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1963 Chronology
1963 - .
LV Family:
Martlet.
Launch Vehicle:
Martlet 1.
- Martlet One Flight Vehicle designed. - .
Nation: Canada.
The Martlet One Flight Vehicle was designed in mid-1962 as a first generation test vehicle for the HARP project. The primary role of the Martlet One was to test the fundamental technologies for the concept. The main body of the vehicle was intended contain coloured chemicals for release during flight to produce a visible trail. This was to allow the wind and atmospheric conditions to be observed along the flight path. (primarily wind shear at altitudes near apogee). Ground observers were to determine the effect of high altitude winds on the chemical trail. The nose was designed to hold a small one watt radio telemetry transmitter and other electronic instruments.
Only four Martlet Ones were manufactured. Two were flown during the initial test series and the remaining two were retired. The first Martlet One was launched on January 21, 1963. It was launched at an elevation of 80 degrees and flew for 145 seconds. During its flight it rose to an altitude of 26 km and landed 11 km down range. The second Martlet One was launched on February 1, 1963 and flew for 146 seconds. It rose to an altitude of 27 km and landed about 11 km down range. These two flights were sufficient to prove the launch concept. The initial test series also included several wooden test slugs.
The Martlet 1 series was retired in favour of the much improved Martlet 2 family of vehicles. Also, the cost of installation of the gun and the ground support infrastructure left precious little funds for an extensive initial test series.
MARTLET ONE SPECIFICATIONS
- Mass: 205 kg (450 lb.)
- Body Diameter: 0.168 m (6.6 inches)
- Length: 1.78 m (70 inches)
- Sabot: Metallic pusher plate with four laminated plywood centring petals; outside diameter of sabot 0.417 m (16.4')
- Gun Launcher: 16.4 inch L45 smooth-bored gun. This was a standard 16 inch battleship gun which had the rifling bored out. Propellant load 330 kg cordite.
by Richard K Graf
1963 During the Year - .
- Space Television Reconnaissance System (TGR) - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Chelomei.
Spacecraft: TGR.
Chelomei began project work in 1963 on a Space Television Reconnaissance System (TGR). The television apparatus was developed by VNII-380 GKRE (I A Rosselevich) and TsNII Kometa MRP (A I Savin). Savin had developed the original draft project, but Chelomei was given overall control. But the project had no sound scientific research basis at that point - it was not advanced enough for a draft project. Work was abandoned and no such system would be put into operation until the Yantar 4KS1 of the 1980's.
1963 January 2 - .
- Plesetsk cosmodrome authorised. - .
Nation: Russia.
Military-Industrial Commission (VPK) Decree 15-5 'On creation of the space and missile cosmodrome at NIIP-51 at Mirniy/Plesetsk' was issued..
1963 January 3 - .
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- Mercury MA-9 flight to go 22 orbits. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Tentative plans were made by NASA to extend the Mercury-Atlas 9 (MA-9) flight from 18 to 22 orbits..
1963 January 4 - .
08:49 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Molniya 8K78.
FAILURE: The escape stage's BOZ unit failed to operate due to failure of a DC transformer of the power system. The stage with payload remained in Earth orbit..
Failed Stage: U.
- Sputnik 25 - .
Payload: E-6 s/n 1. Mass: 1,422 kg (3,134 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: Korolev bureau.
Program: Luna.
Class: Moon.
Type: Lunar probe. Spacecraft: Luna E-6.
Decay Date: 1963-01-05 . USAF Sat Cat: 522 . COSPAR: 1963-001B. Apogee: 189 km (117 mi). Perigee: 165 km (102 mi). Inclination: 64.60 deg. Period: 88.00 min.
1963 January 5 - .
- Gagarin is in the hospital for an appendix operation. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin.
His wife had the same in December..
1963 January 6 - .
- Birth of Philippe Perrin - .
Nation: France,
Morocco.
Related Persons: Perrin.
French test pilot mission specialist astronaut 1990-2004. Grew up in Avignon, Provence. 1 spaceflight, 13.9 days in space. Flew to orbit on STS-111 (2002)..
1963 January 7 - .
- Seven Vostok flights planned in 1963 - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 5,
Vostok 6,
Vostok 6A,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Agreement was finally reached among space management for the production of five additional Vostok spacecraft during 1963. Two would be used in solo flights and five in group flights..
1963 January 7 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC31B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 January 7 - .
21:09 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Agena D.
- KH-4 9051 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9051 / Agena D 1157 / OPS 0048. Mass: 1,150 kg (2,530 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1963-01-24 . USAF Sat Cat: 525 . COSPAR: 1963-002A. Apogee: 384 km (238 mi). Perigee: 202 km (125 mi). Inclination: 82.00 deg. Period: 90.30 min. KH-4. Erratic vehicle attitude. Frame ephemeris not created..
1963 January 8 - .
- Existing C-band tracking radars to be modified to increase range for Apollo - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Communications.
After studying the present radar coverage provided by ground stations for representative Apollo trajectories, North American recommended that existing C-band radars be modified to increase ranging limits. The current capability for tracking to 920 kilometers (500 nautical miles), while satisfactory for near-earth trajectories, was wholly inadequate for later Apollo missions. Tracking capability should be extended to 59,000 kilometers (32,000 nautical miles), North American said; and to improve tracking accuracy, transmitter power and receiver sensitivity should be increased.
1963 January 9 - .
- Agreement reached on future Vostok flights - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Dementiev,
Keldysh,
Malinovskiy,
Smirnov.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 5,
Vostok 6,
Vostok 6A,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
After eight months of debate, a Vostok project plan was finally agreed. There would be a single female cosmonaut flight in March-Apriil 1963. This would be followed by 4 to 5 additional Vostok flights in 1963 and 2 to 3 flights in 1964. This plan was approved by Malinovskiy, Keldysh, Smirnov, and Dementiev and forwarded to the Communist Party Central Committee. However Rudenko and others were still opposed.
1963 January 10 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn I.
- Unmanned Apollo spacecraft to be flown on Saturn C-1 - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
MSC and OMSF agreed that an unmanned Apollo spacecraft must be flown on the Saturn C-1 before a manned flight. SA-10 was scheduled to be the unmanned flight and SA-111, the first manned mission..
1963 January 10 - .
- Soviet Air Force Cosmonaut Training Group 2 selected. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Artyukhin,
Buinovski,
Demin,
Dobrovolsky,
Filipchenko,
Gubarev,
Gulyayev,
Kolodin,
Kugno,
Kuklin,
Matinchenko,
Shatalov,
Vorobyov,
Voronov,
Zholobov.
The group was selected to provide astronauts for the Soyuz manned spaceflight program.. Qualifications: Military pilots, engineers, or navigators under 40 years of age; graduate of military academy or civilian university; under 170 cm tall; under 70 kg in weight..
1963 January 10 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC16.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Mk 6 re-entry vehicle test launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 January 11 - .
- Korolev lays out detailed plan for future Vostok flights - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 5,
Vostok 6,
Vostok 6A,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Korolev and Kamanin meet to lay out Vostok flight plan. There were three variants possible for the March flights: 1) A single female flight of 2 to 3 days; 2) Two female flights launched one day apart, but landing at the same time; 3) An 'absurd' version: launch of a female cosmonaut for a three day flight, followed two days after her landing by a male cosmonaut on a 5 to 7 day flight. The planners selected the two female flight variant.
1963 January 12 - .
- Cosmonaut travels. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Nikolayev,
Popovich.
Flight: Vostok 3,
Vostok 4.
Following interminable discussions with the leadership, in the end only Nikolayev is to go to Indonesia. Popovich has returned from Cuba, after a 14 hour non-stop flight from Havana to Moscow aboard a Tu-114..
1963 January 13 - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Complex:
Cuxhaven.
- DRG launches at Cuxhaven - .
Nation: Germany.
The DRG (German Rocket Society) launched three model rockets but they fell in the flats and were not recovered..
1963 January 14 - .
- Mercury spacecraft 15A was redesignated 15B and allocated as a backup for the MA-9 mission. - .
Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-10.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
In the event Mercury-Atlas 10 (MA-10) were flown, 15B would be the prime spacecraft. Modifications were started immediately with respect to the hand controller rigging procedures, pitch and yaw control valves, and other technical changes..
1963 January 16 - .
21:59 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Agena B.
- OPS 0180 - .
Payload: Ferret 3 / Agena B 2313. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NRO,
USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: SIGINT. Spacecraft: Ferret.
Decay Date: 1969-01-09 . USAF Sat Cat: 527 . COSPAR: 1963-003A. Apogee: 522 km (324 mi). Perigee: 461 km (286 mi). Inclination: 81.90 deg. Period: 94.40 min.
