

Space Oddysey 06/12/2004 . Source: Stephen Hunt 
Imagine crashing through the acid storms of Venus, taking a space walk in the magnificent rings of Saturn, or collecting samples on the disintegrating surface of an unstable comet. From the makers of Walking With Dinosaurs, this magical
new drama-documentary series, narrated by David Suchet,
takes viewers on the ultimate space flight and, by pressing the
red button on the remote control, transports them right to the heart
of the European Space Agency's mission control room.
Seen through the eyes of five astronauts on a six-year mission
to the new frontiers that make up our solar system, it reveals the
spectacle - and the dangers - they face when landing on and exploring
the exotic worlds of our neighbouring planets.
Using the latest scientific findings and feature film digital effects,
Space Odyssey: Voyage To The Planets is the ultimate
grand tour, brought to life in a beautiful and moving journey packed
with peril and excitement.

Along the way, it uncovers the immense physical and emotional challenges
that would affect those taking such a trip.
From a daring fly-by of the Sun, to a marathon mission to the frozen
realms of Pluto, this epic voyage takes viewers on the adventure
of a lifetime.
In a first for a TV series, the actors were filmed on parabolic
flights to simulate zero gravity conditions so that they really
are floating weightless in some of the scenes.
Back on the ground, filming took place in some of the most inhospitable
places on Earth to create a very real sensation of what it would look
and feel like to walk on alien worlds. Award-winning film score composer,
Don Davis, has created a spectacular soundtrack which brings the action,
the drama and the sheer beauty of the scenery to life. Executive producer,
Tim Haines of Impossible Pictures, explains: "In a unique collaboration
between Hollywood's entertainment industry, the world's main space
agencies and the cutting-edge digital effects talents of Framestore,
this series is the most accurate vision of a human exploration of
our neighbouring planets ever created."
Series Producer, Chris Riley, continues: "We worked closely with
cosmonauts, astronauts and space agencies in Russia, Europe and
the USA to bring a gritty reality to the series that reflects over
40 years of their experience of human space flight and robotic exploration
of the planets of our solar system."

Facts, figures and the science lowdown are available via interactive
TV and the web, plus there's also a special touring show, designed
for families, which will be visiting science centres around the
UK.
The interplanetary spacecraft Pegasus and her five-strong crew
are launched into Earth orbit. Their epic six-year mission has begun.
Forty one days from Earth lies their first encounter - with Venus.
Although Earth's nearest neighbour, it could not be a more different
world. With clouds of sulphuric acid, surface temperatures pushing
500 degrees centigrade, snows of metal encrusting mountain peaks
and atmospheric pressures that could destroy a submarine, this is
a hell-hole of a planet.
Astronauts Zoe Lessard and Yvan Grigorev make the nail-biting descent
in a landing craft called Orpheus.
Enveloped in a shroud of gases and plummeting to the surface in
a fireball, Pegasus loses contact with them. Cocooned in the supremely
re-enforced Orpheus, though, the astronauts land safely.
Encased in an ultra-toughened titanium spacesuit, Yvan takes mankind's
historic first steps onto the planet.

His objectives are to collect samples, lay sensors to listen for
volcanic eruptions and to retrieve a piece of a robot from a previous
Russian mission - but it proves almost too much as the temperature
inside his suit soars.
With everything that's keeping them alive at its design limits,
these two planet pioneers make their escape with only seconds to
spare.
Mars is 150 million miles and 62 days of interplanetary travel
away.
Mission Commander Tom Kirby, medic and geologist John Pearson and
exo-biologist Nina Sulman make their descent in another specially
designed lander, Ares.
This frozen, red planet should prove comparatively easy to explore
compared to the ferocious conditions on Venus but, as Tom steps
onto the surface, a dust devil, five times larger than anything
on Earth, engulfs him.
Fortunately, the Martian atmosphere is so weak that even these
giant twisters are harmless. It does Tom no permanent damage, bar
leaving a red hue all over his spacesuit!
Supported by a host of robotic explorers, they head for the edge
of Valles Marineris - a canyon system a thousand times the size
of Arizona's Grand Canyon.
Their quest is to search for water in an attempt to discover life
on Mars.
Marvelling at the breathtaking views, the team is suddenly alerted
to the imminent arrival of a solar storm carrying lethal levels
of radiation.
The safest place is inside Ares. Desperate to complete the experiments,
their struggle back becomes a race for their lives.
Battling against radiation and giant dust storms, the team eventually
complete their exploration of Mars and return to Pegasus.
They must now cross the inner solar system for an unsettling, but
necessary, close encounter with the Sun at temperatures approaching
a staggering two million degrees centigrade.
This accelerates Pegasus briefly to one million kilometres an
hour, which helps propel them the next half a billion miles to Jupiter.
