Courier 1B

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Courier 1B

Image:Courier-1A image.jpg

Organization United States Air Force
Major Contractors Western Development Laboratories
Mission Type Communications satellite
Satellite of Earth
Launch Thor-DM21 Able-Star; 4 October 1960
Mission Duration 17 days
Mass 230 kg
Webpage N/A
Orbital elements
Semimajor Axis LEO, perigee=967 km, apogee=1214 km
Eccentricity N/A
Inclination 28.3°
Orbital Period 107.1 min.
Right ascension of the
ascending node
N/A
Argument of perigee N/A
Instruments
Active Repeater N/A

Launched 4 October 1960, Courier 1B was the world’s first active repeater satellite. Courier was built by the Palo Alto, California–based Western Development Labs (WDL) division of Philco, previously known as Army Fort Monmouth Laboratories and now the Space Systems/Loral division of Loral Space & Communications.

Proposed by the U.S. Army Signal Corps in September 1958, this satellite was a flown in 1960. The first satellite in the series, Courier 1A, blew up in the rocket 2.5 minutes after take off. This satellite was a follow-on to the Project SCORE launched in that 1958. It used approximately 19,000 solar cells and was also the first satellite to use Nickel Cadmium storage batteries. It had an effective message transmission rate of 55,000 bit/s. After completing its first orbit, a message from President Eisenhower to the United Nations was transmitted from the Deal Test Site, an off-base transmission facility of Fort Monmouth, and relayed to a ground station in Puerto Rico.

After 228 orbits in 17 days, the payload refused to respond to commands from the ground. It is believed that the clock-based access codes got out of synchronization, therefore the satellite would not respond to what it interpreted as unauthorized commands.

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