1963 January 17 - .
- Department of Defense (DOD) and NASA management responsibilities in the Cape Canaveral area. - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: McNamara,
Webb.
NASA Administrator James E. Webb and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara signed a new agreement on Department of Defense (DOD) and NASA management responsibilities in the Cape Canaveral area. The Air Force would continue as single manager of the Atlantic Missile Range and host agency at the 15,000-acre Cape Canaveral launch area. NASA's Launch Operations Center would manage and serve as host agency at the Merritt Island Launch Area, north and west of existing DOD installations. DOD and NASA would each be responsible for their own logistics and administration in their respective areas. Specific mission functions - e.g., preparation, checkout, launch, test evaluation - would be performed by each agency in its own behalf, regardless of location. DOD retained certain fundamental range functions, including scheduling, flight safety, search and rescue operations, and downrange airlift and station operation.
1963 January 17 - .
- Mercury MA-10 a possibility. - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Seamans.
Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Asked by a Congressional committee if NASA planned another Mercury flight after MA-9, Dr Robert C. Seamans stated, in effect, that schedules for the original Mercury program and the 1-day orbital effort were presumed to be completed in fiscal year 1963. If sufficient test data were not accumulated in the MA-9 flight, backup launch vehicles and spacecraft were available to fulfill requirements.
1963 January 17 - .
18:59 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Delamar Dry Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A VO Alt, IR expt Test/Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 82 km (50 mi). First civilian flight above 80 km. Maximum Speed - 5917 kph. Maximum Altitude - 82810 m. Second astronaut wings flight (USAF definition). Air dropped in Delamar Dry Lake DZ..
1963 January 18 - .
- Contract to Bell for two Apollo lunar landing research vehicles - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft Bus: Apollo LM.
Spacecraft: Apollo LLRV.
NASA's Flight Research Center (FRC) announced the award of a $3.61 million contract to Bell Aerosystems Company of Bell Aerospace Corporation for the design and construction of two manned lunar landing research vehicles. The vehicles would be able to take off and land under their own power, reach an altitude of about 1,220 meters (4,000 feet), hover, and fly horizontally. A fan turbojet engine would supply a constant upward push of five-sixths the weight of the vehicle to simulate the one-sixth gravity of the lunar surface. Tests would be conducted at FRC.
1963 January 18 - .
- Two aerodynamic strakes added to Apollo CM - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Heat Shield,
CSM LES.
Two aerodynamic strakes were added to the CM to eliminate the danger of a hypersonic apex-forward trim point on reentry. (During a high-altitude launch escape system (LES) abort, the crew would undergo excessive g forces if the CM were to trim apex forward. During a low-altitude abort, there was the potential problem of the apex cover not clearing the CM. The strakes, located in the yaw plane, had a maximum span of one foot and resulted in significant weight penalties. Additional Details: here....
1963 January 18 - .
- Soyuz expert commission - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Chelomei,
Korolev,
Smirnov.
Flight: Soyuz 11.
Spacecraft: Raketoplan,
Soyuz A,
Soyuz B,
Soyuz V.
Smirnov insisted on the following after reviewing Korolev's design: 1) there must be a space suit for every crew member; 2) the spacecraft must be able to use lift during re-entry to change its landing point; 3) the spacecraft must have ejection seats. Korolev and his assistants categorically rejected these demands. Smirnov was only insisting on the availability of suits, not that they be worn at all times; and only on small lifting surfaces to give the capsule more manoeuvrability during re-entry. But Korolev rejected even this. Later the commission went to Chelomei's bureau to see his Raketoplan manned spaceplane design. But this was not even laid out on paper yet, with the draft project not scheduled to be completed until the end of February. Chelomei has already been working on this for two years. In January 1961 he gave a presentation to the General Staff and made big promises in regard to this spacecraft - but nothing has been completed. The only spacecraft that will be realistically available in the next three to five years is Korolev's - anything else would only be purely experimental.
1963 January 19 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan IIIC.
- McNamara requests review of the Titan III nd Gemini programs. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Dynasoar,
Gemini.
The Secretary of Defense directed a review of the Titan III program and the Gemini program of NASA..
1963 January 21 - .
- VVS Review of Soyuz - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Korolev.
Program: Soyuz.
Flight: Soyuz 11.
Spacecraft: Soyuz A,
Soyuz B,
Soyuz P,
Soyuz R,
Soyuz V.
The primary objective of the design is to achieve docking to two spacecraft in earth orbit. Secondary objectives are the operation of scientific and military equipment from the spacecraft. Three different spacecraft, all launched by an R-7 derived booster, are required to achieve this:
- 7K spacecraft, capable of carrying three men into space and returning them to earth. The 5.5 tonne spacecraft has three modules, including the BO living module and the SA re-entry capsule
- 9K booster stage, with a fuelled mass of 18 tonnes. After docking with the 7K this is capable of boosting the combined spacecraft to earth escape velocity. The 9K is equipped with a 450 kgf main engine and orientation engines of 1 to 10 kgf. It will have 14 tonnes propellant when full loaded. Four sequential docking with a tanker spacecraft will be required to fill the tanks before the final docking with the 7K.
- 11K tanker, with a mass of 5 tonnes.
The system will conduct fuellings and dockings in a 250 km altitude parking orbit, and be boosted up to 400,000 km altitude on lunar flyby missions. The system will be ready in three years. Military variants proposed are the Soyuz-P and Soyuz-R. Each spacecraft will have 400 kg of automatic rendezvous and docking equipment. Manual docking will be possible once the spacecraft are within 300 m of each other.
Korolev still insists on an unguided landing and categorically rejects the use of wings. A parachute will deploy and slow the capsule to 10 m/s. Then a retrorocket will fire just before impact with the earth to provide a zero-velocity soft landing. Korolev still insists that spacesuits will not be carried for the crew. First test flight of the 7K, without docking, could not occur until the second half of 1964.
1963 January 21 - .
LV Family:
Martlet.
Launch Vehicle:
Martlet 1.
- Martlet 1 Shot 1 - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: HARP.
Apogee: 26 km (16 mi). The gun-launched rocket was shot at an elevation of 80 degrees and flew for 145 seconds. During its flight it rose to an altitude of 26 km and landed 11 km down range..
1963 January 22 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn V.
- Orbiting Space Station. - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Skylab.
Spacecraft: LORL.
Addressing an Institute of Aerospace Science meeting in New York, George von Tiesenhausen, Chief of Future Studies at NASA's Launch Operations Center, stated that by 1970 the United States would need an orbiting space station to launch and repair spacecraft. The station could also serve as a manned scientific laboratory. In describing the 91-m-long, 10-m-diameter structure, von Tiesenhausen said that the station could be launched in two sections using Saturn C-5 vehicles. The sections would be joined once in orbit.
1963 January 22 - .
- Birth of Jean-Marc Michel Daniel Gasparini - .
Nation: France.
Related Persons: Gasparini.
French engineer astronaut, 1990-1998. Graduated from Polytechnic School, 1985 Combat and test pilot, French Air Force. Chief test pilot at Bretigny Flight Test Center ..
1963 January 23 - .
1963 January 23 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC26A.
LV Family:
Jupiter.
Launch Vehicle:
Jupiter IRBM.
- Combat training launch - .
Nation: Italy.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 January 23 - .
Launch Site:
Tonopah.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Deacon Arrow II.
- Tracking Flare test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: Sandia.
Apogee: 90 km (55 mi).
1963 January 23 - .
Launch Site:
Tonopah.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Deacon Arrow II.
- Tracking Flare test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: Sandia.
Apogee: 90 km (55 mi).
1963 January 23 - .
18:10 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC32B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 January 24 - .
- Crew mobility evaluation of the ILC Apollo pressure suit conducted - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Cockpit.
The first evaluation of crew mobility in the International Latex Corporation (ILC) pressure suit was conducted at North American to identify interface problems. Three test subjects performed simulated flight tasks inside a CM mockup. CM spatial restrictions on mobility were shown. Problems involving suit sizes, crew couch dimensions, and restraint harness attachment, adjustment, and release were appraised. Numerous items that conflicted with Apollo systems were noted and passed along to ILC for correction in the continuing suit development program.
1963 January 25 - .
10:44 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B2.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- NTMP K-9/OT ABM test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 January 26 - .
- New assignments for the seven original astronauts - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Armstrong,
Borman,
Carpenter,
Conrad,
Cooper,
Glenn,
Grissom,
Lovell,
McDivitt,
Schirra,
See,
Shepard,
Slayton,
Stafford,
White,
Young.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Gemini.