On the way, however, a scary brush with a rogue fragment of rock
begins to erode the crew's trust in Mission Control back on Earth.
As they crash into the top of giant Jupiter's immense atmosphere
a few weeks later, there is concern that Control might have betrayed
them again.
Even more worryingly, flight medic John Pearson seems to be getting
very sick.
Just over 200 days of travel from the Sun, Pegasus reaches the
largest planet of the solar system, Jupiter.
Its danger lies in a menace lurking at its core - a churning mass
of liquid metallic hydrogen that inflates a magnetic bubble around
the planet, producing levels of radiation 500 times the dose that
would kill a human.
To repel these lethal rays, Pegasus generates its own magnetic
field.
Mission geologist Zoe is to land on Io, one of Jupiter's moons.
As the most volcanically active world in the solar system, it's
a geologist's heaven.
This scientific bounty does, however, come at a price. Perilously
close to the most lethal Jovian radiation belts, Zoe risks severe
exposure but she's trained hard for this day and nothing is going
to stop her exploring these exotic lava flows.
Her exhilaration at being on the surface quickly turns to frustration
when her spacesuit malfunctions. Even the most cutting-edge technology
and millions of pounds of development still cannot guarantee safety
in these other worlds.
She is forced to cut the mission short. No samples are returned
and, to her despair, half the expedition is a failure.
The ringed world of Saturn is almost a year of interplanetary travel
away. By the time they reach it, medic John is seriously sick and
deteriorating rapidly.
He seems to have been exposed to a lethal level of radiation as
Pegasus passed the Sun.
Amongst a mesmerising trillion shards of ice and rock tumbling
in endless rings around this gas giant, crew member Nina Sulman
conducts a spacewalk.
She collects a fragment for testing, hoping it will help establish
the rings' origins and age.
By the time she returns, John has passed away, no longer able to
fight the radiation in his body. His death is a terrible blow to
the astronauts.
Torn between returning to Earth or venturing on to Pluto, at the
edge of the solar system, the psychological stress takes it toll
and the crew take the unprecedented step of cutting contact with
Mission Control whilst they make up their minds.
Eventually, the astronauts re-establish communication having decided
to continue on their Plutonian path.
Almost two years elapse before Pegasus draws close to the tiny
frozen world of Pluto, its massive moon hanging close by.
Tom and Yvan make the descent and spend 10 days constructing a
telescope which will remain on the surface after they leave, scouring
the Galaxy for other Earth-like planets.
Heading for home, there is one final mission: to land on a newly
observed comet, Messier, to sample pristine material from the birth
of the solar system in a search for the organic building blocks
of life.
Resting inside their lander, the comet suddenly starts breaking
up without warning, shedding material into space and blocking their
safe return to orbit.
Zoe and Nina make a dramatic emergency launch to bring them within
sight of Pegasus, but comet debris has breached its hull, injuring
Yvan.
Tom is busy fighting a fire on-board. The safety of Earth suddenly
seems a long way off...
The Robot Pioneers
To accompany Space Odyssey: Voyage To The Planets, BBC FOUR broadcasts
a documentary that looks at the history of space exploration to
reveal the science behind the series.
It tells the story of the human ingenuity that has dispatched
robotic missions to all the planets except, as yet, Pluto.
Voyager 2 - which accomplished the original grand tour of the planets
in the Seventies and Eighties - is a prime example.
Incredibly, more than 25 years since its launch and now over seven
billion miles from Earth, we can still hear its whispers from deep
space.
It carries the spirit of human exploration like a metal Christopher
Columbus as its sensors probe the edge of our planetary system.
Human space flight has always overshadowed such extraordinary robotic
quests but this documentary seeks to unveil their secret history.
Since the first Russian robot flew round the moon in 1959, more
than 160 incredible metal explorers have diced with disaster, enduring
multi-billion mile missions to unwelcoming worlds and dramatic journeys
of discovery and survival that rival the tale of Apollo 13.
They've trail blazed a priceless path for any future manned missions,
with their maps, measurements and images providing the knowledge
for Space Odyssey: Voyage To The Planets.
Every amazing event, experience and danger portrayed in the series
is based on the findings of these real robotic missions.
The sturdy Russian Venera landers survived blistering temperatures,
acid storms and submarine-crushing pressures to snap tantalising
images of the surface of Venus in the Seventies and Eighties.
This allowed the production team to accurately recreate this most
extreme volcanic surface and know that, to ensure their survival
on the surface long enough to carry out their mission, a human explorer
would have to be equipped with a super-cooled titanium suit.
Nasa's Viking landers endured five years of daily sub-Siberian
winter temperatures whilst hunting for life on Mars.
Their experiences on the surface of the red planet enabled Space
Odyssey: Voyage To The Planets' depiction of this frozen desert
world and left the fictional Pegasus crew with no doubts about the
stamina they'd need to leave their own footprints in the Martian
dust.
