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Juno I
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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{{Short description|Four-stage American expendable launch vehicle (1958â59)}}{{More citations needed|date=July 2021}}{{Use American English|date=November 2021}}{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2021}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
factoids | |
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}}| status = Retired
factoids | |
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| solid = no
| SI = {{cvt|235|isp}}
| burntime = 155 seconds
| fuel = Hydyne/LOX
}}
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| solid = yes
| SI = {{cvt|220|isp}}
| burntime = 6 seconds
| fuel = Polysulfide-aluminum and ammonium perchlorate (Solid)
}}
factoids | |
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| solid = yes
| SI = {{cvt|236|isp}}
| burntime = 6 seconds
| fuel = Polysulfide-aluminum and ammonium perchlorate (Solid)
}}
factoids | |
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| solid = yes
| SI = {{cvt|249|isp}}
| burntime = 6 seconds
| fuel = Polysulfide-aluminum and ammonium perchlorate (Solid)
}}
History
Developed as a part of the Explorer Project, the original goal for the launch vehicle was to place an artificial satellite into orbit. Following the Soviet Union's launch of Sputnik 1 on October 4, 1957 (and the resulting "Sputnik crisis") and the failure of the Vanguard 1 launch attempt, the program received funding to match the Soviet space achievements. The launch vehicle family name was suggested in November 1957 by Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) Director Dr. William Pickering, who proposed the name Juno, after the Roman goddess and queen of the gods, as well as for its position as the satellite-launching version of the Jupiter-C. The fourth stage for the Juno I launch vehicle was derived following the September 1956 test launch of a Jupiter-C for the Army Ballistic Missile Agency, which could have been the world's first satellite launch, had a fourth stage been loaded and fueled. A fourth stage would have allowed the nose cone to overshoot the target and enter orbit.NEWS, Bello, Francis, 1959, The Early Space Age, Fortune,weblink dead, June 5, 2012,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20131103053024weblink">weblink November 3, 2013, The first launch of a Juno I launch vehicle was in early 1958, with the successful launch of Explorer 1 satellite on February 1, 1958, at 03:47:56 GMT, after the Soviet Union's Sputnik 1 on October 4, 1957. The launch had been scheduled for January 29, 1958, but was scrubbed twice. Explorer 1 was the first U.S. satellite, and it confirmed the existence of the Van Allen radiation belt. Following the first successful launch, five more Juno I launch attempts occurred with two successes and three failures. The final launch attempt was on October 23, 1958, from Cape Canaveral Launch Pad 5, which ended in failure.WEB, JUNO I FACT SHEET,weblink Spaceline, 2021-08-01,Launch vehicle
(File:Juno I.svg|left|thumb|200x200px|Juno I diagram)The Juno I consisted of a Jupiter-C first stage, based on the Redstone missile; with three additional solid fuel stages based on the Sergeant missile to provide the added impulse to achieve orbit.WEB, Juno-1,weblink 2023-10-15, Gunter's Space Page, en, The fourth stage was mounted on top of the "tub" of the third stage, and fired after third-stage burnout to boost the payload and fourth stage to an orbital velocity of {{cvt|8|km/s}}, with an acceleration of 25â51 g. The tub along with the fourth stage were set spinning while the launch vehicle was on the launch pad to provide gyroscopic force in lieu of a guidance system that would have required thrust vectoring, vernier thrusters, or a reaction control system. The booster guidance package (with the tub attached) separated from the first stage after burnout to provide attitude control until second stage ignition. This multi-stage system, designed by Wernher von Braun in 1956 for his proposed Project Orbiter, obviated the need for a guidance system in the upper stages. It was the simplest method for putting a payload into orbit but having no upper-stage guidance, the payload could not achieve a precise orbit. Both the four-stage Juno I and three-stage Jupiter-C launch vehicles were the same height ({{cvt|21.2|m}}), with the added fourth-stage booster of the Juno I being enclosed inside the nose cone of the third stage.Launch history
Juno I was launched six times by ABMA in 1958, intending to place satellites in LEO.Following the successful launch of Explorer 1 on February 1, 1958, the first U.S. satellite, Juno I made five more launches before being retired in favor of Juno II. Although Juno I's launch of the Explorer 1 satellite was a huge success for the U.S. space program, only two of its remaining five flights were successful, Explorer 3 and Explorer 4,REPORT,weblink J., Boehm, H.J., Fichtner, Otto A., Hoberg, Explorer satellites launched by Juno 1 and Juno 2 vehicles, NASA, US, {{PD-notice}} giving the Juno I vehicle a mission total success ratio of 50%. The Juno I vehicle was replaced by the Juno II in 1959.The American public was happy and relieved that America had finally managed to launch a satellite after the launch failures in the Vanguard and Viking series. With the relative success of the Juno I program, von Braun developed the Juno II, using a PGM-19 Jupiter first stage, rather than a Redstone.{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"Gallery
File:Launch of Jupiter C with Explorer 1.jpg|Juno I RS-29 UE launching Explorer 1File:Juno-1 explorer-2.jpg|Juno I RS-26 UV launching Explorer 2File:Explorer III.jpg|Juno I RS-24 UT launching Explorer 3File:Juno-1 (Explorer 4).jpg|Juno I RS-44 TT with Explorer 4File:Juno-1 44.JPG|Juno I RS-44 TT launching Explorer 4File:Juno I with Beacon 1.jpg|Juno I RS-49 HE with BEACON 1File:Juno I RS CC-49.jpg|Juno I RS-49 HE launching BEACON 1File:Juno I with Explorer I mock-up at KSC.jpg|Juno I with Explorer 1 mock-up at the Kennedy Space Center rocket gardenFile:NationalAirAndSpaceMuseum 10290004.jpg|Juno I with Explorer 1 mock-up at the National Air and Space MuseumSee also
References
{{Reflist|30em}}External links
- Source: Data Sheet, Department of Astronautics, National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution.
- content above as imported from Wikipedia
- "Juno I" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
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- "Juno I" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 9:21am EDT - Sat, May 18 2024
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