MSC announced new assignments for the seven original astronauts: L. Gordon Cooper, Jr., and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., would be responsible for the remaining pilot phases of Project Mercury; Virgil I. Grissom would specialize in Project Gemini; John H. Glenn, Jr., would concentrate on Project Apollo; M. Scott Carpenter would cover lunar excursion training; and Walter M. Schirra, Jr., would be responsible for Gemini and Apollo operations and training. As Coordinator for Astronaut Activities, Donald K. Slayton would maintain overall supervision of astronaut duties.
Specialty areas for the second generation were: trainers and simulators, Neil A. Armstrong; boosters, Frank Borman; cockpit layout and systems integration, Charles Conrad, Jr.; recovery system, James A. Lovell, Jr.; guidance and navigation, James A. McDivitt; electrical, sequential, and mission planning, Elliot M. See, Jr.; communications, instrumentation, and range integration, Thomas P. Stafford; flight control systems, Edward H. White II; and environmental control systems, personal equipment, and survival equipment, John W. Young.
1963 January 27 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
LV Family:
R-11.
Launch Vehicle:
R-11A.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: AN.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 January 27 - .
01:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
LV Family:
V-2.
Launch Vehicle:
A-1 (R-1).
- Test mission - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 January 28 - .
- Philco prime contractor for the Mission Control Center - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
NASA announced the selection of the Philco Corporation as prime contractor for the Mission Control Center (MCC) at MSC. To be operational in mid-1964, MCC would link the spacecraft with ground controllers at MSC through the worldwide tracking network..
1963 January 29-30 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Titan II development flight failures caused by problems in the airborne radio guidance system. - .
Nation: USA.
At a launch guidance and control coordination meeting, Aerospace described three Titan II development flight failures that had been caused by problems in the General Electrical Mod III airborne radio guidance system. Although these failures did not appear to be the result of inherent design faults that might react on the Gemini program, Aerospace felt that a tighter quality assurance program was needed: 'GE has a poor MOD III (G) quality control program, basically poor workmanship.'
1963 January 29 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A1.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Research and development Category II test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 January 30 - .
1963 January 31 - .
- Smirnov opposed to dual female Vostok flight. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Smirnov,
Titov.
Program: Vostok.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6,
Vostok 6A.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Smirnov only wants to fly two, not four Vostoks this year. One male, and one female cosmonaut would be launched in a group flight. Correct approvals cannot be obtained in time for manufacture of four Vostoks until August of this year. Later Kamanin has another scene with Titov. The cosmonaut was drunk on a factory visit, and defied the militia when confronted.
1963 January 31 - .
08:51 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576A3.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- NTMP K-12 ABM test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,800 km (1,100 mi).
1963 February 1 - .
- 35 Soviet Cosmonauts in six groups in training - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 5,
Vostok 6,
Vostok 6A,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
These were:
- Group 1 - Four cosmonauts (Solovyova, Ponomareva, Tereshkova, Yerkina) in final training for two simultaneous female flights in March 1963
- Group 2: Three male cosmonauts (Komarov, Bykovsky, Volynov) in training for two or three individual flights of over five days duration in the second half of 1963
- Group 3: Four flown cosmonauts (Gagarin, Titov, Nikolayev, Popovich) in academic training but also very occupied in public relations tasks
- Group 4: Six cosmonauts from the first group - not trained for Vostok and available for Vostok or Soyuz flights in 1964 and later (Nelyubov, Shonin, Khrunov, Zikin, Gorbutko, Filyatev)
- Group 5: Seven pilot-cosmonauts, just selected and starting training
- Group 6: Eight engineer-cosmonauts, just started training.
February 1963 - .
LV Family:
UR-100.
Launch Vehicle:
R-26.
- Council of Fili - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Brezhnev,
Chelomei,
Khrushchev,
Kozlov,
Yangel.
The Soviet leadership reviewed missile development since the Pitsunda meeting. Both the Yangel R-26 and Chelomei UR-100 were proposed as small ICBM's to be put into mass production as a counter to the American Minuteman. The UR-100 was an ampulised missile with a guaranteed ten-year storage life. Yangel had not solved the problems of long-term storage of corrosive storable fuel yet. Therefore Khrushchev, supported by Kozlov and Brezhnev, selected the UR-100. A decree for mass production was issued on 30 May 1963.
1963 February - .
- LLRV contract - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft Bus: Apollo LM.
Spacecraft: Apollo LLRV.
After conceptual planning and meetings with engineers from Bell Aerosystems, Buffalo, NY, a company with experience in vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) aircraft, NASA issued Bell a $50,000 study contract in December 1961. Bell had independently conceived a similar, free-flying simulator, and out of this study came the NASA Headquarters' endorsement of the LLRV concept, resulting in a $3.6 million production contract awarded to Bell for delivery of the first of two vehicles for flight studies at the FRC within 14 months.
1963 February 1 - .
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Soyuz 11A511.
- Soyuz 'leaves drafting boards' - .
Nation: Russia.
Program: Lunar L1.
Class: Manned.
Type: Manned spacecraft. Spacecraft Bus: Soyuz.
Spacecraft: Soyuz A.
Soyuz 'leaves drafting boards'..
1963 February 1 - .
LV Family:
Martlet.
Launch Vehicle:
Martlet 1.
- Martlet 1 Shot 2 - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: HARP.
Apogee: 27 km (16 mi). The second Martlet One flew for 146 seconds. It rose to an altitude of 27 km and landed about 11 km down range. These two flights were sufficient to prove the launch concept. The initial test series also included several wooden test slugs..
1963 February 2 - .
06:56 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LC-A.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Blue Scout Jr SLV-1C.
- ERCS 279L Communications mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 February 3 - .
09:29 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Molniya 8K78.
FAILURE: Upper stage gyro platform failure..
Failed Stage: G.
- E-6 s/n 2 failure. - .
Payload: E-6 s/n 2. Mass: 1,422 kg (3,134 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Program: Luna.
Class: Moon.
Type: Lunar probe. Spacecraft: Luna E-6.
Decay Date: 1963-02-03 . Apparent causes were instabilities in the torque sensor circuit and the pitch-free floating gyro device. The upper stages and payload broke up on re-entry into the atmosphere over the Pacific..
1963 February 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 599.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 February 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 599.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 February 5 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 599.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 February 5 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 599.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 February 6 - .
17:59 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC15.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Mk 6 re-entry vehicle test launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). A Titan II (N-16) completed a 6,500-mile flight down the Atlantic Missile Range carrying the heaviest payload ever to travel that far on a U.S. missile..
1963 February 7 - .
- Simplified terminology for the Saturn booster series - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
NASA announced a simplified terminology for the Saturn booster series: Saturn C-1 became "Saturn I," Saturn C-1B became "Saturn IB," and Saturn C-5 became "Saturn V.".
1963 February 7 - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Complex:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Vehicle:
Seliger.
- Seliger rockets reach 80 km. - .
Nation: Germany.
Related Persons: Seliger.
Seliger launched three rockets. The 3.4 m long single stage version reached an altitude of 52 km, and the 6.0 m long two stage version reached 80 km. Each stage had a thrust of 5000 kgf. Bochum Observatory tracked the radio transmitters of the payloads during their ascent. The wreckage of the missiles was found on the flats. Seliger announced plans to launch a three-stage rocket to 150 km altitude.
1963 February 7 - .
- Birth of Heidemarie Martha Stefanyshyn-Piper - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Stefanyshyn-Piper.
American engineer mission specialist astronaut 1996-2009. Engineer. 2 spaceflights, 27.7 days in space. Flew to orbit on STS-115 (2006), STS-126..
1963 February 7 - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
LV Family:
Seliger 1.
Launch Vehicle:
Seliger 2.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Germany.
Agency: DRG.
Apogee: 80 km (49 mi).
1963 February 7 - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Vehicle:
Seliger 1.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Germany.
Agency: DRG.
Apogee: 52 km (32 mi).
1963 February 7 - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
LV Family:
Seliger 1.
Launch Vehicle:
Seliger 2.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Germany.
Agency: DRG.
Apogee: 80 km (49 mi).
1963 February 7 - .
16:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC29A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 February 8 - .
- Further construction of Vostok spacecraft approved. - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Decree 24 'On the Manufacture of 'Vostok' Objects --manufacture of Vostok spacecraft in 1963' was issued..
1963 February 8 - .
- Department of Defense objectives in the Gemini program. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Gemini.
Colonel Kenneth W Schultz of Headquarters, Air Force Office of Development Planning, outlined Department of Defense objectives in the Gemini program at the first meeting of the Gemini Program Planning Board. He defined three general objectives: conducting orbital experiments related to such possible future missions as the inspection and interception of both cooperative and passive or noncooperative objects in space under a variety of conditions, logistic support of a manned orbiting laboratory, and photo reconnaissance from orbit; gaining military experience and training in all aspects of manned space flight; and assessing the relationship between man and machine in the areas of potential military missions.
