Names | S-15 NASA S-15 |
---|---|
Mission type | Gamma-ray astronomy |
Operator | NASA |
Harvard designation | 1961 Nu 1 |
COSPAR ID | 1961-013A |
SATCAT no. | 00107 |
Website | Explorer 11 at GSFC |
Mission duration | 6 months and 20 days |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | Explorer XI |
Spacecraft type | Science Explorer |
Bus | S-15 |
Manufacturer | Goddard Space Flight Center |
Launch mass | 37.2 kg (82 lb) [1] |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 27 April 1961, 14:16:38 GMT |
Rocket | Juno II (AM-19E) |
Launch site | Cape Canaveral, LC-26B |
Contractor | Army Ballistic Missile Agency |
Entered service | 27 April 1961 |
End of mission | |
Last contact | 17 November 1961 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric orbit[2] |
Regime | Low Earth orbit |
Perigee altitude | 486 km (302 mi) |
Apogee altitude | 1,786 km (1,110 mi) |
Inclination | 28.90° |
Period | 108.10 minutes |
Instruments | |
Crystal Sandwich / Cherenkov Counter Phoswich-Cherenkov Counter Telescope | |
Explorer program |
Explorer 11 (also known as S-15) was a NASA satellite that carried the first space-borne gamma-ray telescope. This marked the beginning of space gamma-ray astronomy. Launched on 27 April 1961 by a Juno II, the satellite returned data until 17 November 1961, when power supply problems ended the science mission. During the spacecraft's seven-month lifespan it detected twenty-two events from gamma-rays and approximately 22,000 events from cosmic radiation.