1955 in spaceflight

1955 in spaceflight
The Viking made its final flight in 1955
Rockets
Maiden flightsUnited States Aerobee RTV-N-10c
United States Aerobee RTV-N-10a
United States Aerobee Hi
United States Aerobee AJ10-27
United States Loki rockoon
United States Deacon-Loki rockoon
United States Nike-Deacon
United States Nike-Nike-Tri-Deacon-T40
United States X-17
United States HJ-Nike
Soviet Union R-1E
Soviet Union R-5M
RetirementsUnited States Aerobee RTV-N-10a
United States Aerobee AJ10-27
United States Deacon-Loki rockoon
United States Nike-Nike-Tri-Deacon-T40
1955 in spaceflight
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In 1955, both the United States and the Soviet Union (USSR) announced plans for launching the world's first satellites during the International Geophysical Year (IGY) of 1957–58. Project Vanguard, proposed by the US Navy, won out over the US Army's Project Orbiter as the satellite and rocket design to be flown in the IGY. Development of Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles, the Atlas by the US and the R-7 by the USSR, accelerated, entering the design and construction phase.

Both the US and USSR continued to launch a myriad of sounding rockets to probe the outer reaches of Earth's atmosphere and to take quick glimpses of the sun beyond the obscuring layers of air. The Aerobee Hi, first launched in April, promised a comparatively low cost alternative to other high altitude sounding rockets. The State University of Iowa meanwhile experimented with balloon-launched rockoons on its fourth expedition into the Atlantic Ocean.