From Publishers Weekly
The interplanetary space probes Pioneer 10 and 11 are probably best remembered for the gold calling cards on their sides inscribed with a "We Are Here" map of the Earth and, most controversially, a naked man and woman. But the accomplishments of these probes are remarkable, as journalist Wolverton recounts in this history of the amazing miniprobes that ran on old-fashioned computer logic switches. The team at Ames Space Center didn't know whether Pioneer 10 would even survive its crossing of the asteroid belt, but a final, faint tweet was received from the spacecraft nearly 30 years later, in January 2003, on its way to some distant solar system. Pioneer 11, shot like a stone from a slingshot by Jupiter's gravity, went on to a rendezvous with Saturn, where it made its way through the planet's ring system, narrowly escaping collision with a fast-moving moon it had just discovered. The last Pioneer mission, Pioneer Venus, stayed a little closer to home, dropping probes onto the surface of Venus. Wolverton conveys the intense competition within NASA as scientists at Ames jockeyed with other space centers, first to run the Pioneer projects, then to get the valuable allocation of radio antenna time to answer the crafts' ever fainter signals. Project managers under the legendary Charlie Hall proved the success of the "Faster, better, cheaper" mantra before it became a NASA catch phrase. Space buffs will revel in this well-told tale of the little space probes that could. B&w photos.
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Review
"...an excellent job describing the history of the Pioneer program in a manner that is detailed yet accessible..." --
Sky & Telescope, September 2004"An excellent job describing the history of the Pioneer program in a manner that is accessible to the casual reader." --
The Space Review, August 9, 2004"An informed and informative historical overview of the Pioneer space probe mission program... Superbly written." --
The Bookwatch, September 2004"Extraordinarily well written. ... Engaging. ... An absolute 'must read' for any one interested in the development of NASA's unmanned space program." --
Science Books and Films, Nov/Dec 2004"Refreshing insight into the science and the politics of the Pioneer space probes." --
Universe Today, Sept. 14, 2004"[A] gripping account ... Highly recommended for space-age history buffs." --
CHOICE, November 2004
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