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Landed Probe Lifespan

Landed Probe
Lifespan

SURFACE SURVIVAL DURATION // THERMAL DEGRADATION LOG

MISSION YEAR: ----

Select a Probe

Survival Time
00min

Venus' surface temperature 467°C melts lead and the pressure 92 ATM crushes titanium. Click a mission to see how long they survived this "hell."

FAILURE MODE Electronic Melt
MISSION STATUS Success

Lander Vitals

Thermal Endurance. Monitoring the structural integrity and internal CPU temperature against the supercritical CO₂ exterior.

  • 🔥 Ext Temp: 465°C (Leads to solder failure).
  • ⏲️ Avg Life: 60 to 120 minutes.
  • 🛡️ Cooling: Phase-change heat sinks active.
The Oat: ENDURANCE_LOG
TIME REMAINING:
84 MIN
TEMP: 144°C (INTERNAL)

Venera 7 Epoch

The First Contact. Dec 15, 1970. Despite a 17 m/s impact, the titanium sphere transmitted the first-ever surface data for 23 frantic minutes.

  • Duration: 23 Minutes (Record at the time).
  • 📉 Signal: 1% strength (due to capsule tilt).
  • 🌡️ Data: Confirmed 475°C surface temperature.
🔴
The Oat: MISSION_HIST_V7
TOTAL TRANSMISSION:
23M
DEATH MODE: THERMAL

Venera 13 Record

The 127-Minute Champion. On March 1, 1982, this titanium fortress captured the first color panoramic views of the Venusian basalt plains.

  • 🏁 Record: 127 minutes (Current world record).
  • 🌋 Geology: First X-ray soil analysis (Leucitic Basalt).
  • ❄️ Cooling: Lithium Nitrate Phase-Change cooling.
🥇
The Oat: MISSION_DATA_V13
TOTAL UPTIME:
127M
SURVIVAL RECORD HELD

Vega 2 Highlands

The Ancient Crust. June 15, 1985. Landing in Aphrodite Terra, Vega 2 sampled rocks that suggest Venus once had a very different history.

  • ⏱️ Surface Life: 56 Minutes.
  • 🎈 Balloon Link: 46 hours of atmospheric floating data.
  • 💎 Rock Type: Anorthosite (Ancient Highland Crust).
🛰️
The Oat: HIGHLAND_OPS
SURFACE STATUS:
56M
TERRAIN: ROUGH/MOUNTAIN

LLISSE Future

The Enduring Explorer. Moving beyond the "Lead Wall." LLISSE uses Silicon Carbide to turn Venus from a death-trap into a long-term laboratory.

  • 🗓️ Life: 60+ Earth Days (Target).
  • 💎 Tech: Silicon Carbide (SiC) Wide-Bandgap chips.
  • 🔋 Power: High-Temp Molten Salt Batteries.
🔋
The Oat: LLISSE_DEPLOY
UPTIME TARGET:
1,440H
STATUS: HOT-STABLE

Paper

SURVIVAL LOG: THERMAL 🌡️

Ambient: 737 K. Internal: Rising. Shutdown: Imminent.

Sources

VENERA 13 RECORD


The Soviet lander holds the current record, surviving for 127 minutes in the Venusian furnace.

MISSION LOGS
Record: 2 Hours 7 Mins

PHASE CHANGE COOLING


How landers use lithium nitrate or wax to absorb heat energy and delay thermal failure.

NASA COOLING
Thermal Management

DAVINCI+ MISSION


NASA's upcoming probe designed to taste the atmosphere during a 63-minute descent to the surface.

FUTURE PROBES
Descent Analytics

Venera Legacy


The Soviet Venera probes: The only craft to survive the 90-bar surface pressure.

Clockwork Rover


NASA’s AREE: A purely mechanical rover designed to operate without silicon chips.

DAVINCI+


New generation of atmospheric descent spheres for precision gas analysis.

Venera 7 Ignition


Challenge: 470°C Surface Heat

Lifespan: ~127 minutes (Record)

Source: RussianSpaceWeb / NASA

Venera Lander


The heavy spherical pressure vessel designed to survive 90 atmospheres.

Venera View


Rare surface photography showing the orange-tinted basaltic plains.

Vega Craft


Museum model of the Vega 1 & 2 spacecraft, featuring complex instrument arrays.

Aero-Probe


Mission: Vega 1 & 2 (1985)

Altitude: 54 km (Balloon drift)

Tech: Helium-filled Teflon balloons

Venera 7 (1970)

The pioneer of planetary landings. It was the first spacecraft to land on another planet and transmit data back to Earth, proving Venus has a crushing surface pressure and temperatures high enough to melt lead.

Venera 13 (1981)

Famous for sending back the first color panoramic images of the Venusian surface. It also featured a mechanical drill to analyze soil samples in the extreme 457°C heat.

Vega 2 (1985)

A dual-purpose mission that dropped a lander and a balloon into the Venusian atmosphere before flying off to encounter Halley’s Comet. The lander operated on the surface for 56 minutes.

NASA LLISSE

The Long-Lived In-Situ Solar System Explorer is a modern project designed to survive the hostile Venusian environment for months rather than minutes, using high-temperature electronics.