China's Plan to Land Astronauts on the Moon
Subtitles
  • Off
  • English

The Last Images From Doomed Space Probes

The Last Images From Doomed Space Probes

These space explorers managed to document their final moments, sending back precious data before going silent forever.

We may earn a commission from links on this page.
Start Slideshow

To all the space probes we’ve loved before: sorry! You fell into Saturn, drifted into deep space, suffocated in Martian dust—all for the greater good of science. Today, we’re memorializing the space explorers that met dramatic endings far, far from Earth.

Advertisement

An earlier version of this article was published on June 16, 2021. We are updating it as additional probes meet their demise.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

2 / 12

DART, Dimorphos

DART, Dimorphos

The second-to-last image sent back by the DART asteroid-smashing probe. September 26, 2022.
The second-to-last image sent back by the DART asteroid-smashing probe. September 26, 2022.
Image: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL

NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft was doomed from the start—its creators designed it to smash into an asteroid. The DART mission, completed in September 2022, aimed to find out if humankind could change the trajectory of an Earth-threatening asteroid, should the need ever arise in the future. DART passed with flying colors; the spacecraft collided with a small (non-threatening) moonlet named Dimorphos about 6.8 million miles from Earth. Above is the last complete image sent by DART, showing a 100-foot-wide swathe of Dimorphos about 2 seconds before impact. Below is the last image from DART; it’s incomplete because DART collided with the asteroid as the image was being transmitted to Earth. Scientists later determined that the asteroid’s orbit had changed by 32 minutes—a resounding success.

Advertisement
The final, incomplete image from DART before it impacted the asteroid’s surface.
The final, incomplete image from DART before it impacted the asteroid’s surface.
Image: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL
Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

3 / 12

Roscosmos Luna-25

Roscosmos Luna-25

Image for article titled The Last Images From Doomed Space Probes
Image: IKI RAS

The Russian space agency Roscosmos’ Luna-25 lander was the country’s first mission to the Moon in 47 years. But Luna-25 didn’t land on the Moon—it crashed into it on August 19, 2023, after an attempted maneuver to orbit the Moon instead caused the spacecraft to collide with the lunar surface. Its last images were snaps of Earth (left) and the Moon (right), taken at the same moment on August 13.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

4 / 12

Cassini, Saturn

Cassini, Saturn

Cassini snuck a final shot of Saturn as it headed into the planet.
Cassini’s last image was taken on September 14, 2017.
Image: NASA

Cassini, after orbiting Saturn for 13 fruitful years, was decommissioned in 2017 in one of the most epic ways imaginable, as NASA engineers instructed the probe to plunge directly into the ringed planet. During its lifespan, Cassini illuminated alien realms where methane runs like water and geysers of ice blast into space. It also captured the hauntingly beautiful dance of Saturn’s moons, at least two of which—Titan and Enceladus—could potentially harbor life.

Advertisement

In its final days, Cassini was running out of fuel, and NASA didn’t want to risk an out-of-control probe crashing into (and contaminating) one of those moons. When Cassini hit Saturn’s atmosphere, it likely burned up and disintegrated within a few minutes, according to NASA. Along with other data it was taking during its fatal plunge, the spacecraft sent images back to Earth. The last image, above, depicts a looming Saturn—huge in Cassini’s field of view—that welcomes Cassini on its final fall. In the bottom of the image, the rings are visible. The top half of the image shows the planet at night, facing away from the Sun but still illuminated by light reflected off the rings.

A view from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, December 6, 2007. Three moons are visible.
A view from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, December 6, 2007. Three moons are visible.
Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

5 / 12

Opportunity, Mars

Opportunity, Mars

Opportunity’s last images give a glimpse of the Sun through a June 2018 dust storm.
Opportunity’s last images give a glimpse of the Sun through a June 2018 dust storm.
Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell/ASU

Talk about ominous. While Cassini’s final image covers a luminous swath of Saturn’s surface, the last view from NASA’s Opportunity rover was just a flicker of light through a dark Martian sky. Indeed, Opportunity’s watch ended with an intense dust storm in 2018, 14 years into the rover’s tenure on the Red Planet. Not much can be made out in the two images other than a slightly brighter spot in both. That’s the Sun, nearly blocked out by the planet-wide dust storm that sealed Oppy’s fate.