Braving the debilitating radiation belts of giant Jupiter, the
Galileo mission survived for eight years.
It watched the planet's weather systems and charted the four big
moons - snapping tantalising details of the volcano fields of Io
and the ice-rucked surface of Europa - enabling the accurate digital
representations of these exotic worlds created for the main series.
Thanks to the dedicated spacecraft engineers and the glass eyes
and metal limbs of these remarkable mechanical explorers - and many
more not mentioned here - this series is able to accurately portray
the gruelling reality of a deep space human journey to the planets.
Did you Know?
- The crew of Pegasus were weightless for three times longer than
the first American in Space - Alan Shepard - whose Freedom 7 spacecraft
carried him on a parabolic trajectory producing just five minutes
of weightlessness on his 15-minute flight in May 1961.
- The Mars scenes were filmed at "the most Mars-like place on Earth",
the Atacama Desert in Northern Chile, where the World's Space Agencies
test their Mars robotic rovers. Whilst filming, researchers in Mexico
University actually declared it the most Mars-like place on Earth.
- Mars was the closest it had been to Earth for 60,000 years whilst
the film crew were preparing to recreate the planet in Chile's Atacama
Desert.
- Since there are no oceans on Mars to hide surface details, we
have been able to map more of this red world than we have of Earth.
- Just before filming the solar flare sequence for the series,
the largest solar flare ever recorded erupted from the Sun. Images
of this eruption were used in the scenes at Mission Control.
- The day the crew filmed scenes of the mission nearing Pluto,
headlines in the papers announced that one of Nasa's robotic Pioneer
spacecraft was reaching the edge of the solar system too. The newspaper
was used as a prop in the scenes at Mission Control.
- On Venus, the Sun crosses the sky 100 times more slowly than
on Earth. It takes two weeks for dusk to fall and the Sun sets in
the east. Sunset is followed by an interminable night that lasts
longer than one of Earth's seasons. It is so hot that lead and zinc
form rock pools and mountain peaks get dusted with a metallic 'snow'
of iron pyrites and germanium.
- In 1938, Orson Welles' radio dramatisation of War Of The Worlds
- in which a realistic news broadcast described a Martian invasion
of Earth - sent a million Americans into panic.
- The Sun is currently the most studied object in the solar system.
Via the internet, people can watch solar storms rage, check today's
solar weather forecast and find out how much radiation will be thrown
at Earth in the next few hours.
- Saturn was the last planet the probe Voyager 1 visited. It used
the planet's gravity to hurl it over the north pole of the planet's
largest moon, Titan, and on, up and out of the plane of the solar
system.
In 2003, this vintage probe reached 90 astronomical units from
Earth - 90 times the distance between Earth and the Sun, a total
of 13.5 billion kilometres, making it is the most distant man-made
object in the universe.
It has enough power to operate until 2020, by which time it will
be almost 22.5 billion kilometres from Earth.
- The space sport of zero-G tennis was invented on shuttle flights
in the Nineties. The ball is a lump of gaffer tape and clipboards
are used as rackets. There's no net but points are gained if an
opponent misses a shot. Apart from that, it's a free-for-all - forehand,
backhand, upside down, overhead, off the wall…
- Until just over 10 years ago, the nine planets of the solar system
were the only ones known to man. Since then, around 120 extra solar
planets have been found because it was discovered that large planets
have just enough gravity to make their stars wobble a little. Once
astronomers figured out how to detect this tiny wobble, planets
started popping up all over the place.
- No laws of physics were broken in the making of this series.
Although the propulsion systems and active magnetic shielding are
still just concepts, they are more imaginable to scientists today
than Concorde would have been to the Wright brothers.
How we know what
we know - the real missions behind Pegasus' journey
The series-makers used facts collected by hundreds of robotic
missions to the planets in order to construct the most accurate
and realistic human experiences of walking on these exotic worlds.
Every detail of their atmospheres, rock formations and gravity
fields has been gathered over the last 40 years.
The colours, sights, sounds and smells encountered by the astronaut
explorers in the series are as predicted by planetary scientists
who have already been there - experiencing these alien planets and
moons through these robotic emissaries.
The information below provides summaries of the missions the astronauts
in this series had to undertake and the accomplishments and discoveries
of the real trail-blazing robots.
Venus
Today, 98 per cent of the surface of Venus has been mapped by radar
from Earth and orbiting Russian and American spacecraft.
They revealed a world covered in volcanic features ranging from
tiny craters to continent-sized features.
The Russian Venera landers took panorama images of their landing
sites.
In this series, the crew's descent through the Venusian atmosphere
and their experiences on the surface are based on the results of
these missions.
Working with the Russian mission team who designed and built Venera
14, their robotic lander was rebuilt and aged in the way these scientists
believe it would have been altered by decades sitting on one of
the most extreme surfaces in the solar system.
