Discoverer 2

Discoverer 2
Mission typeOptical reconnaissance
OperatorUS Air Force / NRO
Harvard designation1959 GAM
COSPAR ID1959-003A Edit this at Wikidata
SATCAT no.S00014
Mission duration1 day
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft typeCORONA Test Vehicle
BusAgena-A
ManufacturerLockheed
Launch mass784 kilograms (1,728 lb) after orbital insertion
Start of mission
Launch date13 April 1959 21:18:39 (1959-04-13UTC21:18:39Z) GMT
RocketThor DM-21 Agena-A
(Thor 170)
Launch siteVandenberg LC 75-3-4
End of mission
Last contact14 April 1959 (1959-04-15)
Decay date26 April 1959 (1959-04-27)
Landing date13 April 1959 (SRV)
Landing siteOver Spitzbergen (SRV)
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeLow Earth
Eccentricity0.00801
Perigee altitude239 kilometers (149 mi)
Apogee altitude346 kilometers (215 mi)
Inclination89.9°
Period90.40 minutes
Epoch13 April 1959 21:21:00

Discoverer 2 was an American optical reconnaissance satellite launched on 13 April 1959 at 21:18:39 GMT, the second of three test flights of the Corona KH-1 spy satellite series. Discoverer 2 was the first satellite to be stabilized in orbit in all three axes and to be maneuvered on command from the earth. Though it carried no film and thus conducted no surveillance, Discoverer 2 was both the first satellite equipped with a reentry capsule and the first to return a payload from orbit. A timing error caused the reentry capsule to land near the island of Spitzbergen, Norway, rather than Hawaii. A joint US-Norway recovery operation was mounted, but was unsuccessful, and there was fear that the capsule ended in the possession of the Soviet Union. Such claims have never been verified. The flight and loss of Discoverer 2 was the inspiration for the book and film Ice Station Zebra.