The "Pioneer Plaque"
![]() In the late Fall of 1971, the usual crowd of newsmen and scientists from around the Nation (and the world) -- including the usual complement of outright "space junkies" -- were gathered once again at NASA's world-renowned Jet Propulsion laboratory (JPL), in Pasadena, southern California. The occasion: the imminent arrival of the first U.S. spacecraft destined to be placed in orbit around Mars-- Mariner 9. Suddenly, a PA announcement crackled over the close-circuit television system in the Auditorium, coming from the "SFOF" -- the Mariner Control Center -- just up the hill: Mariner 9's engine had ignited on time ... and the spacecraft was now (actually, several minutes before, at the speed of light for radio transmissions ...) rapidly decelerating around Mars... Long minutes passed. Then, a cheer -- from literally hundreds of special guests, NASA employees, contractors and the press -- all clustering around the multiple TV screens arrayed around the Auditorium: the "real-time" telemetered readout of Mariner 9's space motion, relative to Mars, had dropped below critical "escape velocity"-- Regardless of what might happen, Mariner 9 was now -- and forever -- a prisoner of Mars ... From the sheer elation of that moment, the mood among those gathered changed ... as the initial Mariner 9 imaging sequences disappointingly revealed only "blank Martian close-ups" -- repeatedly being "painted" by the spacecraft computer transmissions on those same TV screens. The problem: a raging Martian global duststorm ... that had chosen that precise moment to completely blanket the whole planet -- creating high-tech spacecraft images of "bed sheets" (as one wry pundit put it), followed by "computer-enhanced bed sheets!" A spacecraft to be called "Pioneer 10." Would we be interested, Waller asked -- while waiting for the unending Martian dust to fall -- in seeing the actual Pioneer 10 spacecraft, before it left the entire solar system ... never to return? So it was -- because of a chance duststorm swirling on a nearby planet one November afternoon -- that Eric Burgess and I found ourselves face-to-face with this unprecedented NASA mission; how we came face-to-face with "the meaning of it all" ... including ... who might one day find this tiny sliver of Humanity, this "Pioneer" ...; how we decided, in a split second that very afternoon, that Pioneer should -- must, somehow -- carry into Infinity a literal "Message from Mankind." The full story of how we came to present our joint idea to Carl, and what he later did to accomplish this equally unprecedented "mission," has been told in detail elsewhere ("The Monuments of Mars," Richard C. Hoagland, North Atlantic Books:Berkeley, 1987, 1992; "Murmurs Of Earth," Carl Sagan, Frank Drake, et al, Random House:New York, 1978; "Pioneer: First to Jupiter, Saturn, and Beyond," Richard O. Fimmel, James Van Allen, and Eric Burgess, NASA-SP 446, 1980).
![]() We present here then, in unedited form, the original Sagan et al paper, published in SCIENCE magazine, March, 1972 -- describing the background thinking, significant problems, and calculations that went into our initial "Message from Mankind" ... Enjoy. In order to offer genuine authenticity of this document, these are scanned images of the actual article.
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