1963 February 11 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC70.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,160 km (720 mi).
1963 February 11 - .
15:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC25A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 February 12 - .
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- The Manned Spacecraft Center announced a mid-May flight for Mercury-Atlas 9 (MA-9). - .
Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Originally scheduled for April, the launch date was delayed by a decision to rewire the Mercury-Atlas flight control system, as a result of the launch vehicle checkout at the plant inspection meeting..
1963 February 12 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn V.
- Marion Power Shovel selected to build the Saturn V crawler-transport - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
NASA selected the Marion Power Shovel Company to design and build the crawler-transport, a device to haul the Apollo space vehicle (Saturn V, complete with spacecraft and associated launch equipment) from the Vertical Assembly Building to the Merritt Island, Fla., launch pad, a distance of about 5.6 kilometers (3.5 miles). The crawler would be 39.6 meters (130 feet) long, 35 meters (115 feet) wide, and 6 meters (20 feet) high, and would weight 2.5 million kilograms (5.5 million pounds). NASA planned to buy two crawlers at a cost of $4 to 5 million each. Formal negotiations began on February 20 and the contract was signed on March 29.
1963 Feb 12? - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC43.
Launch Pad: LC43D.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 February 12 - .
01:47 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LC-A.
Launch Vehicle:
Journeyman.
- Electron Spectrometer Magnetospheric mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 1,675 km (1,040 mi).
1963 February 13 - .
11:55 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576A1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- NTMP K-8 / NC20.133 ABM test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,800 km (1,100 mi). K-8 Nike-Zeus intercept of Atlas ICBM..
1963 February 14 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 February 14 - .
00:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Sphere Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 234 km (145 mi).
1963 February 14 - .
05:35 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC17B.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Delta B.
- Syncom 1 - .
Payload: Syncom 1. Mass: 39 kg (85 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA Greenbelt.
Class: Technology.
Type: Communications technology satellite. Spacecraft Bus: HS 301.
Spacecraft: Syncom.
Completed Operations Date: 1963-02-14 . USAF Sat Cat: 553 . COSPAR: 1963-004A. Apogee: 36,739 km (22,828 mi). Perigee: 34,392 km (21,370 mi). Inclination: 33.30 deg. Period: 1,425.50 min.
During firing of the apogee kick motor, contact was lost with the satellite. Syncom (Synchronous Communications) was a NASA project supported by DoD ground stations and communications experiments. Spacecraft engaged in practical applications and uses of space technology such as weather or communication (US Cat C). Four score. Last known longitude (10 March 1987) 172.58 deg E drifting at 2.429 deg E per day.
1963 February 15 - .
16:34 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Bennett Mass Spec Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 239 km (148 mi).
1963 February 16 - .
1963 February 16 - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Trailblazer test vehicle.
Launch Vehicle:
Trailblazer 1.
- Re-entry Vehicle test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 280 km (170 mi).
1963 February 16 - .
00:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus DM-15S.
- DM-15S Test 2 - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 240 km (140 mi).
1963 February 16 - .
21:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-C.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Awful Tired - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 5.00 km (3.10 mi). Research and development launch - Mk 6 re-entry vehicle.
1963 February 18 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Pilot safety philosophy and procedures would be carried over from Mercury-Atlas to Gemini-Titan. - .
Nation: USA.
In a letter transmitting copies of the Gemini Launch Vehicle Pilot Safety Program to Gemini contractors and other organizations engaged in Gemini development and operations, Air Force Space Systems Division explained that pilot safety philosophy and procedures would be carried over from Mercury-Atlas to Gemini-Titan.
1963 February 18 - .
- Soviet Ministers' decree on use of Vostok - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 5,
Vostok 6,
Vostok 6A,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
The Soviet Ministers finally issued decree 24. Four additional spacecraft are to be completed in the first half of 1963. Together with the two existing spacecraft, these will be used for two female flights, three male flights of up to ten days duration, and one 30-day biosat flight.
1963 February 18 - .
17:43 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Solar extreme ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 306 km (190 mi).
1963 February 18 - .
23:14 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Asp.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Asp.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Sodium release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 25 km (15 mi). Final Nike Asp flight..
1963 February 19 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Vehicle:
Emma.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 60 km (37 mi).
1963 February 19 - .
16:33 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC5.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Scout X-3M.
- P 35-3 - .
Mass: 40 kg (88 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Program: DMSP.
Class: Earth.
Type: Weather satellite. Spacecraft: Program 35.
Decay Date: 1979-12-26 . USAF Sat Cat: 533 . COSPAR: 1963-005A. Apogee: 810 km (500 mi). Perigee: 488 km (303 mi). Inclination: 100.50 deg. Period: 97.80 min. Military weather satellite to provide targetting information for reconnaisance satellites..
1963 February 20 - .
- Smithsonian received Friendship 7 Mercury spacecraft - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Glenn.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
The Smithsonian Institution received the Friendship 7 Mercury spacecraft (MA-6 Glenn flight) in a formal presentation ceremony from Dr. Hugh L. Dryden, the NASA Deputy Administrator. Astronaut John Glenn presented his flight suit, boots, gloves, and a small American flag that he carried on the mission.
1963 February 20 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn I.
- Saturn engine-out capability investigated - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
At a meeting of the MSC-MSFC Flight Mechanics Panel, it was agreed that Marshall would investigate "engine-out" capability (i.e., the vehicle's performance should one of its engines fail) for use in abort studies or alternative missions. Not all Saturn I, IB, and V missions included this engine-out capability. Also, the panel decided that the launch escape system would be jettisoned ten seconds after S-IV ignition on Saturn I launch vehicles.
1963 February 20 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 February 20 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC32B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). Minuteman FTM 421B was successfully launched from the Eastern Test Range by an all-Air Force crew, thus completing the Atlantic range test program for the Wing I configuration Minuteman missile (LGM-30A). .
1963 February 20 - .
23:18 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Grenades / Sodium release? Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 164 km (101 mi).
1963 February 20 - .
23:34 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 113 km (70 mi).
1963 February 20 - .
23:47 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 113 km (70 mi).
1963 February 21 - .
17:58 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 618.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 February 21 - .
23:16 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 172 km (106 mi).
1963 February 22 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,160 km (720 mi).
1963 February 23 - .
- Checkout of Mercury spacecraft 20 scheduled for completion - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Manned Spacecraft Center checkout and special hardware installation at Cape Canaveral on spacecraft 20 were scheduled for completion as of this date. However, work tasks were extended for a 2-week period because of the deletion of certain experimental hardware - zero g experiment and new astronaut couch. In addition, some difficulties were experienced while testing the space reaction control system and environmental control system.
1963 February 23 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan IIIC.
- First static firing of one segment version of the Titan III solid rocket motor. - .
United Technology Center (UTC), the contractor for the Titan III solid-rocket motors, successfully conducted the first static firing of one segment of the large-size, 120-inch diameter motor. This would be used as the first stage (Stage 0) booster. UTC was developing a single engine of five segments as the basic booster.
1963 February 24-March 23 - .
- Lunar Surface Experiments Panel - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft Bus: Apollo LM.
Spacecraft: Apollo ALSEP.
The MSC Lunar Surface Experiments Panel held its first meeting. This group was formed to study and evaluate lunar surface experiments and the adaptability of Surveyor and other unmanned probes for use with manned missions..
1963 February 25 - .
- Talks with Bell on development of the Apollo LEM ascent engine - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM Ascent Propulsion.
Grumman began initial talks with the Bell Aerosystems Company on development of the LEM ascent engine. Complete specifications were expected by March 2..
1963 February 25 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan IIIC.
- Contract for Titan III standard launch vehicles for space missions. - .
The Air Force announced the formal contract award to Martin Marietta Corporation for the design, development, fabrication, and delivery of Titan III standard launch vehicles for space missions. Martin Marietta would act as the systems integration contractor, while Aerojet-General would produce the liquid-fuel propulsions systems for the Titan core section and United Technology Center (UTC) would provide the solid-rocket motors (SRMs) for the booster.
1963 February 26 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Mass spectrometer Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 February 27 - .
19:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Eclipse inst test Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 151 km (93 mi).
1963 February 28 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg.
- First use of a Thrust-Augmented-Thor/Agena - .
Nation: USA.
First use of a Thrust-Augmented-Thor/Agena space booster at Vandenberg..
1963 February 28 - .
Launch Site:
Malmstrom AFB.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Malmstrom AFB - .
Five years after development was approved, the first fully operational Minuteman squadron, the 10th Strategic Missile Squadron of the 341st Strategic Missile Wing at Malmstrom AFB, Montana..
