RocketSTEM Issue #9 - October 2014 | Page 17

the mission-spacecraft interactions, writing the reports and putting the requirements on the launch vehicles.” RS: From the science point of view, what were the reactions to the first images sent back from Mars in 1964, which showed a cratered world? KOHLHASE: “Well, the early Mariners seemed to show Mars as a cratered, somewhat uninteresting place. Mariner 7’s instruments did image the edge of the southern polar cap, showing frost or ice, but Mars did not emerge as a really interesting world until the first successful orbiter, Mariner-71 (Mariner 9), which arrived in November 1971. We had to ride out a dust storm for a couple of months, but then the complexity of the surface and its atmosphere were revealed. “I myself didn’t work on Mariner-71. I jumped to Viking after the Mariner-69 missions. I was the Navigation Development Team Leader for Viking, but now also got more into the overall mission design, so I was writing mission requirements and documents on all the systems. In fact, I co-authored a high-level document referred to as the ‘Mrs. D’ - Mission Requirements on System Design.” RS: When was the decision made to mount the Viking mission and how did it come about? KOHLHASE: “There was a desire to go to Mars on a project initially called Voyager, believe it or not. It was planned between 1966 and 1968 as part of the Apollo Applications Program, and was scheduled for launch in 1974–75. It was very risky. We were going to use a Saturn C5, the biggest launch vehicle in the US, and put two complete orbiter-lander missions on a single launch. They were firstly conceived as precursors for a manned A boulder-strewn field of red rocks stretches across the horizon in this self-portrait of Viking 2 on Mars’ Utopian Plain. Credit: NASA/JPL landing on Mars in the 1980s. Then NASA realised that we’d have all our eggs in one basket, which would be a mistake, so that was cancelled. And Viking arose in its place in 1968, led by Project Manager James Martin, former assistant manager for the Lunar Orbiter Project. It separated the missions on different launch vehicles. “Viking was very interesting work. It was an expensive, challenging mission run out of Langley Research Centre. Martin Marietta of Denver was building the lander and JPL was building the orbiter. “Now, I had a hard decision to make in 1974. I could stay with Viking and become the Navigation Team Leader for operations, or I could get on this great Voyager mission, where the planets only line up every 176 years. This would give me the chance to work with Bud Schurmeier again, with whom I’d worked on Mars ‘69. So, I left Viking in late 1974, even though it was an activelyfunded project, and moved to Voyager and loved every minute of it! I did worry at first about whether I was capable enough to do the job, and I had some sleepless nights. But I had developed enough of the fundamentals of mission design, navigation and spacecraft performance to handle it.” RS: At that stage, you were writing the rule books and procedures as the missions evolved. Image from the computer animation of the Voyager Saturn encounter, created by Blinn and Kohlhase, which was so important for public outreach for the missions. Credit: Charles Kohlhase KOHLHASE: “Yes, with Schurmeier looking over my shoulder initially, but he began to trust me and soon I was off on my own, generating the requirements and procedures on the project and mission systems for Ed Stone (Voyager Project Scientist) and the science team from then on.” 15 www.RocketSTEM .org 15