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[Mariner IV] The historic first photograph of Mars. NASA, 14 July 1965....

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[Mariner IV] The historic first photograph of Mars. NASA, 14 July 1965. Printed 1965–1966. Vintage gelatin silver print on fiber-based paper. 20.3×25.4 cm (8×10 in), numbered “NASA G-66–786” in black in bottom margin (NASA Goddard Spaceflight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland).

Literature: TIME, 23 July 1965, cover; Space: A History of Space Exploration in photographs, Chaikin, p. 62; Exploring Space with a Camera, NASA SP-168, Cortright, ed., p. 130.

The historic first close-up photograph of Mars, reproduced on front pages of newspapers all over the world. It shows an area of Mars near the boundary of Elysium Planitia to the west and Arcadia Planitia to the east, about 330 km across by 1200 km from limb to bottom of frame. The photograph features three different processing of the image.

The Mariner IV spacecraft was managed by scientists of NASA JPL. It captured the first images of another planet ever returned from deep space. The photograph was taken by a television camera that was nearly 150 million miles away, farther from Earth than any camera had ever traveled before. It was riding on Mariner IV, which, after an interplanetary journey of 7 1/2 months, flew within 9847 kilometers of Mars on July 15, 1965. It took more than 8 hours for the spacecraft to send across some 150 million miles the 240 000 bits that constituted this first photograph. Mariner IV’s camera, its shutter automatically operating every 48 seconds as red and green filters were alternated before its lens, took a total of 21 complete pictures and a fraction of another. These pictures provided man with his first chance since the invention of the telescope to view the surface of Mars without the hindrance of “straining to see through the Earth’s atmosphere like a driver peering through a rain-spattered windshield,” as Dr. Robert Jastrow has expressed it. (Cortright, p. 130).

“This first image of the Red Planet sent back from space from the probe of Mariner IV caused as much mixed consternation and satisfaction as any photograph on record. [...] For multitudes of human beings the idea of being alone in the universe is intolerable and the Mariner IV picture of the Martian surface, more arid and hostile than the wastes of Gobi, surely caused tremendous dismay. For others, including myself, content to be forever solitary in this remote galactic backwater and not caring much one way or another about fellow beings in the cosmos, the portrait of Mars was comforting in a bleak way. Confirming our loneliness, at least in the solar system, the scarred landscape caused us to cherish all the more intensely the luxuriant, sweetly habitable globe we live on. And it let us turn our attention to those amazing undertakings in space, already being prepared, that were closer to home yet no less awesome for that.” William Styron, American writer (Schick and Van Haaften, foreword, p. 6).

“The historic value of these photos is clear. Their scientific value lies primarily in their indication of the existence of clouds and its demonstration of the importance and feasibility of imagery as a scientific tool for planetary exploration. Many scientists before that time had considered the surface of Mars to resemble more closely that of the Earth than that of the Moon. These pictures, portending a complete rearrangement of Mars on the family tree of the solar system, must be regarded as one of the high points of discovery of the space age, if not of the 20th century. Because of the speed with which photographic data can be disseminated, and the universal understanding of pictures, the entire world truly shared in the excitement of this discovery.” Bruce Murray, California Institute of Technology (Cortright, p. 131).

Condition Report:Excellent condition.

Please notice: Supplementary material not included.

Category:Photos ▸ Vintage photographs

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[Mariner IV] The historic first photograph of Mars. NASA, 14 July 1965. Printed 1965–1966. Vintage gelatin silver print on fiber-based paper. 20.3×25.4 cm (8×10 in), numbered “NASA G-66–786” in black in bottom margin (NASA Goddard Spaceflight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland).

Literature: TIME, 23 July 1965, cover; Space: A History of Space Exploration in photographs, Chaikin, p. 62; Exploring Space with a Camera, NASA SP-168, Cortright, ed., p. 130.

The historic first close-up photograph of Mars, reproduced on front pages of newspapers all over the world. It shows an area of Mars near the boundary of Elysium Planitia to the west and Arcadia Planitia to the east, about 330 km across by 1200 km from limb to bottom of frame. The photograph features three different processing of the image.

The Mariner IV spacecraft was managed by scientists of NASA JPL. It captured the first images of another planet ever returned from deep space. The photograph was taken by a television camera that was nearly 150 million miles away, farther from Earth than any camera had ever traveled before. It was riding on Mariner IV, which, after an interplanetary journey of 7 1/2 months, flew within 9847 kilometers of Mars on July 15, 1965. It took more than 8 hours for the spacecraft to send across some 150 million miles the 240 000 bits that constituted this first photograph. Mariner IV’s camera, its shutter automatically operating every 48 seconds as red and green filters were alternated before its lens, took a total of 21 complete pictures and a fraction of another. These pictures provided man with his first chance since the invention of the telescope to view the surface of Mars without the hindrance of “straining to see through the Earth’s atmosphere like a driver peering through a rain-spattered windshield,” as Dr. Robert Jastrow has expressed it. (Cortright, p. 130).

“This first image of the Red Planet sent back from space from the probe of Mariner IV caused as much mixed consternation and satisfaction as any photograph on record. [...] For multitudes of human beings the idea of being alone in the universe is intolerable and the Mariner IV picture of the Martian surface, more arid and hostile than the wastes of Gobi, surely caused tremendous dismay. For others, including myself, content to be forever solitary in this remote galactic backwater and not caring much one way or another about fellow beings in the cosmos, the portrait of Mars was comforting in a bleak way. Confirming our loneliness, at least in the solar system, the scarred landscape caused us to cherish all the more intensely the luxuriant, sweetly habitable globe we live on. And it let us turn our attention to those amazing undertakings in space, already being prepared, that were closer to home yet no less awesome for that.” William Styron, American writer (Schick and Van Haaften, foreword, p. 6).

“The historic value of these photos is clear. Their scientific value lies primarily in their indication of the existence of clouds and its demonstration of the importance and feasibility of imagery as a scientific tool for planetary exploration. Many scientists before that time had considered the surface of Mars to resemble more closely that of the Earth than that of the Moon. These pictures, portending a complete rearrangement of Mars on the family tree of the solar system, must be regarded as one of the high points of discovery of the space age, if not of the 20th century. Because of the speed with which photographic data can be disseminated, and the universal understanding of pictures, the entire world truly shared in the excitement of this discovery.” Bruce Murray, California Institute of Technology (Cortright, p. 131).

Condition Report:Excellent condition.

Please notice: Supplementary material not included.

Category:Photos ▸ Vintage photographs

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Sale price
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Estimate
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Time, Location
23 Mar 2023
Denmark, Havnen
Auction House
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