1963 February 28 - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Hopi.
Launch Vehicle:
Hopi Dart.
FAILURE: Failure.
1963 February 28 - .
09:02 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576A3.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- NTMP K-10 ABM test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,800 km (1,100 mi). K-10 Nike-Zeus intercept of Atlas ICBM..
1963 February 28 - .
21:48 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 113 km (70 mi).
1963 February 28 - .
21:48 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: U.
- KH-4 9052 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9052. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1963-02-28 . KH-4. Mission failed..
- SRV 610 - .
Mass: 1,200 kg (2,600 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
1963 February 28 - .
22:11 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 103 km (64 mi).
1963 March 1 - .
- Mercury spacecraft 9A completed Project Orbit Run 110. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Mercury spacecraft 9A, configured for manned 1-day mission requirements, completed Project Orbit Run 110. For this test, only the reaction control system was exercised; as a result of the run, several modifications were made involving pressurization and fuel systems.
1963 March 1 - .
- Apollo-derived 18 crew space station. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: LORL.
MSC proposed building a manned space station using hardware already under development for the Apollo program. MSC's plan called for an orbiting station with a capacity for 18 crewmen. Manning would be accomplished through successive flights of six-man, modified Apollo-type spacecraft that would rendezvous with the station in orbit.
1963 March - .
Launch Vehicle:
RT-2.
- RT-2 draft project completed - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Korolev.
Korolev completed the draft project in March 1963. The modular design had three stages, each with three nozzles..
1963 March 1 - .
01:20 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 March 1 - .
21:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC11.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
- ABRES REX-I / Pod 1 Re-entry vehicle test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Spacecraft: ABRES.
Apogee: 1,800 km (1,100 mi).
1963 March 2 - .
- Plan for Cosmonaut Training - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin,
Kuznetsova,
Ponomaryova,
Solovyova,
Tereshkova,
Yerkina.
The big question regards Gagarin. Shall the 'Columbus of the Cosmos' be allowed to risk his life on another spaceflight? Most of the Soviet leadership are against it, but Gagarin himself wants to train and fly again. Later in the day the cosmonauts have an idiotic argument with IAKM on high-G centrifuge runs for female cosmonauts. This is the first cosmonaut revolt against the policies and practices of IAKM.
1963 March 4 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/4.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Operational test launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 March 5 - .
- American agreement with Australia to build new tracking stations - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
NASA announced an American agreement with Australia, signed on February 26, that permitted the space agency to build and operate several new tracking stations "down under." A key link in the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's network of Deep Space Instrumentation Facilities would be constructed in Tidbinbilla Valley, 18 kilometers (11 miles) southwest of Canberra. Equipment at this site included a 26-meter (85-foot) parabolic dish antenna and electronic equipment for transmitting, receiving, and processing radio signals from spacecraft. Tracking stations would be built also at Carnarvon and Darwin.
1963 March 6 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn I.
- North American completed Apollo boilerplate (BP) 9 - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM LES.
North American completed construction of Apollo boilerplate (BP) 9, consisting of launch escape tower and CSM. It was delivered to MSC on March 18, where dynamic testing on the vehicle began two days later. On April 8, BP-9 was sent to MSFC for compatibility tests with the Saturn I launch vehicle.
1963 March 6 - .
22:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Mass spectrometer Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 228 km (141 mi).
1963 March 7 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Study group to recommend DOD experiments for inclusion in the Gemini flight program. - .
Nation: USA.
The Gemini Program Planning Board, meeting in Washington, agreed to the establishment of an ad hoc study group to compare NASA and Department of Defense (DOD) objectives for the Gemini program and to recommend DOD experiments for inclusion in the Gemini flight program. The group met in continuous session March 25 to April 26, presenting its final report to the board on May 6. The board then recommended that a program of inflight military experiments be immediately approved, that the Air Force establish a field office at Manned Spacecraft Center to manage DOD participation in the Gemini program in general and integration of experiments in particular, and that work on preventing longitudinal oscillations in stage I and combustion instability in stage II of the Gemini launch vehicle to be urgently pursued. The board declined to recommend additional flights in the Gemini program, as suggested by the study group, to encompass experiments that would not fit into the framework of the planned Gemini program. The Secretary of Defense and NASA Administrator concurred in the Board's recommendations.
1963 March 7 - .
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Soyuz 11A511.
- Korolev approves draft plan for 'Soyuz Complex' - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Chelomei,
Korolev.
Program: Lunar L1.
Class: Manned.
Type: Manned spacecraft. Spacecraft: Soyuz 7K-OK,
Soyuz A,
Soyuz B,
Soyuz V.
Final design approval for Soyuz A spacecraft for earth orbit and circumlunar flight using orbital rendezvous, docking, and refuelling technques. Except for change of orbital module from cylindrical to spherical design, and changes to rendezvous radar tower arrangement, this design was essentially identical to the Soyuz 7K-OK that flew three years later. Additional Details: here....
1963 March 7 - .
18:49 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 618.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 March 8 - .
- Ustinov challenges Vostok plans - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Ustinov.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 5,
Vostok 6,
Vostok 6A,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Ustinov, Smirnov, and other industry leaders challenge the plan for dual female flights. They would send only one woman aloft in Vostok s/n 007. Vostok s/n 008 would be held as a reserve. If Vostok s/n 007 was successful, s/n 008 would be used for a simultaneous manned flight. Training was to be complete by 1 April. The Soviet Air Force was categorically against this sudden revision. There were four women that had completed advanced training and were ready for flight, while there were only three men in training for flights later in the year. It would be impossible to complete the training of the male cosmonauts in a few weeks. However the spacecraft would reach the end of their storage life by May-June 1963 and would have to be used by then.
1963 March 8 - .
19:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 155 km (96 mi).
1963 March 9 - .
00:01 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 117 km (72 mi).
1963 March 9 - .
00:01 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 119 km (73 mi).
1963 March 10 - .
02:42 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B3.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- Operational missile test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 March 11 - .
- First Apollo LM fire-in-the-hole model test - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM Ascent Propulsion.
Grumman completed its first "fire-in-the-hole" model test. Even though preliminary data agreed with predicted values, they nonetheless planned to have a support contractor, the Martin Company, verify the findings..
1963 March 11 - .
- Birth of Marcos Cesar Pontes - .
Nation: Brazil.
Related Persons: Pontes.
Brazilian test pilot mission specialist astronaut 1998-2019. 1 spaceflight, 9.9 days in space. Flew to orbit on Soyuz TMA-8 (2006)..
1963 March 11 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 March 11 - .
04:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 March 12 - .
- Birth of Patricia Consolatrix nee Hilliard Robertson - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Hilliard.
American physician mission specialist astronaut, 1998-2001..
1963 March 12 - .
05:21 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B2.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- Operational missile test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,800 km (1,100 mi).
1963 March 12 - .
09:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
LV Family:
Lupus.
Launch Vehicle:
HAD.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Australia.
Agency: WRE.
Apogee: 124 km (77 mi).
1963 March 13 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn I.
- First long-duration static test of Saturn SA-5 first stage - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
The first stage of the Saturn SA-5 launch vehicle was static fired at MSFC for 144.44 seconds in the first long-duration test for a Block II S-1. The cluster of eight H-1 engines produced 680 thousand kilograms (1.5 million pounds) of thrust. An analysis disclosed anomalies in the propulsion system. In a final qualification test two weeks later, when the engines were fired for 143.47 seconds, the propulsion problems had been corrected.
1963 March 14 - .
- Unmanned lunar orbiter spacecraft - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Lunar Orbiter.
Homer E. Newell, Director of NASA's Office of Space Sciences, summarized results of studies by Langley Research Center and Space Technology Laboratories on an unmanned lunar orbiter spacecraft. These studies had been prompted by questions of the reliability and photographic capabilities of such spacecraft. Both studies indicated that, on a five-shot program, the probability was 0.93 for one and 0.81 for two successful missions; they also confirmed that the spacecraft would be capable of photographing a landed Surveyor to assist in Apollo site verification.
1963 March 14 - .
- Birth of Pedro Francisco Duque - .
Nation: Spain.
Related Persons: Duque.
Spanish engineer mission specialist astronaut 1992-2018. First Spanish astronaut. 2 spaceflights, 18.8 days in space. Flew to orbit on STS-95 (1998), Soyuz TMA-3..
1963 March 14 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 600.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 March 14 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 600.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 March 14 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 600.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 March 14 - .
01:01 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LC-A.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Blue Scout Jr SLV-1C.
- ERCS 279L Communications mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 March 15 - .
11:38 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- TALL TREE 1 operational test launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 300 km (180 mi).
1963 March 16 - .
02:05 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576D.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
- OT TALL TREE 5 operational test launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,400 km (800 mi).
