Ariel 1, 2 (UK 1, 2)

 

Ariel 1 [NASA]

Ariel 1 was designed to contribute to the current knowledge of the ionosphere and of sun-ionosphere relationships. The satellite was a 62-kg cylinder with a 58-cm diameter and a height of 22 cm. A tape recorder and instrumentation for one cosmic-ray, two solar emissions, and three ionospheric experiments were on board the satellite. Except for failure at launch of the solar Lyman-alpha experiment, the spacecraft operated nominally until July 9, 1962. Between that date and September 8, 1962, spacecraft operation was limited. The spacecraft was operated again from August 25, 1964, to November 9, 1964, to obtain data concurrent in time with Explorer 20

Ariel 2 was launched from the Wallops Flight Facility using a Scout-X3 rocket. It carried 3 British experiments to measure galactic radio noise. 

 

Nation: U.K., USA
Type / Application: Science
Operator:   
Contractors: Westinghouse Electric (Spacecraft)
Equipment:
Configuration:   
Propulsion:
Lifetime:
Mass: 62 kg (#1), 68 kg (#2)
Orbit:

 

Satellite Date LS   Launcher Remarks:
Ariel 1 (UK 1, S 51) 26.04.1962 CC LC-17A Delta-DM19
Ariel 2 (UK 2, S 52) 27.03.1964 WI LA-3 Scout-X3

  

Further Ariel missions:

Source: NSSDC Master Catalog website

Last update: 27.09.2009
Contact: gunter.krebs@skyrocket.de
© Gunter Dirk Krebs