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Ranger 1

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<tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Satellite of:</th><th>Earth</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Launch Date:</th><th>August 23, 1961 at 19:12 UTC</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Launch Vehicle:</th><th>Atlas-Agena B</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Decay:</th><th>August 30, 1961</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Mission Duration:</th><th>7 days</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">NSSDC ID:</th><th>1961-021A</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Webpage:</th><th>NASA NSSDC Master Catalog</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Mass:</th><th>306.2 kg</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Semimajor Axis:</th><th>6,690.3 km</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Eccentricity:</th><th>.019939</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Inclination:</th><th>32.9°</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Orbital Period:</th><th>91.1 minutes</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Apoapsis:</th><th>446 km</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Periapsis:</th><th>179 km</th></tr><tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Orbits:</th><th>110</th></tr>
Ranger 1

<tr><td style="border-top:1px solid #999966; text-align: center;" colspan="2">Ranger 1
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Organization: NASA

<tr><th bgcolor="#CCCCCC">Major Contractors:</th><th>Jet Propulsion Laboratory</th></tr>

Mission type: Lunar Science
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Instruments
Lyman-Alpha Telescope to scan earth to study hydrogen constituent of exosphere
Magnetometer to measure magnetic field in interplanetary space

Ranger 1 was a spacecraft in the Ranger program whose primary mission was to test the performance of those functions and parts necessary for carrying out subsequent lunar and planetary missions. A secondary objective was to study the nature of particles and fields in interplanetary space.

[edit] Spacecraft design

The spacecraft was of the Ranger Block 1 design and consisted of a hexagonal base 1.5 m across upon which was mounted a cone-shaped 4 m high tower of aluminum struts and braces. Two solar panel wings measuring 5.2 m from tip to tip extended from the base. A high-gain directional dish antenna was attached to the bottom of the base. Spacecraft experiments and other equipment were mounted on the base and tower. Instruments aboard the spacecraft included a Lyman-alpha telescope, a rubidium-vapor magnetometer, electrostatic analyzers, medium-energy range particle detectors, two triple coincidence telescopes, a cosmic-ray integrating ionization chamber, cosmic dust detectors, and solar X-ray scintillation counters.

The communications system included the high gain antenna and an omni-directional medium gain antenna and two transmitters, one at 960.1 MHz with 0.25 W power output and the other at 960.05 MHz with 3 W power output. Power was to be furnished by 8680 solar cells on the two panels, a 57 kg silver-zinc battery, and smaller batteries on some of the experiments. Attitude control was provided by a solid-state timing controller, Sun and Earth sensors, and pitch and roll jets. The temperature was controlled passively by gold plating, white paint, and polished aluminum surfaces.

[edit] Mission

The Ranger 1 spacecraft was designed to go into an Earth parking orbit and then into a 60,000 by 1,100,000 km Earth orbit to test systems and strategies for future lunar missions. Ranger 1 was launched into the Earth parking orbit as planned, but the Agena B failed to restart to put it into the higher trajectory, so when Ranger 1 separated from the Agena stage it went into a low Earth orbit and began tumbling. The satellite re-entered Earth's atmosphere on August 30, 1961. Ranger 1 was partially successful, much of the primary objective of flight testing the equipment was accomplished but little scientific data was returned.

[edit] External link


 

Ranger Rangers 6 through 9
Previous mission:  Start of program Next mission:  Ranger 2
Ranger 1 | Ranger 2 | Ranger 3 | Ranger 4 | Ranger 5 | Ranger 6 | Ranger 7 | Ranger 8 | Ranger 9
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