Mars
There have been more robotic missions to Mars than to any other
world and, today, there are more complete maps of its surface than
Earth's.
Nasa's Mars Odyssey and Global Surveyor satellites and ESA's Mars
Express orbiter provided detailed maps of the surface and subsurface,
as well as detailed observations of its weather and climate.
Robotic landers and rovers have recorded the chemistry, mineralogy
and microscopic textures of the ground and it has become clear that
liquid water played a big part in shaping the contours of Mars.
To film the Mars scenes, the cast and crew went to the remote Atacama
Desert of northern Chile, deemed "Mars-like" enough by Nasa to be
a testing ground for its future missions to the red planet.
Sun
Solar science has progressed enormously in the last decade. There's
now an armada of international robotic missions scrutinising it.
Nasa's TRACE mission, the Nasa/ESA Soho satellite and Japan's Yohkoh
mission have been sending back stunning images of the tormented
solar surface, twisted and gnarled by the potent magnetic forces
emanating from deep within.
An ESA/Nasa mission - Ulysses - has made four giant, one billion
mile-wide orbits of the Sun, providing the first-ever map of the
heliosphere from the equator to the poles.
The views shown in the series are modelled entirely on the images
from these missions.
To protect the crew from the lethal levels of radiation, they pass
by the Sun during a period of quietness called Solar Minimum, with
Pegasus shielded by an artificial, on-board magnetic field - a technology
currently being researched at the University of Washington in Seattle
for possible future propulsion.
Asteroid Belt
This 80 million kilometre thick band of debris is known to stretch
out for 280 million kilometres.
Over 48,000 asteroids are catalogued but there are over a million
more waiting to be found.
The Pegasus crew encounters one of these unknown asteroids. It
is modelled on observations from a number of robotic missions that
have flown past, orbited and even landed on these tiny worlds, in
particular Nasa's Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (Near).
This spacecraft orbited and mapped the surface of an asteroid called
Eros for a year then survived a crash landing onto it and continued
to send back useful data and pictures.
Jupiter & Moons
The first probes to visit Jupiter - Nasa's Pioneer 10 and 11 missions
- discovered that its magnetic field captures charged particles
thrown out by the Sun and accelerates them to incredible speeds
generating dangerous radiation amounting to over 1,000 times the
lethal dose for a human.
A few years later, Nasa's famous Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft sent
back thousands of pictures and gigabytes of data, charting the planet's
immense weather systems and imaging its moons.
In 1995, Nasa's Galileo mission dropped a probe into the planet's
atmosphere which relayed data on temperatures, pressures, wind speed
and cloud.
The orbiter spent eight years scrutinising the whole Jovian system
and making multiple fly-bys of the four main moons.
In December 2001, Cassini also flew past Jupiter on its way to
Saturn.
The details of Pegasus' encounter with Jupiter and the crew's exploration
of the moons, Io and Europa, are taken entirely from the results
of these missions.
Saturn & Moons
So far, three probes have gone to Saturn. In the Seventies, Pioneer
11 navigated across the ring plane and discovered its eleventh moon,
two new rings and that it had a magnetic field a thousand times
stronger than Earth's.
Voyagers 1 and 2 sped past in 1980 and 1981 studying the planet's
vast weather patterns, the dynamics of the rings and the orbits
of its moons.
In 2004, the joint ESA/Nasa mission, Cassini-Huygens, reached Saturn,
going into orbit for a four-year study of the system.
In 2005, the Huygens probe will drop into the atmosphere of Titan,
taking images and recording weather patterns as it falls towards
the surface where, if it survives, it will conduct a series of further
experiments designed to analyse the environment it finds.
The Saturn encounter in the series is based entirely on these missions.
Pluto-Charon
Pluto remains the only planet never to have been visited by a
spacecraft but, since the Eighties, it has passed in front of numerous
stars giving astronomers the chance to make precise measurements
of its size and revealing a very thin atmosphere made mostly of
nitrogen.
The best images of this planet come from the Hubble space telescope.
Through these observations, it is thought the surface resembles
that of Neptune's moon, Triton.
Voyager 2 flew past Triton in 1989, so Pluto's landscape was recreated
for this series using the detailed pictures it took.
A Nasa mission called New Horizons will head for Pluto in 2006.
Comet
Our first close-up look at a comet came in 1986 when ESA's Giotto
mission made a spectacular flight to Halley's Comet.
Nasa's Stardust mission flew through the tail of comet Wild 2 in
early 2004, catching a sample of debris which it will drop back
to Earth in January 2006.
The latest comet exploration, mounted by ESA, is called Rosetta.
It was launched from Earth in March 2004 and, in 10 years, will
land on comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
The comet lander in this series is modelled on Rosetta's designs.
The crew's exploration of the surface draws on all the robotic
encounters with comets to date.
Stephen Hunt 
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