a discussion with Larry Kellogg. I thought it was a neat idea, and I maintained it for quite a while afterwards, but it is nowadays superseded by far better resources.

Even as you read this, there are several man-made probes serving as our remote eyes throughout the Solar System. Some perform useful and valuable observations on a daily basis, such as the Solar and Heliocentric Observatory, monitoring the Sun 24 hours a day. Others are living relics from the dawn of space exploration, including the longest-living space probe ever made, NASA's Pioneer 6. Well, maybe this isn't exactly Arthur C. Clarke's vision of the year 2001, with a nuclear-powered manned spaceship en route towards Jupiter, but we are getting there... at least some of our faithful remote outposts are out there already, as a first step towards what I hope will be our eventual conquest of the Solar System and beyond.

These pages provide summary information on all "live" probes that operate away from the immediate vicinity of the Earth. In other words, probes that are either going somewhere, or are "looking up", not down.

Please note that this 'portal' is the result of the efforts of one person who's not in any way associated with the space agencies whose missions are featured here. One consequence is that the information is not always up-to-date. For instance, the 'Last reported contact' field contains information about the last contact I heard about (from an e-mail newsletter, a visit to the probe's Web site, etc.) and if it shows a date months in the past, that doesn't necessarily mean that the probe has not been heard from by its operators in the intervening time!

New!Return visitors may have noticed that the appearance of this page has changed. I believe the new format is more easily readable (no more tables twice as wide as your screen), and it also made it easier for me to switch to a database-driven version of this page.

Deep Space Probes

Planetary probes have a specific mission: to explore the surface or vicinity of a planet in the Solar System. Not surprisingly, Mars remains the most popular target. Other deep space probes explore the Sun, other planets, or are on their way out of the Solar System.

Lunar Probes
The last Apollo landed on the Moon over 30 years ago, but our satellite has not been completely abandoned.
  Probe Name Date of launch Current Location Mission description Last reported contact Current status Live telemetry Project home page Comments
Chandrayaan-1  Chandrayaan-1  2008-10-22  Lunar orbit  Lunar mapping  2009-08-28  Ceased operations due to star sensor failure    Indian Space Agency   
Chang'e 2  Chang'e 2  2010-10-01  Lunar orbit  Lunar exploration  Daily  Normal    China National Space Administration   
Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite  Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite  2009-06-19  Elongated Earth orbit  Lunar impact  2009-10-09  Destroyed by planned lunar impact    NASA Ames   
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter  Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter  2009-06-19  Lunar polar orbit  Lunar survey  Daily  Normal    NASA GSFC   

 

Mars Probes
Many deep space probes have been launched in recent years with a specific mission: to explore the Red Planet.
  Probe Name Date of launch Current Location Mission description Last reported contact Current status Live telemetry Project home page Comments
Mars Express  Mars Express  2003-06-02  Martian orbit  Lander, orbiter  Daily  No contact with lander    European Space Agency   
Mars Odyssey  Mars Odyssey  2001-04-07  Martian orbit  Mapping chemical elements  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL   
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter  Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter  2005-08-12  Martian orbit  Mars exploration  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL   
MER-A   MER-A "Spirit"  2003-06-10  Gusev crater  Mars exploration rover  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL   
MER-B   MER-B "Opportunity"  2003-07-07  Meridiani Planum  Mars exploration rover  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL   
Planet-B (Nozomi)  Planet-B (Nozomi)  1998-07-04  Solar orbit  Solar system observations  2003-12-09  Failed to achieve Martian orbit    Japanese Space Agency  Designed to orbit Mars; mission altered due to excessive propellant loss and equipment failure 

 

Other Planetary Probes
Other planets are also targeted. Galileo recently finished its mission at Jupiter; Saturn is about to be investigated by Cassini, and hopefully, more probes will be under way in the near future.
  Probe Name Date of launch Current Location Mission description Last reported contact Current status Live telemetry Project home page Comments
Cassini  Cassini  1997-10-15  Saturnian orbit  Exploring the Saturn system  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL  Huygens probe landed successfully on Titan 
Messenger  Messenger  2004-08-02  En route to Mercury  Exploring Mercury  Daily  Normal    Johns Hopkins University   
Venus Express  Venus Express  2005-11-09  In Venutian orbit  Venus orbiter  Daily  Normal    ESA   

 

Interplanetary Probes
Other probes are studying the Solar System, or are on their way towards non-planetary targets. Some, like the early Pioneers, have long outlived their planned lifetimes but they just refuse to die; the engineering marvel called Pioneer 6 has been transmitting faithfully for over 35 years! (Design lifetime: 6 months.)
  Probe Name Date of launch Current Location Mission description Last reported contact Current status Live telemetry Project home page Comments
Dawn  Dawn  2007-09-27  Solar orbit  Investigate Ceres and Vesta  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL   
Deep Impact / EPOXI  Deep Impact / EPOXI  2005-01-12  Solar orbit  Comet impact mission  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL  Impact mission completed; spacecraft remains in usable trajectory, pending proposals for further use. 
Muses-C (Hayabusa)  Muses-C (Hayabusa)  2003-09-05  on Earth  Asteroid sample return  2010-06-14  Sample return capsule successfully recovered    Japanese Space Agency   
Planet-C (Akatsuki)  Planet-C (Akatsuki)  2010-05-20  En route to Venus  Venus exploration  Daily  Normal    Japanese Space Agency   
Rosetta  Rosetta  2004-03-02  En route to comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko  Comet orbiter and lander  Daily  Normal    European Space Agency   
Stardust  Stardust  1999-02-07  Solar orbit  Comet and interstellar dust collection  2006-01-30  Hibernation    NASA JPL  Successful sample return; spacecraft remains in orbit 
Ulysses  Ulysses  1990-10-06  Solar polar orbit  Exploring the Sun's polar regions  2009-06-30  Ceased operations    European Space Agency   

