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On This Day In Space: March 27, 1989: Phobos 2 mission to Mars moon ends in failure

On March 27, 1989, the Soviet Union’s Phobos 2 mission to Mars’ moons ended in failure. But the whole mission was definitely not a failure. 

Phobos 2 arrived in Mars orbit two months earlier and had been studying Mars and Phobos, the larger of the planet’s two moons. During that time, it beamed 37 pictures of Phobos back to Earth. 

An artist’s illustration of the Phobos 2 mission to the Mars moon Phobos launched by the former Soviet Union. It arrived in orbit around Mars on Jan. 29, 1989. (Image credit: NASA/JPL)

For the final phase of its mission, the spacecraft was getting ready to drop off two small landers on Phobos. One lander was actually something called a “hopper” that could move around on the moon’s surface. 

As Phobos 2 made its way over to Phobos to deploy the landers, mission control suddenly lost contact with it, and the mission was lost. The cause of this failure was determined to be a computer error.

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