1963 March 16 - .
02:19 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Lockheed XR 2 X-ray astronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 201 km (124 mi).
1963 March 16 - .
08:32 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576A1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- NTMP K-14/NC20.145 Target/Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 300 km (180 mi).
1963 March 18 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC31B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 March 18 - .
21:13 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: U.
- KH-6 8001 - .
Payload: KH-6 s/n 8001. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-6.
Decay Date: 1963-03-18 . First launch of KH-6. Mission failed..
- P-11 No. 1 - .
Payload: P-11 No. 1. Mass: 80 kg (176 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: SIGINT. Spacecraft Bus: P 11.
Spacecraft: SSF.
Decay Date: 1963-03-18 . Ferret subsatellite aboard first launch of KH-6. Mission failed..
- P-11 - .
Payload: P-11. Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Spacecraft: P 11.
1963 March 19 - .
- Chamberlin reassigned from Manager of Project Gemini. - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Chamberlin,
Gilruth.
Spacecraft: Gemini.
James A Chamberlin was reassigned from Manager of Project Gemini to Senior Engineering Advisor to Robert R Gilruth, Director of Manned Spacecraft Center. Charles W Mathews was reassigned from Chief, Spacecraft Technology Division, to Acting Manager of Project Gemini.
1963 March 19 - .
01:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC43.
Launch Pad: LC43D.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 March 19 - .
16:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC29A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 March 20 - .
- Soyuz draft project was submitted to the expert commission - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft: Soyuz A,
Soyuz B,
Soyuz P,
Soyuz R,
Soyuz V.
Aside from the baseline Soyuz-B circumlunar mission, the draft project also proposed the Soyuz-P space interceptor and the Soyuz-R command-reconnaissance spacecraft. The military projects Soyuz-P and Soyuz-R were 'subcontracted' to OKB-1 Filial Number 3, based in Samara. The Soyuz B circumlunar version did not receive the same level of financial support.
1963 March 21 - .
- Raketoplan model launched atop R-12. - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft: Raketoplan.
Raketoplan model reached 400 km altitude, re-entered at 4 km/sec. Flew a total distance of 1900 km before being recovered by parachute. First test flight of a lifting re-entry vehicle in the world..
1963 March 21 - .
- Vostok programme cut back - second female flight cancelled - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Kozlov.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 5,
Vostok 6,
Vostok 6A,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Vostok flight plans were drastically curtailed at a meeting of the Presidium of the Communist Party. Korolev presented the plan for 1963 as approved by the Interorganizational Soviet at the beginning of the year. This plan, already in an advanced stage of execution, was rejected utterly by Kozlov and Vershinin. The Ministry of Defence announced its categorical opposition to further Vostok production. It was finally decided that there would be only two flights in 1963 using existing spacecraft. These were scheduled for June and would consist of simultaneous female and male flights. Kamanin was infuriated that although he was ordered by a leadership decree in December 1961 to train five women for spaceflight, the same leadership was now asking - Who ordered this? What was the purpose? Are we sure they're ready?
1963 March 21 - .
- Soyuz development approved. - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft: Soyuz A,
Soyuz B,
Soyuz V.
Central Committee of the Communist Party and Council of Soviet Ministers Decree 'On approval of work on the Soyuz complex' was issued..
1963 March 21 - .
- Vostok launch plans in 1963. - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Central Committee of the Communist Party and Council of Soviet Ministers Decree 'On preparation of proposals on launches of Vostok spacecraft' was issued..
1963 March 21 - .
LV Family:
N1.
Launch Vehicle:
N1 1964.
- Presidium of Inter-institution Soviet - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Chelomei,
Glushko,
Keldysh,
Korolev.
Program: Soyuz.
Spacecraft: Soyuz 7K-OK,
Soyuz A,
Soyuz B,
Soyuz V.
The expert commission report on Soyuz is reviewed by the Chief Designers from 10:00 to 14:00. The primary objective of the Soyuz project is to develop the technology for docking in orbit. This will allow the spacecraft to make flights of many months duration and allow manned flyby of the moon. Using docking of 70 tonne components launched by the N1 booster will allow manned flight to the Moon, Venus, and Mars. Keldysh, Chelomei and Glushko all support the main objective of Soyuz, to obtain and perfect docking technology. But Chelomei and Glushko warn of the unknowns of the project. Korolev agrees with the assessment that not all the components of the system - the 7K, 9K, and 11K spacecraft - will fly by the end of 1964. But he does argue that the first 7K will fly in 1964, and the first manned 7K flight will come in 1965.
1963 March 21 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC110L.
Launch Vehicle:
N1.
- Design work starts on N1 launch complex. - .
Nation: Russia.
Program: Lunar L3.
1963 March 21 - .
08:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8A92.
- Cosmos 13 - .
Payload: Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 9. Mass: 4,700 kg (10,300 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: Korolev bureau.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: Vostok.
Spacecraft: Zenit-2 satellite.
Duration: 8.00 days. Decay Date: 1963-03-29 . USAF Sat Cat: 554 . COSPAR: 1963-006A. Apogee: 303 km (188 mi). Perigee: 214 km (132 mi). Inclination: 65.20 deg. Period: 89.60 min. Area survey photo reconnaissance satellite. Also performed radiation measurements..
1963 March 21 - .
11:40 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar PL1.
Launch Vehicle:
R-12.
- M-12 re-entry vehicle test flight - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 405 km (251 mi). First flight of Raketoplan Chelomei, launched at 16:40 Moscow Time. The reentry vehicle was destroyed during reentry. Maximum Altitude - 400 km. Maximum Speed - 14,400 kph. Distance of free flight - 1900 km..
1963 March 21 - .
15:23 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC15.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Mk 6 re-entry vehicle test launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 March 21 - .
21:10 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg OSTF2.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,400 km (800 mi).
1963 March 22 - .
- Glenn receives the Robert H. Goddard trophy - .
Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
The National Rocket Club presented to John Glenn, pilot of America's first orbital manned space flight, the Robert H. Goddard trophy for 1963 for his achievement in assisting the advance of missile, rocket, and space flight programs..
1963 March 24 - .
- VVS Chief of Staff Malinovskiy says that manned flights should be cut back due to safety considerations. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Malinovskiy.
VVS Chief of Staff Malinovskiy says that manned flights should be cut back due to safety considerations. Kamanin considers this a strange attitude - many die every day in auto or aircraft accidents, but not one death will be tolerated in the conquest of space. The whole plan for the next Vostok missions are thrown back for reconsideration. Many meetings occur over the next week - the basic question, was the MO / RVSN / VVS interested in manned space flight or not? Finally the decision was made to continue - a 180 degree reversal from the original position.
1963 March 24 - .
00:29 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576E.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- OT TALL TREE 4 operational test launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 10 km (6 mi).
1963 March 25 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Little Joe II.
- First Little Joe II completed - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Electrical.
General Dynamics Convair completed structural assembly of the first launcher for the Little Joe II test program. During the next few weeks, electrical equipment installation, vehicle mating, and checkout were completed. The launcher was then disassembled and delivered to WSMR on April 25, 1963.
1963 March 26 - .
- Beginning of Apollo CM environmental control system tests - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM ECS.
MSC announced the beginning of CM environmental control system tests at the AiResearch Manufacturing Company simulating prelaunch, ascent, orbital, and reentry pressure effects. Earlier in the month, analysis had indicated that the CM interior temperature could be maintained between 294 K (70 degrees F) and 300 K (80 degrees F) during all flight operations, although prelaunch temperatures might rise to a maximum of 302 K (84 degrees F).
1963 March 27 - .
- Cosmonauts Nelyubov, Anikeyev and Filatyev arrested drunk and disorderly - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Anikeyev,
Filatyev,
Nelyubov.
Cosmonauts Nelyubov, Anikeyev and Filatyev were arrested drunk and disorderly by the militia at Chkalovskiy station. This was not the first time. The VVS hierarchy wants them all dismissed from the cosmonaut corps. Gagarin says that only Filatyev should be fired. Kamanin would prefer to see all three go, but cannot afford to lose 25% of his flight-ready cosmonauts. He would hope to at least keep Nelyubov, who was a candidate for the third or fourth Vostok flights, but did not perform well on the centrifuge.
1963 March 27 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC32B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 March 28 - .
- Manned Earth Orbiting Laboratory. - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Seamans.
Spacecraft: MORL.
