Nasas First Satellite

Space News

Submitted by Arthur - N1ORC

At a mere 31 pounds, it was tiny by today's spacecraft standards. Yet, as it sprang skyward from Cape Canaveral, Fla., 45 years ago today, Jan. 31, 1958, aboard a Jupiter-C rocket, the Explorer 1 satellite carried with it the enormous hopes and dreams of Cold War America. The country was still reeling from the Soviet Union's.....Donald Savage

Headquarters, Washington January 31, 2003

(Phone: 202/348-1547)

Alan Buis

Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

(Phone: 818/354-0474)

NATION'S FIRST SPACE "GEM" MARKS SAPPHIRE ANNIVERSARY

At a mere 31 pounds, it was tiny by today's spacecraft

standards. Yet, as it sprang skyward from Cape Canaveral,

Fla., 45 years ago today, Jan. 31, 1958, aboard a Jupiter-C

rocket, the Explorer 1 satellite carried with it the enormous

hopes and dreams of Cold War America. The country was still

reeling from the Soviet Union's shocking launches of Sputnik

1 and 2, and the failure of America's first Vanguard launch

in the month before.

The rocket was quickly swallowed by the night sky. For 90

long minutes President Eisenhower and America waited tensely

to learn the fate of the mission. Finally, from a California

desert tracking station came the message, "Goldstone has the

bird." America had launched its first Earth-orbiting

satellite and entered the Space Age.

Today we remember Explorer 1 for both its pioneering place in

U.S. space history and its immediate contributions to

science, as the discoverer of the Van Allen Radiation Belts.

For Explorer's developers, the people of NASA's Jet

Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena, Calif., operated then

by the U.S. Army, those memories are fond indeed. JPL is

managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology in

Pasadena, Calif.

Dr. William Pickering, then JPL's director and leader of the

project, recalls the media's reaction to Explorer 1's

success. "We were told there was going to be a press

conference at the National Academy of Sciences (in

Washington). About 2 a.m. we got into a car and drove over to

the Academy. I can remember sitting in that car with (Dr.

James) Van Allen and (Dr. Wernher) von Braun; just the three

of us. I think all three of us wondered a little bit about

what was going to happen and who was going to be there at

that hour of the morning. They took us around to the back

door of the Academy and into the great hall. It was

completely filled with people. The media were there and very

enthusiastic when we got there. At the end of (the press

conference), I think all three of us realized that life was

going to be different, " he said.

Explorer 1's official chronology started in 1954, when the

Army authorized work on a joint Army-JPL program called

Orbiter. In 1955, the government announced plans to launch a

scientific satellite during the International Geophysical

Year (July 1957 to December 1958). Orbiter competed with the

Navy's Vanguard program, which won, partly because it relied

less on military technology. Despite the decision, JPL

continued developing some Orbiter technology for use in tests

of reentry heat shields for missiles. After Sputnik shocked

the world, Orbiter was renamed Explorer and approved for

development as a backup program. With Vanguard's failure,

Explorer 1 suddenly found itself front and center.

In just 84 days, Pickering and his JPL team, working with the

U.S. Army Ballistic Missile Agency in Huntsville, Ala., top

military experts, U.S. academia, and legendary rocket science

luminaries, like Dr. Wernher von Braun, developed Explorer

1's science package and communications system, as well as the

high-speed upper stages for the Jupiter-C rocket. The work

changed JPL's emphasis from rockets to what sits on top of

them.

Pickering describes the mood around JPL during Explorer 1's

development as confident. "We regarded ourselves as the

experts in the rocket business, having made both the Corporal

and Sergeant rockets for the Army and having developed most

of the underlying design features of the modern rocket, both

liquids and solids," he said. "We were confident."

Explorer 1's main science experiment was a cosmic ray

detector built by Dr. James Van Allen of the State University

of Iowa. It was designed to measure the cosmic radiation,

high-speed ions (atoms stripped of electrons) from the

distant universe, in Earth's orbit. It sought to measure the

flow of cosmic ray ions of the lowest energies, which are

completely absorbed by the atmosphere and can't be studied

from the ground.

Explorer 1 was launched into a highly elliptical orbit and

carried no onboard tape recorder. Its data could only be

collected when it was within range of a tracking station. The

data collection soon revealed a mystery: at the low points of

the orbit the cosmic ray count was near the expected value,

but at the high portions of the orbit none were counted at

all. Van Allen theorized the instrument might have been

saturated by very strong radiation from a belt of charged

particles trapped in space by Earth's magnetic field. Two

months later, Explorer 3 confirmed the existence of these

radiation belts, which became known as the Van Allen Belts.

Explorer 1 made its final transmission on May 23, 1958. It

entered Earth's atmosphere and burned up on March 31, 1970,

after more than 58,000 orbits.

For more Explorer information on the Internet see:

http://www.redstone.army.mil/history/explorer/explorer.html

For more information about NASA programs via links on the

Internet see:

www.nasa.gov

-end-

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N1ORC – Sat, 2003 – 02 – 01 12:13
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