Mercury-Atlas 5

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mercury-Atlas 5
Mission insignia
Mercury 2 insignia
Mission statistics
Mission name: Mercury MA-5
Call sign: MA-5
Number of
crew members:
1 primate
Launch: November 29, 1961
15:08 UTC
Cape Canaveral
Complex 14
Landing: November 29, 1961
18:29
Duration: 3 h 20 min 59 s
Number of
orbits:
2
Apogee: 147.4 mi
237.2 km
Perigee: 99.5 mi
160.1 km
Distance
traveled:
50,892 mi
81,902 km
Maximum
velocity:
17,530 mph
28,212 km/h
Peak acceleration: 7.7 g (74.5 m/s²)
Mass: 1,331 kg
Crew picture
Mercury 2 crew portrait (NASA)
Enlarge
Mercury 2 crew portrait (NASA)
Enos the Chimp

Mercury-Atlas 5 was an American unmanned spaceflight of the Mercury program. It was launched on November 29, 1961 with Enos the Chimp, a chimpanzee, aboard. The craft orbited the Earth twice and splashed-down off the coast of Puerto Rico, a territory associated with the United States in the eastern Caribbean. Enos was unharmed.

By November 1961, the Soviets had launched two men into orbit and the United States still had not orbited a chimp. Some NASA leaders opposed the chimpanzee flight. NASA headquarters questioned the wisdom of MSC wasting time on another unmanned Mercury mission, when the Soviets had already flown two successful manned orbital flights. NASA Headquarters Public Affairs Office finally issued the following statement, "The men in charge of Project Mercury have insisted on orbiting the chimpanzee as a necessary preliminary checkout of the entire Mercury program before risking a human astronaut."

The flight used Mercury spacecraft # 9 and Atlas # 93-D. On February 24, 1961 spacecraft # 9 arrived at Cape Canaveral. It took 40-weeks of preflight preparation. This was the longest preparation time in the Mercury program. The mission of spacecraft # 9 kept changing. It had been first been configured for a suborbital instrumented flight, then for a suborbital chimpanzee flight, then a three-orbit instrumented mission, and finally for the orbital flight that Enos flew.

MA-5 was planned as a close approximation of the upcoming MA-6 manned orbital mission. Mercury-Atlas 5 would be launched from Complex 14 at Cape Canaveral on a heading 72.51 degrees east of north. Orbital insertion of the Mercury spacecraft would occur 480 miles (722 km) from Cape Canaveral. The altitude would be 100 miles (161 km) and the speed would be 25,695 ft/s (7,832 m/s). Retrofire was planned to take place at 4 hours, 32 minutes, and 26 seconds after launch. The spacecraft would land 21 minutes and 49 seconds after retrofire. Reentry temperatures should reach 3,000 °F (1,650 °C) on the heatshield, 2,000 °F (1,095 °C) on the antenna housing, 1,080 °F (582 °C) on the cylindrical section, and 1,260 °F (682 °C) on the conical section. The spent Atlas sustainer engine should reenter the atmosphere after 9 1/3 orbits.

On October 29, 1961, three chimps and 12 medical specialists moved into quarters at the Cape to prepare for the flight. The name given to "Enos," the chimp selected to fly the MA-5 mission, in Hebrew means "man". Enos's backups were (in order possible call-up) Duane, Jim, Rocky and Ham (the MR-2 veteran). Enos was from Cameroon, Africa, (originally called Chimp # 81), and was purchased by the USAF on April 3, 1960.

On November 29, 1961, about five hours before launch, Enos and his spacesuit-couch were inserted in the spacecraft. During the countdown, various holds took 2 hours and 38 minutes. Liftoff came at 15:08 UTC. The Atlas launched the MA-5 spacecraft into an orbit of 99 miles by 147 miles (159 km by 237 km).

The turnaround and damping maneuver consumed 6 pounds (2.7 kg) of the 61.5 pounds (27.9 kg) of control fuel aboard. The spacecraft used less fuel than the MA-4 did during the same maneuver. MA-5 assumed its planned 34 degree orbital attitude and after that, through the first orbit the thrusters used only 1.5 pounds (0.7 kg) of fuel to maintain a correct position.

At the end of the first orbit, ground controllers noticed the capsule clock was 18 seconds too fast. As it passed over Cape Canaveral a command was sent to update the clock to the correct time. The Mercury Control Center at Cape Canaveral received information that all spacecraft systems were in good condition.