Associate Administrator Robert C. Seamans, Jr., asked Abraham Hyatt of Headquarters to organize a task team to study the concept of a Manned Earth Orbiting Laboratory. Seamans pointed out that such a laboratory was under consideration by several government agencies and that NASA and the Department of Defense were at that time supporting a number of advanced feasibility studies. He said that such a laboratory bore a very heavy interrelationship between manned space flight, space sciences, and advanced research and technology and that NASA's top management was faced with the decision whether to initiate hardware development. Hyatt's aft's team thus must examine broadly the needs of an orbiting laboratory from NASA's viewpoint, as well as that of outside agencies, and the operational and scientific factors impinging on any possible decision to undertake hardware development.
1963 March 28 - .
00:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Ultraviolet geocorona? Ultraviolet astronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 300 km (180 mi).
1963 March 28 - .
07:54 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- UM Composition 1 Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 190 km (110 mi).
1963 March 28 - .
09:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
LV Family:
Lupus.
Launch Vehicle:
HAD.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Australia.
Agency: WRE.
Apogee: 133 km (82 mi).
1963 March 28 - .
19:06 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- UM Composition 2 Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 190 km (110 mi).
1963 March 28 - .
20:06 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Eclipse inst test Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 161 km (100 mi).
1963 March 28 - .
20:11 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC34.
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn I.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 129 km (80 mi).
Fourth suborbital test of Saturn I. The S-I Saturn stage reached an altitude of 129 kilometers (80 statute miles) and a peak velocity of 5,906 kilometers (3,660 miles) per hour. This was the last of four successful tests for the first stage of the Saturn I vehicle. After 100 seconds of flight, No. 5 of the booster's eight engines was cut off by a preset timer. That engine's propellants were rerouted to the remaining seven, which continued to burn. This experiment confirmed the "engine-out" capability that MSFC engineers had designed into the Saturn I.
1963 March 29 - .
02:57 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
Launch Complex:
Kwajalein RN.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 177 km (109 mi).
1963 March 30 - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- K-17 Titan Intercept - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi). K-17 Nike-Zeus intercept of Titan I ICBM..
1963 March 30 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/4.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Operational test launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 March 30 - .
08:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A2.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- NTMP K-17 Target mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi). K-17 Nike-Zeus intercept of Titan I ICBM..
1963 April 1 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- POGO problems in the Titan II. - .
Nation: USA.
The Titan II-Gemini Coordination Committee was established to direct efforts to reduce longitudinal vibration (POGO) in the Titan II and to improve engine reliability. Air Force Space Systems Division (SSD) and Aerospace had presented to NASA and the Air Force a series of briefings on the POGO problem that culminated in a briefing to the Gemini Program Planning Board. The main problem was that POGO level satisfactory in the weapon system was too high to meet NASA standards for the Gemini program, and further reduction in the POGO level required a much more elaborate and extensive analytic and experimental program than had so far been considered necessary. The board approved the SSD/Aerospace proposals and established a committee to oversee work toward a POGO remedy. The high-level committee was composed of officials from Air Force Ballistic Systems Division, SSD, Space Technology Laboratories, and Aerospace.
1963 April 1 - .
Launch Site:
Kerguelen.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 130 km (80 mi).
1963 April 1 - .
23:01 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Agena D.
- KH-4 9053 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9053 / Agena D 1160 / OPS 0720. Mass: 1,150 kg (2,530 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1963-04-26 . USAF Sat Cat: 562 . COSPAR: 1963-007A. Apogee: 408 km (253 mi). Perigee: 198 km (123 mi). Inclination: 74.90 deg. Period: 90.50 min. KH-4; film capsule recovered 3.1 days later. Best imagery to date..
1963 April 2 - .
- Final contract with McDonnell for the Gemini spacecraft. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Gemini.
NASA announced the signing of a contract with McDonnell for the Gemini spacecraft. Final negotiations had been completed February 27, 1963. Estimated cost was $428,780,062 with a fixed fee of $27,870,000 for a total estimated cost-plus-fixed-fee of $456,650,062. NASA Headquarters spent two weeks on a detailed review of the contract before signing. Development of the spacecraft had begun in December 1961 under a preliminary letter contract which the final contract superseded. The contract call for a 13 flight-rated spacecraft, 12 to be used in space flight, one to be used for ground testing. In addition, McDonnell would provide two mission simulator trainers, a docking simulator trainer, five boilerplates, and three static articles for vibration and impact ground tests.
1963 April 2 - .
08:16 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Molniya 8K78.
- Luna 4 - .
Payload: E-6 s/n 3. Mass: 1,422 kg (3,134 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Program: Luna.
Class: Moon.
Type: Lunar probe. Spacecraft: Luna E-6.
Decay Date: 1963-04-03 . USAF Sat Cat: 563 . COSPAR: 1963-008A. Apogee: 182 km (113 mi). Perigee: 167 km (103 mi). Inclination: 64.70 deg. Period: 87.98 min.
Luna 4 was the second attempted Soviet unmanned lunar soft lander probe. The spacecraft, rather than being sent on a straight trajectory toward the Moon, was placed first in an earth parking orbit. The rocket stage then reignited and put the spaccecraft on a translunar trajectory. Failure of Luna 4 to make a required midcourse correction resulted in it missing the Moon by 8336.2 km on April 6, at 4:26 a.m. Moscow time. It thereafter entered a barycentric Earth orbit. The Soviet news agency, Tass, reported that data had been received from the spacecraft throughout its flight and that radio communication would continue for a few more days.
1963 April 3 - .
- Charles W Frick resigned as Apollo ASPO Manager - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Charles W. Frick resigned as ASPO Manager and Robert O. Piland was named Acting ASPO Manager..
1963 April 3 - .
Launch Site:
McConnell AFB.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- All major site construction on the Titan II force completed. - .
All major site construction on the Titan II force was completed at Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona; Little Rock AFB, Arkansas; and McConnell AFB, Kansas..
1963 April 3 - .
02:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC17A.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Delta B.
- Explorer 17 - .
Payload: AE A (S-6). Mass: 185 kg (407 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA Greenbelt.
Program: Explorer.
Class: Earth.
Type: Atmosphere satellite. Spacecraft: AE.
Decay Date: 1966-11-24 . USAF Sat Cat: 564 . COSPAR: 1963-009A. Apogee: 891 km (553 mi). Perigee: 254 km (157 mi). Inclination: 57.60 deg. Period: 96.10 min. Atmospheric research. Spacecraft engaged in research and exploration of the upper atmosphere or outer space (US Cat B). .
1963 April 3 - .
16:46 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 237 km (147 mi).
1963 April 4 - .
15:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Solar X-rays Spectrum 1 Solar x-ray mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 205 km (127 mi).
1963 April 5 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A1.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 April 5 - .
03:01 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC5.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Scout X-3.
FAILURE: Failure..
Failed Stage: U.
- Transit 5A-2 - .
Payload: Transit 5A-2. Mass: 84 kg (185 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Program: Transit.
Class: Navigation.
Type: Navigation satellite. Spacecraft: Transit.
Decay Date: 1963-04-05 . Replacement for the failed Transit 5A; failed to reach orbit..
1963 April 6 - .
- The General Staff considers the topic of spaceflight and is opposed to greater VVS participation. - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
They are not against the flight of four Vostoks in 1963, though..
1963 April 6 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar Mayak-2.
LV Family:
R-12.
Launch Vehicle:
Kosmos 63S1.
FAILURE: First stage failed..
Failed Stage: 1.
- DS-P1 s/n 2 - .
Payload: DS-P1. Mass: 355 kg (782 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Program: DS.
Class: Military.
Type: Military target satellite. Spacecraft Bus: DS.
Spacecraft: DS-P1.
Prototype ABM radar target; supported developmental experiments for ABM systems..
1963 April 6 - .
04:03 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant I.
- Ionosphere / fields Aurora / aeronomy / ionosphere mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: NRCC.
Apogee: 144 km (89 mi).
1963 April 6 - .
07:25 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant I.
- Aurora / ionosphere / fields mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: NRCC.
Apogee: 140 km (80 mi).
1963 April 8 - .
16:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC29A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 April 9 - .
- Vostok proposed as the first 'space trainer'. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Keldysh,
Korolev.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
In a meeting between the VVS and OKB-1 engineers, Korolev and Keldysh push for acceptance by the military and use of Vostok as the first 'space trainer'. Cosmonauts would train for spaceflight on Vostok missions before being assigned to operational flights aboard Soyuz.. This was consistent with aircraft practice (e.g. where the first effective jet fighter, the MiG-15, was converted to the MiG-15UTI and became the standard jet trainer for the VVS). It also envisioned a future where operational Vostok and Soyuz spacecraft would be mass-produced by the military and flown as regularly as fighter aircraft.
1963 April 9 - .
- Birth of Timothy Lennart Kopra - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Kopra.
American engineer mission specialist astronaut 2000-2018. 2 spaceflights, 244.0 days in space. Flew to orbit on STS-127 (2009), Soyuz TMA-19M..