Advertisement
This image, taken by the Opportunity rover on March 31, 2016, shows a Martian dust devil in Marathon Valley.
This image, taken by the Opportunity rover on March 31, 2016, shows a Martian dust devil in Marathon Valley.
Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

6 / 12

MESSENGER, Mercury

MESSENGER, Mercury

Orbiters tend go to out with more of a bang than rovers. Cassini’s plunge into Saturn’s atmosphere was thrilling, yes, but imagine the sound a craft would make hitting a rocky world’s surface at full speed. That’s what happened to NASA’s MESSENGER orbiter, the first spacecraft to ever orbit Mercury. It encircled the closest planet to the Sun for four years (three more than planned!), culminating in its greeting the world head-on. On April 30, 2015, MESSENGER transmitted an image of Jokai, a crater about as wide as the English Channel. It was the last image the trailblazing spacecraft would send; later that day, it crashed just north of the planet’s Shakespeare basin. It was pretty dramatic—the bard would’ve been proud.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

7 / 12

Huygens, Titan

Huygens, Titan

Titan's golden atmosphere, plus rocks.
The only images we have of Titan’s surface come from the short-lived Huygens probe. Could life be somewhere beyond this horizon?
Image: ESA/NASA/JPL/University of Arizona

Having piggybacked to Saturn aboard Cassini, the Huygens probe was charged with descending through the atmosphere of Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, which some astrobiologists believe could host microbial life. During its parachute-slowed descent on January 14, 2005, Huygens collected information on Titan’s atmosphere, wind, electromagnetic activity, and chemistry. Once the probe landed—scientists weren’t sure if the surface would be liquid or solid; it turned out to be the latter—it began snapping images of its alien surroundings. Titan remains the most distant surface humans have landed a spacecraft on. Huygens transmitted data from this spot for just over an hour before going silent.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

8 / 12

Venera 13, Venus

Venera 13, Venus

Venera 13 peers down at Venus.
Venus, in all its stinking hot glory.
Image: USSR Academy of Sciences / Brown University

Decades before the other missions on this list, the USSR launched a series of probes to Venus. The Venera program (Russian for “Venus”) ran from 1961 to 1983 and included a number of flyby spacecraft, orbiters, and landers. Four of those landers—Venera 9, 10, 13, and 14—returned images from the Venusian surface. But Venera 13’s images were the first in color.

Advertisement

Venus’ surface is nearly 900 degrees Fahrenheit, with the pressure of many dozens of Earth atmospheres. Venera 13 survived only about two hours on the hostile planet, sending panoramic images back to Earth. One of those images was in color: The landscape appears yellow due to the dense atmosphere. A version of the image with those atmospheric effects removed reveals a stretch of rock and dusty terrain, but not much else. A discarded lens cap and the rim of the lander are visible at center.

While NASA made it to Venus with the Magellan mission, the spacecraft never reached the planet’s surface. In 1994, it dove into Venus’ atmosphere, where it burned up. Hopefully the agency’s upcoming missions to Venus—VERITAS and DAVINCI+—provide us better views of Venus’ inhospitable terrain.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

9 / 12

Beresheet, the Moon

Beresheet, the Moon

A look at the lunar surface from Beresheet.
Beresheet’s final view before it crashed into the lunar surface.
Image: SpaceIL / Twitter

In 2019, Israel’s Beresheet lunar lander suffered a glitch during descent that prevented the craft from slowing down for a gentle landing. Instead, the probe crashed into the surface, ending the mission before it could even begin. Had the Beresheet mission had been successful, it would’ve been the first privately built spacecraft to land on the Moon. Now, it seems that honor will belong to SpaceX, though hurdles remain.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

10 / 12

Spirit, Mars

Spirit, Mars

Spirit’s final panorama, taken about a month before it went dark.
Spirit’s final panorama, taken about a month before it went dark.
Image: Mars Exploration Rover Mission, NASA, JPL, Cornell; Image Processing: Kenneth Kremer, Marco Di Lorenzo

Like many of NASA’s Mars rovers, Spirit stayed operational well past its expected lifespan. And when it finally did succumb to the Red Planet’s hospitality, it wasn’t the extremely thin atmosphere or frigid temperatures that did it in. It wasn’t even an intense dust storm like the one Opportunity faced. Nope, it was some soft dirt that acted like quicksand, trapping Spirit in place in May 2009. By January 2010, Spirit had been reclassified as a stationary science instrument.

Advertisement

But the rover—ahem, stationary science instrument—was stuck at such an angle that it wasn’t getting enough power from its solar panels. In March 2010, Spirit went quiet, and NASA hasn’t heard from the rover since. Its last panorama shows the crater that became its final resting place. Perhaps when humans one day get to Mars, they can finally set the rover free.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

11 / 12

Voyager, the Outer Solar System

Voyager, the Outer Solar System

Earth's "Pale Blue Dot" as seen by Voyager.
Well, there’s every person you’ve ever known or will know in one shot.
Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Though they’re not truly dead, the Voyager probes are on a one-way mission out of the solar system, and their last images were captured in 1990. The picture above was taken in February 1990, when Voyager 1—the farthest human-made object—was 3.7 billion miles from the Sun, just 34 days before the craft shut down its cameras to conserve energy for the long journey ahead. (The spacecraft is still chugging along, now 14.2 billion miles from the Sun and detecting all kinds of weird phenomenon.) This blurry image was Carl Sagan’s idea; he had suggested to NASA that one of the Voyager probes look back at Earth, revealing our world as a “pale blue dot” in the vastness of space. This unparalleled portrait of humanity was captured just half an hour before Voyager shut down its cameras. Worth it? Beyond the shadow of a doubt.

Advertisement