Mars 2M No.521

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

Page Revisions

Year Metadata Sections Top Words First Paragraph
2018

63184 characters

4 sections

5 paragraphs

5 images

297 internal links

7 external links

1. Launch

2. See also

3. References

4. External links

2m 0.490

521 0.235

probes 0.176

stage 0.170

1969 0.154

engineers 0.136

launch 0.130

luna 0.121

lander 0.114

altai 0.107

babakin 0.107

discard 0.107

imbalanced 0.107

lagging 0.107

intended 0.101

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

2017

64545 characters

4 sections

5 paragraphs

6 images

300 internal links

7 external links

1. Launch

2. See also

3. References

4. External links

2m 0.490

521 0.235

probes 0.176

stage 0.170

1969 0.154

engineers 0.136

launch 0.130

luna 0.121

lander 0.114

altai 0.107

babakin 0.107

discard 0.107

imbalanced 0.107

lagging 0.107

intended 0.101

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

2016

64315 characters

4 sections

5 paragraphs

6 images

300 internal links

6 external links

1. Launch

2. See also

3. References

4. External links

2m 0.490

521 0.235

probes 0.176

stage 0.170

1969 0.154

engineers 0.136

launch 0.130

luna 0.121

lander 0.114

altai 0.107

babakin 0.107

discard 0.107

imbalanced 0.107

lagging 0.107

intended 0.101

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

2015

61202 characters

3 sections

2 paragraphs

6 images

301 internal links

6 external links

1. Launch

2. References

3. External links

2m 0.507

521 0.365

1969 0.238

stage 0.211

altai 0.166

438 0.155

8k78k 0.148

exploding 0.142

1969a 0.133

rotor 0.133

turbopump 0.130

522 0.127

encoded 0.124

failure 0.122

launch 0.121

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

2014

62258 characters

3 sections

2 paragraphs

6 images

302 internal links

7 external links

1. Launch

2. References

3. External links

2m 0.501

521 0.360

1969 0.236

altai 0.164

stage 0.156

438 0.153

8k78k 0.146

exploding 0.140

1969a 0.132

rotor 0.132

seconds 0.129

turbopump 0.128

fairing 0.125

522 0.125

encoded 0.123

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

2013

40072 characters

2 sections

3 paragraphs

4 images

149 internal links

7 external links

1. References

2. External links

2m 0.501

521 0.360

1969 0.236

altai 0.164

stage 0.156

438 0.153

8k78k 0.146

exploding 0.140

1969a 0.132

rotor 0.132

seconds 0.129

turbopump 0.128

fairing 0.125

522 0.125

encoded 0.123

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

2012

36301 characters

2 sections

3 paragraphs

4 images

144 internal links

7 external links

1. References

2. External links

2m 0.501

521 0.360

1969 0.236

altai 0.164

stage 0.156

438 0.153

8k78k 0.146

exploding 0.140

1969a 0.132

rotor 0.132

seconds 0.129

turbopump 0.128

fairing 0.125

522 0.125

encoded 0.123

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

2011

36385 characters

2 sections

2 paragraphs

4 images

144 internal links

7 external links

1. References

2. External links

2m 0.501

521 0.360

1969 0.235

altai 0.164

stage 0.156

438 0.153

8k78k 0.146

exploding 0.140

1969a 0.132

rotor 0.132

seconds 0.129

turbopump 0.128

fairing 0.125

522 0.125

encoded 0.122

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter and a lander. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

2010

36385 characters

2 sections

2 paragraphs

4 images

144 internal links

7 external links

1. References

2. External links

2m 0.501

521 0.360

1969 0.235

altai 0.164

stage 0.156

438 0.153

8k78k 0.146

exploding 0.140

1969a 0.132

rotor 0.132

seconds 0.129

turbopump 0.128

fairing 0.125

522 0.125

encoded 0.122

Mars 2M No.521 , [1] also known as Mars M-69 No.521 and sometimes identified by NASA as Mars 1969A , was a Soviet spacecraft which was lost in a launch failure in 1969. [2] It consisted of an orbiter and a lander. The spacecraft was intended to image the surface of Mars using three cameras, with images being encoded for transmission back to Earth as television signals. It also carried a radiometer, a series of spectrometers, and an instrument to detect water vapour in the atmosphere of Mars . It was one of two Mars 2M spacecraft, along with Mars 2M No.522 , which was launched in 1969 as part of the Mars programme . Neither launch was successful. [3]

2009

27037 characters

1 sections

3 paragraphs

4 images

132 internal links

3 external links

1. External links

69a 0.410

altai 0.219

1969b 0.205

438 0.205

rocket 0.197

sl 0.195

strewn 0.195

exploding 0.188

documentation 0.176

1969a 0.176

turbopump 0.172

shutdown 0.168

encoded 0.164

soviet 0.155

shot 0.152

Mars 1969A , also known as Mars 69A in Soviet documentation, was one of two identical probes (the other being Mars 1969B ), each consisting of an orbiter and an atmospheric probe. The mission was never officially announced by the Soviet government.

2008

25718 characters

1 sections

3 paragraphs

4 images

129 internal links

3 external links

1. External links

69a 0.410

altai 0.219

1969b 0.205

438 0.205

rocket 0.197

sl 0.195

strewn 0.195

exploding 0.188

documentation 0.176

1969a 0.176

turbopump 0.172

shutdown 0.168

encoded 0.164

soviet 0.155

shot 0.152

Mars 1969A , also known as Mars 69A in Soviet documentation, was one of two identical probes (the other being Mars 1969B ), each consisting of an orbiter and an atmospheric probe. The mission was never officially announced by the Soviet government.

2007

25516 characters

1 sections

3 paragraphs

4 images

129 internal links

2 external links

1. External links

69a 0.410

altai 0.219

1969b 0.205

438 0.205

rocket 0.197

sl 0.195

strewn 0.195

exploding 0.188

documentation 0.176

1969a 0.176

turbopump 0.172

shutdown 0.168

encoded 0.164

soviet 0.155

shot 0.152

Mars 1969A , also known as Mars 69A in Soviet documentation, was one of two identical probes (the other being Mars 1969B ), each consisting of an orbiter and an atmospheric probe. The mission was never officially announced by the Soviet government.

2006

25516 characters

1 sections

3 paragraphs

4 images

129 internal links

2 external links

1. External links

69a 0.410

altai 0.219

1969b 0.205

438 0.205

rocket 0.197

sl 0.195

strewn 0.195

exploding 0.188

documentation 0.176

1969a 0.176

turbopump 0.172

shutdown 0.168

encoded 0.164

soviet 0.155

shot 0.152

Mars 1969A , also known as Mars 69A in Soviet documentation, was one of two identical probes (the other being Mars 1969B ), each consisting of an orbiter and an atmospheric probe. The mission was never officially announced by the Soviet government.