SETI bioastro: Fw: A 70,000-Carat U.S. Space 'Gem' Marks its Sapphire Anniversary

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Sun Feb 02 2003 - 11:44:01 PST

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    Sent: Friday, January 31, 2003 5:31 PM
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com
    Subject: A 70,000-Carat U.S. Space 'Gem' Marks its Sapphire Anniversary

    MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
    JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
    CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
    PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
    http://www.jpl.nasa.gov http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/

    Alan Buis 818/354-0474
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

    Donald Savage 202/358-1727
    NASA Headquarters, Washington
         January 31, 2003

    News Release: 2003-011

    A 70,000-Carat U.S. Space 'Gem' Marks its 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,
    January 31, 1958, aboard a Jupiter-C rocket, the Explorer 1 satellite
    carried with it the enormous hopes and dreams of a Cold War America.
    The country was still reeling from the former Soviet Union's shocking
    launches of Sputnik 1 and 2 the previous fall and the failure of
    America's first Vanguard project launch the month before.

    The rocket was quickly swallowed by the night sky, and 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 reply: "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
    initial discoverer of the Van Allen Radiation Belts around Earth. For
    its developers, the people of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
    Pasadena, Calif. -- then operated by the U.S. Army -- those memories
    are fond indeed.

    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.
    It was a cold, rainy night there in Washington and 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."

    Explorer 1's official chronology spans to 1954, when the Army
    authorized work on a joint Army-JPL program called Orbiter. In 1955,
    the U.S. government announced plans to launch a scientific satellite
    during the International Geophysical Year (July 1957 to December
    1958). Orbiter competed head to head with another proposal from the
    Navy called Vanguard. Vanguard 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's "shot heard 'round the world," Orbiter was
    renamed Explorer and was approved for development as a backup program.
    Then came Vanguard's failure and Explorer 1 suddenly found itself
    front and center.

    In just 84 days, Pickering and his JPL team worked with the U.S. Army
    Ballistic Missile Agency in Huntsville, Ala.; top experts from U.S.
    academia and the military; and legendary space luminaries such as
    German rocket scientist Dr. Wernher von Braun to develop Explorer 1's
    science package and communications system, as well as the high-speed
    upper stages for the Jupiter-C rocket. The work would mark JPL's
    shift in 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 environment in Earth's orbit
    -- high-speed ions (atoms stripped of electrons) from the distant
    universe. 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. Therefore, its data could only be collected
    when it was within range of a tracking station, for just minutes at a
    time. 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 belts, which would become known as the Van Allen Radiation
    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. The Explorer program would go on to launch two more
    successful missions.

    JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology in
    Pasadena.

    -end-


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