Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Samos 4

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Spacecraft type
  
Samos-E5

Epoch
  
Planned

Bus
  
RM-81 Agena

Operator
  
United States Air Force

Launch site
  
Point Arguello LC-1-1

Launch date
  
22 November 1961

Mission type
  
Reconnaissance satellite

Reference system
  
Geocentric orbit

Mission duration
  
15-30 days (planned) Failed to orbit

Rocket
  
Atlas LV-3A Agena-B 108D

Regime
  
Sun-synchronous low Earth

People also search for
  
FTV-2203, Samos 3, Samos 2

Samos 4 was an American reconnaissance satellite which was lost in a launch failure in 1961. It was a film-return reconnaissance spacecraft, meaning that it returned images in a film capsule at the end of its mission. It was operated as part of the Samos programme. Samos 4 was the first of three Samos-E5 spacecraft to be launched; Samos-E5 satellites were based on an Agena-B, and carried a camera with a focal length of 1.67 metres (5 ft 6 in), and a resolution of 1.5 metres (4 ft 11 in).

The launch of Samos 4 occurred at 20:45:47 UTC on 22 November 1961. An Atlas LV-3A Agena-B rocket was used, flying from Launch Complex 1-1 at the Point Arguello Naval Air Station. Four minutes and four seconds into the flight, the rocket's first stage attitude control system malfunctioned, and control over the rocket's pitch was lost. The rest of the flight proceeded nominally, however by the time the second stage ignited it had pitched up by 160 degrees and was hence facing in the wrong direction. Its three-minute-41-second burn reduced the vehicle's velocity instead of increasing it, and as a result the satellite failed to achieve orbit. Samos 4 was to have operated in a Sun-synchronous low Earth orbit. It was designed to operate for between 15 and 30 days.

References

Samos 4 Wikipedia