On July 14, 1965, Mariner 4 swooped over Mars. It was a moment of high drama. Six other probes had already tried to reach the red planet and failed. Since the days of H.G. Wells (War of the Worlds, 1898), people had been hearing about life on Mars, and they were ready to see the canals and cities. The wait was becoming excruciating. Finally, all was revealed. With flawless precision, Mariner 4 dipped less than 10,000 km above the planet's surface and took 22 pictures. Mars was covered with desert sand and ancient craters. No cities. No canals. No Martians. No one would ever look at the red planet the same way again.
Most histories of the mission end right there, with Mariner 4 buzzing Mars—"the first spacecraft to visit the red planet"-- and throwing cold water on a lot of good science fiction. But there's more to the story. After the flyby, something strange happened to Mariner 4, setting the stage for a 40-year mystery:
Fast-forward to September 15, 1967. Mariner 4 was cruising the dark emptiness between Earth and Mars. Having shot past Mars in '65 without enough fuel to turn around and go back, there was nothing else to do. All was quiet. Fuel was running low. Soon, Mariner 4 would fade into history. That's when the meteor storm hit.
"For about 45 minutes the spacecraft experienced a shower of meteoroids more intense than any Leonid meteor storm we've ever seen on Earth. It was a complete surprise" - Bill Cooke, the head of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office in Huntsville, AL.
The impacts ripped away bits of insulation and temporarily changed the craft's orientation in space. Think about it. Out in the "emptiness" between Earth and Mars, a region of space astronauts are going cross one day if NASA's Vision for Space Exploration comes to fruition, lurks a dark stream of meteoroids capable of producing a shower more intense than anything we've seen in centuries of sky watching on Earth.
"Until Mariner 4 stumbled onto it, we had no idea it was there" - Bill Cooke.
For almost 40 years the source of the shower remained a mystery. But now, meteor expert Paul Weigert of the University of Western Ontario may have cracked the case. The culprit, he believes, is a "dark comet" named D/1895 Q1 (Swift) or "D/Swift" for short.
"Comet D/Swift was first seen in August 1895 by the prolific comet hunter Lewis A. Swift. D/Swift quickly vanished. The comet was last spotted in February 1896 heading out of the inner Solar System, and it has never been seen since, even though its orbit indicates it should come back and brighten every 5 years or so" - Paul Weigert .
Swift discovered or co-discovered more than a dozen comets, including 109P/Swift-Tuttle, the source of the well-known Perseid meteor shower. Unlike his other comets, however. (Note that the prefix D/ indicates a lost or broken-up comet, one that was well-observed on one or more occasions, but which failed to reappear as expected.)
D/Swift was mostly forgotten until last year when Bill Cooke wondered if "some old D/ comet" might be responsible for the Mariner 4 episode. Comets, especially disrupted comets, leave a stream of debris in their wake as they orbit the sun. If Mariner 4 passed through such a stream, "it would have been sandblasted."
He asked Weigert, a friend and colleague, to look into it. Weigert began to examine old comet data and—voilà—"Mariner 4 was close to the orbit of Comet D/Swift at the time of the meteor encounter."
Amazingly, Mariner 4 was not merely close to the comet's orbit, it may have been close to the comet itself.
"According to our calculations, the [possibly shattered] nucleus of D/Swift was only 20 million kilometres from the spacecraft."
As distances go in the solar system, that's nearby.
"It's like in Star Trek when Enterprise stumbles across a comet in the middle of deep space. Of course, that's crazy. Space is so big, the chances of running across a comet are almost nil."
Yet this may be what happened to Mariner 4. Mariner's cameras weren't turned on at the time, so a comet could've passed by unnoticed—except for the jostling of comet dust. Telescopes on Earth saw nothing, but that's no surprise. An old, shattered nucleus wouldn't necessarily glow. It all makes sense. Case closed? Weigert still has doubts.
"The complicating factor is that, because D/Swift was seen for only a short time in 1895-96, its orbit is not terribly well-known. Our extrapolations could be wrong. We're in the process of collecting more observations from 19th century archives and re-analysing them. Soon, I hope there will be enough information to convict or acquit Comet D/Swift."