Little Joe 2

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For the Apollo program launch vehicle, see Little Joe II.
Little Joe 2
Mission Insignia
Mercury 2 insignia
Mission Statistics
Mission Name: Little Joe 2
Call Sign: LJ-2
Number of
Crew Members:
1 primate
Launch: December 4, 1959
Wallops Island
Landing: December 4, 1959
Duration: 11 min 6 s
Number of
Orbits:
suborbital
Apogee: 53 mi
88 km
Distance
Traveled:
194 mi
312 km
Maximum
velocity:
4,466 mph
7,187 km/h
Peak acceleration: 14.8 g (145 m/s²)
Mass: 1,007 kg
LJ-2
Sam the Rhesus monkey, pilot of Little Joe 2. (NASA)

The Little Joe 2 was an important test of the Mercury capsule because it was the first Little Joe animal flight, carrying the Rhesus monkey Sam (Macaca mulatta) close to the edge of space. He was sent to test the space equipment and the adverse effects of space on humans. His flight was launched December 4, 1959, at 11:15 from Wallops Island, Virginia, United States. The Little Joe 2 flew 55 miles (88 km) into space. It was recovered, with the monkey intact, in the Atlantic Ocean by USS Borie. Sam was one of a series of Monkeys in space. Sam was from the School of Aviation Medicine in San Antonio, Texas. Flight time 11 minutes 6 seconds. Payload 1,007 kg.

The boilerplate Mercury spacecraft used in the Little Joe 2 mission, is currently displayed at Airpower Park and Museum, Hampton, VA.[1]

  1. ^ Mercury Little Joe 2 spacecraft display page on A Field Guide to American Spacecraft website.


Project Mercury Apollo Program Insignia
Mercury-Jupiter | Little Joe 1 | Big Joe 1 | Little Joe 6 | Little Joe 1A | Little Joe 2 | Little Joe 1B | Beach Abort | Mercury-Atlas 1 | Little Joe 5 | Mercury-Redstone 1 | Mercury-Redstone 1A | Mercury-Redstone 2 | Mercury-Atlas 2 | Little Joe 5A | Mercury-Redstone BD | Mercury-Atlas 3 | Little Joe 5B | Mercury-Redstone 3 | Mercury-Redstone 4 | Mercury-Atlas 4 | Mercury-Scout 1 | Mercury-Atlas 5 | Mercury-Atlas 6 | Mercury-Atlas 7 | Mercury-Atlas 8 | Mercury-Atlas 9 | Mercury-Atlas 10
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