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January 31, 1958 – Explorer 1: America's First Satellite

Posted January 31, 2008 12:01 AM by Steve Melito

Fifty years ago today, the U.S. Army Ballistic Missile Agency (ABMA) sent America's first satellite, Explorer 1, into outer space. The successful launch of the 30.7-lb. satellite lifted a heavy weight from the shoulders of American rocket scientists William H. Pickering and Wernher von Braun, who had been alarmed by the success of the Soviet Union's Sputnik program and humbled by an embarrassing launch-pad failure a month earlier. Explorer I also validated the work of James Van Allen, a University of Iowa space scientist who argued that America's first satellite should carry a Geiger counter to detect charged particles. Today, the Van Allen Radiation Belts bear his name.

Sputnik Succeeds and Vanguard Fails

The successful launch of Explorer I ended a painful four-month period for American space scientists. On October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union had trumped its Cold War rival by launching the world's first artificial satellite, a basketball-sized spacecraft named Sputnik 1. The launch vehicle, an R-7 rocket, could double as an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) – a fact not lost on American military planners. One month later, on November 3, 1957, the U.S.S.R. sent the first payload, a dog named named Laika, into space aboard Sputnik 2. Laika died while in orbit, but the Soviets had proven that more than metal could survive outside of Earth's atmosphere.

On November 8, 1957, the U.S. Secretary of Defense ordered Werhner von Braun to build a rocket that could put a satellite into space in 90 days. As von Braun's team of scientists toiled at Alabama's Redstone Arsenal, the former director of Germany's V-2 missile program was soon summoned aboard the U.S.S. Forrestal. After three days of secret meetings, the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics (NACA) formed the Special Committee on Space Technology - the forerunner to NASA. The 16-member group that was named on November 21, 1957 included Redstone's von Braun as well as William H. Pickering, director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).

In the days before NASA, the development of rockets and satellites were functions of the U.S. military. Inter-service rivalries were (and are) also a fact of life. On December 6, 1957, the U.S. Navy launched Vanguard, a satellite that was designed to take some of the sting out of Sputnik's bite, aboard a three-stage rocket. The margin of extra lifting power in the first stage was too small, however, and Vanguard failed to rise more than four feet in the air before falling back to Earth. After learning that Vanguard's three-stage rocket had toppled and burned on the launch pad, newspaper reporters labeled the failed launch as "Flopnik".

U.S. Space Scientists Turn the Tide

As the space historian Gregory P. Kennedy has written, the prestige of the United States now rested on Werhner von Braun and the U.S. Army. But William Pickering and James Van Allen had an important role to play, too. Just 84 days after the Secretary of Defense ordered the Redstone team to put a satellite into space, a four-stage Jupiter-C rocket thundered into the skies above Cape Canaveral, Florida. The rocket's payload, a satellite designed and built by Pickering's JPL, had been completed in less than three months. Its instrument package, designed in part by Iowa State's Van Allen, would provide science with its first major discovery of the space age.

Shortly before midnight on January 31, 1958, the U.S. Army's twenty-ninth Jupiter-C put Explorer 1 into an orbit with an apogee of 1,575 miles and a perigee of 224 miles. As America's first satellite orbited the Earth once every 115 minutes, scientists at mission control noticed that Van Allen's Geiger counters would stop working periodically, but then resume operation. Although Explorer 1 did not include a data recorder, its nickel-cadmium battery powered a pair of transmitters which relayed these anomalies to Earth. Two months later, when the U.S. Army launched Explorer 3, scientists would learn that the Geiger counters stopped working whenever the satellite passed through a pair of radiation belts that encircle the planet.

Other components of Explorer 1's instrument package also sent valuable information back to Earth. The 11-pound unit featured internal and exterior temperature sensors, micro-meteorite erosion gauges, and a micro-meteorite impact microphone. The satellite's high-power transmitter sent signals for 31 days, and a low-power unit remained in operation for 105 days. Years later, on March 31, 1970, Explorer 1 made the last of its approximately 56,000 orbits around the earth. With its transmitters silent and its orbit decayed, America's first satellite re-entered Earth's atmosphere and burned up.

Resources:

http://spacefellowship.com/News/?p=4367

http://www.nasm.si.edu/exhibitions/GAL100/exp1.html

http://www.phy6.org/stargaze/Spacefly.htm

http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/jupiterc.htm

http://www.ispyspace.com/Explorer_1.html

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