Then as the MA-5 passed over the Atlantic tracking ship at the beginning of the second orbit, indications were received that inverter temperatures were rising. The environmental control system malfunction was also confirmed by Canary Island trackers. Abnormal heating had occurred on earlier flights, inverters had continued working or had been switched to standby in such cases. There was no alarm at Mercury Control. When the spacecraft reached Muchea, Australia, high thruster signals and capsule motion excursions were detected. Other data indicated that the 34-degree orbit mode was being maintained. When the MA-5 crossed the Woomera, Australia, tracking station, attitude control problems were not detected, so earlier reports were discounted.

As the MA-5 capsule reached the Canton Island station, Mercury Control realized that the attitude control system was malfunctioning. A metal chip in a fuel supply line had caused one of the clockwise roll thrusters to fail. The failed thruster allowed the spacecraft to drift from its normal attitude. This drift caused the automatic stabilization and control system to correct the spacecraft attitude. The spacecraft would swung back into the normal 34 degree orbital attitude, and the sequence would start again. The spacecraft repeated this drift and correction process nine times before retrofire. It did it once more between retrofire and the receipt of the 0.05 g (0.49 m/s²) light telemetry signal. The remaining thrusters used 9.5 pounds of fuel to keep the spacecraft properly aligned during the second orbit. Each loss of attitude cost over 1 pound (0.45 kg) of fuel as compared with the entire first orbit consumption of only 1.5 pounds (0.68 kg).

In addition to the attidude control problems, the environmental control system started having problems during the second orbit. The couch-suit circuit temperature rapidly rose from 65 to 80 °F (18 to 26 °C). This was an indication that the heat exchanger was freezing. The rise in suit temperature caused Enos' body temperature to rise to 99 °F (37.2 °C), then to 100 °F (37.8 °C). The medical observers began to worry, about the chimp's condition. At 100.5 °F (38.1 °C), his body temperature stabilized. This indicated that the environmental system had started to function again. The cooling system seemed to correct itself, but the attitude problems continued.

As the spacecraft neared Hawaii on its second orbit, medical monitors were willing to let Enos continue the flight for a third orbit. Engineers were concerned, however, about fuel consumption. They worried that after a third orbit, there would not be enough fuel for attitude control during reentry.

Flight Director Christopher Kraft alerted the Hawaii controllers to be ready to initiate retrofire to bring the spacecraft down in the Pacific, if necessary. He also alerted controllers at Point Arguello, California, to be ready to initiate retrofire as MA-5 passed over their position. He allowed the spacecraft to continue to its normal second orbit, retrofire position near California. Twelve seconds before the retrofire point was reached for the normal second-orbit Atlantic primary recovery point, Kraft decided to bring Enos back to Earth. The chief flight controller at Point Arguello, executed the command.

There was one more attitude control excursion early in reentry, after that, the rest of reentry and recovery were uneventful. The destroyers Stormes and Compton and a P5M aircraft were waiting for the spacecraft at Station 8, the predicted landing point. Three hours and 13 minutes after launch and nine minutes before splashdown, the aircraft spotted the spacecraft at an altitude of 5000 feet (1,525 m) descending on its main parachute. The information was relayed to the Stormes and the Compton, who were 30 miles (48 km) away. The spacecraft recovery aids, except for the sarah beacon, were functioning. During the descent, the aircraft continued to circle and report landing events. It remained in the area until the Stormes arrived, an hour and 15 minutes after the landing. The Stormes hauled Enos and his spacecraft aboard. On the deck of the Stormes, the MA-5 hatch was blown explosively. It was released from outside the capsule by a pulling a lanyard. Blowing the hatch caused the spacecraft "picture" window to crack.

The spacecraft and Enos were both found to have survived the mission in good condition.

On November 4, 1962, Enos died of dysentery caused by shigellosis, which was resistant to antibiotics of the time. He had been under constant observation for two months before his death. Pathologists at Holloman reported that they found no symptom that could be attributed or related to his space flight a year before.

The Mercury spacecraft had now been qualified to carry a human into orbit.

Mercury spacecraft # 9, used in the Mercury-Atlas 5 mission, is currently displayed at the North Carolina Museum of Life and Science, Durham NC.[1]

[edit] References

[edit] See also


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-Atlas 4 | Mercury-Scout 1 | Mercury-Atlas 5 | Mercury-Redstone 3 | Mercury-Redstone 4 | Mercury-Atlas 6 | Mercury-Atlas 7 | Mercury-Atlas 8 | Mercury-Atlas 9 | Mercury-Atlas 10
In other languages