Mission Description
'Explorer-II' was to be a repeat of the
Explorer I mission. However, there was a launch failure in the
Jupiter-C rocket and 'Explorer II' did not reach orbit.
The satellite was launched from
Cape Canaveral (now
Kennedy Space Center) in
Florida on
March 5,
1958, by a
Jupiter-C launch vehicle.
The
Jupiter-C has its origins in the United States Army's
Project Orbiter in
1954. The project was canceled in
1955, however, when the decision was made to proceed with
Project Vanguard.
Following the launch of the Soviet
Sputnik I on
October 4,
1957, ABMA was directed to proceed with the launching of a satellite using the Jupiter-C, which had already been flight-tested in nose-cone re-entry tests for the
Jupiter IRBM (
intermediate-range ballistic missile). Working closely together, ABMA and JPL completed the job of modifying the Jupiter-C and building the Explorer-I in 84 days.
Spacecraft Design
Explorer II was equipped with a
geiger counter for the purposes of detecting
cosmic rays. After
Explorer III, it was decided that the original geiger counter had been overwhelmed by strong radiation coming from a belt of charged particles trapped in space by the
Earth's magnetic field. (see:
Van Allen radiation belt)
Mission Results
Explorer II failed to reach orbit due to Jupiter-C launch vehicle malfunction.
Attempted orbit of Explorer-II failed because fourth stage did not ignite.
See also
★
Jupiter-C launch vehicle
Reference
★ ''Data Sheet, Department of Astronautics,
National Air and Space Museum,
Smithsonian Institution.''