 

Interstellar Probes
Some of our live space probes are actually leaving the solar system. The two Voyagers and the two no longer functional Pioneers are all much farther from the Sun than Pluto, serving as our first messengers to the stars.
  Probe Name Date of launch Current Location Mission description Last reported contact Current status Live telemetry Project home page Comments
Voyager 1  Voyager 1  1977-09-05  Outer solar system (~81 AU)  Outer solar system exploration  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL   
Voyager 2  Voyager 2  1977-08-20  Outer solar system (~65 AU)  Outer solar system exploration  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL   

Space-Based Observatories

Several space probes are presently in heliocentric "halo" orbits. Some are Sun-observing, while others are en route to non-planetary targets. Yet more observatories are Earth-orbiting satellites, but instead of looking back down on our planet, they are looking "up".

Observatories in Halo Orbits
Especially well suited for solar observation are orbital locations at the so-called Sun-Earth Lagrange points. Probes located near these positions remain at a fixed position relative to both the Earth and the Sun.
  Probe Name Date of launch Current Location Mission description Last reported contact Current status Live telemetry Project home page Comments
ACE  ACE  1997-08-25  Sun-Earth Lagrange point L1  Solar wind composition analysis  Daily  Normal    California Institute of Technology   
Fermi  Fermi  2008-06-11  L2 Lagrange Point  Gamma ray astronomy  Daily  Normal    NASA GSFC   
Herschel  Herschel  2009-05-14  L2 Lagrange Point  Infrared observatory  Daily  Normal    European Space Agency   
Kepler  Kepler  2009-03-07  Solar orbit  Search for habitable planets  Daily  Normal    NASA Ames   
Microwave Anisotropy Probe  Microwave Anisotropy Probe  2001-06-30  Sun-Earth Lagrange point L2  Mapping the microwave background  Daily  Normal    NASA Goddard   
Planck  Planck  2009-05-14  L2 Lagrange Point  Cosmic microwave background observations  Daily  Normal    European Space Agency   
SOHO  SOHO  1995-12-02  Sun-Earth Lagrange point L1  Continuous solar observation  Daily  High-gain antenna pointing anomaly    NASA  An amazing recovery occurred in 1998 
WIND  WIND  1994-11-01  Sun-Earth Lagrange point L1  Solar wind observations  Daily  Normal  Near Real-Time Data  NASA Goddard   
WISE  WISE  2009-12-14  Earth polar orbit  Infrared survey astronomy  Daily  Normal    NASA JPL   

 

Earth-orbiting Observatories
The Hubble Space Telescope is certainly the best-known Earth-orbiting observatory, but it is definitely not the only one.
  Probe Name Date of launch Current Location Mission description Last reported contact Current status Live telemetry Project home page Comments
Astro-F  Astro-F  2006-02-22  Polar Earth orbit (745 km)  Infrared astronomy  Daily  Normal    Japanese Space Agency   
Chandra X-Ray Observatory  Chandra X-Ray Observatory  1999-07-23  Elliptical Earth orbit  X-ray astronomy  Daily  Normal    Harvard University   
COROT  COROT  2006-12-27  Earth polar orbit  Extrasolar planetary observation  Daily  Normal    Centre National D'études Spatiales   
Galaxy Evolution Explorer  Galaxy Evolution Explorer  2003-04-28  702km×690km Earth orbit (preliminary)  Ultraviolet astronomy  Daily  Normal    California Institute of Technology   
HETE-2  HETE-2  2000-10-09  625 km Earth orbit  Gamma-Ray Burst observations  Daily  Normal    Massachussets Institute of Technology   
Hubble Space Telescope  Hubble Space Telescope  1990-04-25  Low Earth Orbit  Optical astronomy  Daily  Normal    Space Telescope Science Institute   
Integral  Integral  2002-10-17  Elliptical Earth orbit  Gamma-ray astronomy  Daily  Normal    European Space Agency   
MOST  MOST  2003-06-30  800km Earth orbit  High-precision astornomy  Daily  Normal    Canadian Space Agency  MOST is a 60kg microsatellite launched by a Soviet ICBM booster 
PAMELA  PAMELA  2006-06-15  Elliptical Earth orbit  Antimatter astronomy  Daily  Normal    Italy - Russia  A Payload for Antimatter Matter Exploration and Light-nuclei Astrophysics 
SIRTF  SIRTF  2003-08-25  Solar orbit  Infrared astronomy  Daily  Normal    California Institute of Technology   
Stereo  Stereo  2006-10-25  Eccentric Earth (transfer) orbit  Solar observations  Daily  Normal    NASA GSFC  Simultaneous observations of the Sun from two spacecraft 
SWAS  SWAS  1998-12-09  Low Earth orbit  Submillimeter-wave astronomy  Daily  Normal    Harvard University   
Swift  Swift  2004-11-20  Low Earth orbit  Gamma-Ray Burst observations  Daily  Normal    NASA Goddard   
TRACE  TRACE  1998-04-02  Sun-synchronous low Earth orbit  Solar coronal observations  Daily  Normal    Lockheed-Martin   
XMM-Newton  XMM-Newton  1999-12-10  Elliptical Earth orbit  X-ray astronomy  n/a  Normal    European Space Agency   

Creation of this page was inspired by a discussion with Larry Kellogg, so perhaps he'll forgive me if I thank you the way he thanks readers of his space-related newsletter: Thanks for looking up.

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accesses to this Web page since December 28, 2001.