1963 April 9 - .
20:28 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- D-region Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 163 km (101 mi).
1963 April 10 - .
- Link to build Apollo lunar mission simulators - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Simulator.
North American awarded a $9.5 million letter contract to the Link Division of General Precision, Inc., for the development and installation of two spacecraft simulators, one at MSC and the other at the Launch Operations Center. Except for weightlessness, the trainers would simulate the entire lunar mission, including sound and lighting effects.
1963 April 10 - .
20:33 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: EAG-154.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 April 11 - .
- Manned Orbital Research Laboratory (MORL). - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Kraft.
Spacecraft: MORL.
Christopher C. Kraft, Jr., John D. Hodge, and William L. Davidson of MSC's light Operations Division met at Langley with a large contingent of that Center's research staff to discuss LaRC's proposed Manned Orbital Research Laboratory (MORL). Langley spokesmen briefed their Houston visitors on the philosophy and proposed program phases leading to an operational MORL. Kraft and his colleagues then emphasized the need for careful study of operational problems involved with the MORL, as well as those associated with the smaller crew ferry and logistics supply vehicles. Specifically, they cited crew selection and training requirements, the need for a continuous recovery capability, communications requirements, and handling procedures for scientific data.
1963 April 11 - .
04:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC31B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). The first successful launch of a fully operational Minuteman missile from Vandenberg by an Air Force crew was completed under simulated operational conditions. .
1963 April 11 - .
18:03 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Hidden Hills DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A KC-1/APU Test/Imaging mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 22 km (13 mi). Maximum Speed - 4608 kph. Maximum Altitude - 22680 m. First flight in scientific and advanced research series - carried aerial mapping camera. Air dropped in Hidden Hills DZ..
1963 April 11 - .
20:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF06.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). The first successful launch of a fully operational Minuteman missile from Vandenberg by an Air Force crew was completed under simulated operational conditions. .
1963 April 12 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF02.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 April 12 - .
05:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- CSIRO VLF Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 198 km (123 mi).
1963 April 12 - .
14:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Visible Dayglow Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: KPNO.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 April 13 - .
- Decree issued for four Vostok flights in 1963. - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Decree issued by the Soviet ministers and Central Committee setting out four Vostok flights in 1963. Two are to be launched by 15 June. .
1963 April 13 - .
- At a meeting with the VVS, Korolev outlines his revised plans for the next fights. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Korolev.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
He plans a male flight for 8 days, during which a woman would be sent aloft for 2 to 3 days..
1963 April 13 - .
- Vostok plans in 1963. - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Decree 'On plans for Vostok launches in 1963' was issued..
1963 April 13 - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- K-21 Titan Intercept - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi). K-21 Nike-Zeus intercept of Titan I ICBM..
1963 April 13 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A3.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- NTMP K-21 Target mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi). K-21 Nike-Zeus intercept of Titan I ICBM..
1963 April 13 - .
11:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar Mayak-2.
LV Family:
R-12.
Launch Vehicle:
Kosmos 63S1.
- Cosmos 14 - .
Payload: DS-U / Omega-1. Mass: 347 kg (765 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: MO.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft Bus: DS.
Spacecraft: Omega.
Decay Date: 1963-08-29 . USAF Sat Cat: 567 . COSPAR: 1963-010A. Apogee: 410 km (250 mi). Perigee: 250 km (150 mi). Inclination: 48.90 deg. Period: 91.10 min. Tested VNIIEM electric gyrodyne satellite orientation technology..
1963 April 15 - .
- Flight plan for Mercury MA-9 - .
Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
The Manned Spacecraft Center published a detailed flight plan, and the assumption was made that the mission would be nominal, with any required changes being made by the flight director. .
Additional Details: here....
1963 April 16-May 15 - .
- North American simplified the Apollo CM water management system - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Recovery.
North American simplified the CM water management system by separating it from the freon system. A 4.5- kilogram (10-pound) freon tank was installed in the left-hand equipment bay. Waste water formed during prelaunch and boost, previously ejected overboard, could now be used as an emergency coolant. The storage capacity of the potable water tank was reduced from 29 to 16 kilograms (64 to 36 pounds) and the tank was moved to the lower equipment bay to protect it from potential damage during landing. These and other minor changes caused a reduction in CM weight and an increase in the reliability of the CM's water management system.
1963 April 16-May 15 - .
- Changes in Apollo boilerplate 22 LES test - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM LES.
On the basis of wind tunnel tests and analytical studies, North American recommended a change in the planned test of the launch escape system (LES) using boilerplate 22. .
Additional Details: here....
1963 April 16-May 15 - .
- Simmonds Precision build electronic propellant gauge for Apollo service propulsion system - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM SPS.
North American chose Simmonds Precision Products, Inc., to design and build an electronic measurement and display system to gauge the service propulsion system propellants. Both a primary and a backup system were required by the contract, which was expected to cost about 2 million.
1963 April 16-17 - .
- An MA-9 mission briefing was conducted for the astronauts and Mercury support personnel. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Subjects under discussion included recovery procedures, network communications, spacecraft systems, flight plan activities, and mission rules..
1963 April 17 - .
1963 April 17 - .
- Nelyubov, Anikeyev, and Filatyev dismissed from the cosmonaut corps. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Anikeyev,
Filatyev,
Nelyubov.
The VVS General Staff issues a decree discharging Nelyubov, Anikeyev, and Filatyev from the cosmonaut corps. .
1963 April 17 - .
LV Family:
Saturn V,
Saturn I,
Titan.
- Large Solid Rocket Motor Program (Program 623A) begun. - .
The Defense Department announced the selection of Thiokol Chemical Corporation, Aerojet-General Corporation, and Lockheed Propulsion Company to conduct work on the development of large solid-propellant motors as part of the Space Systems Division's Large Solid Rocket Motor Program (Program 623A). Development work was divided into four tasks: (1) Thiokol and Aerojet-General were to develop 260-inch diameter, solid rocket motors of 3 million pounds of thrust for demonstration static firings; (2) Thiokol was to work on a 156-inch, 3 million-pound thrust, two-segment solid rocket motor; (3) Thiokol was to develop and static fire a 156-inch, one-segment solid rocket motor of one million pounds thrust demonstrating thrust vector control (TVC) through movable nozzles; and (4) Lockheed was to static fire a 156-inch, single segment solid rocket motor of one million pounds thrust that demonstrated TVC through jet tabs.
1963 April 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 608.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 April 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 608.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 April 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 608.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 April 17 - .
09:23 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 April 18 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 April 18 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 608.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 April 18 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 608.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 April 18 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 608.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 April 18 - .
20:16 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Hidden Hills DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
FAILURE: Nose gear scoop door opens at Mach 3.4..
- X-15A HT,Local flow,IR Test/Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 28 km (17 mi). Nose landing gear failed. Maximum Speed - 6066 kph. Maximum Altitude - 28190 m. Air dropped in Hidden Hills DZ..
1963 April 18 - .
21:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 300A.
- Thermo Probe 2(AE-A) Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 342 km (212 mi).
1963 April 19 - .
- Cosmonaut training for Vostok 5/6. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Khrunov,
Leonov,
Tereshkova,
Volynov.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
It is clear that the female cosmonauts are trained and ready for an August flight, and the men (Bykovskiy, Volynov, Leonov, Khrunov) can complete training by that date. The male cosmonauts object to spending 7 to 8 days in a spacesuit in the ground spacecraft mock-up as required by the flight doctors. They don't want to spend more than 3 to 4 days.
1963 April 19 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC15.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Research and development test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi). Mk 6 re-entry vehicle.
1963 April 20 - .
- Birth of Sergei Valerievich Kostenko - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Kostenko.
Russian businessman, cosmonaut training 2005, backup to Gregory Olsen for the space tourist seat on Soyuz TMA-7..
1963 April 20 - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Sergeant.
Launch Vehicle:
Shotput.
- San Marco Satellite test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 426 km (264 mi).
1963 April 20 - .
10:01 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Blandine.
Launch Vehicle:
Veronique.
- Airglow Aeronomy /ionosphere mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 175 km (108 mi).
1963 April 22 - .
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- Mercury Spacecraft 20 mated to Atlas launch vehicle - .
Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Spacecraft 20 was moved from Hanger S at Cape Canaveral to Complex 14 and mated to Atlas launch vehicle 130-D in preparation for the Mercury-Atlas 9 (MA-9) mission. The first simulated flight test was begun immediately..
1963 April 22 - .
- Air lock for the Mercury spacecraft - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft Bus: Mercury.
Spacecraft: Mercury Mark I.
The Bendix Corporation reported to the Manned Spacecraft Center that it had completed the design and fabrication of an air lock for the Mercury spacecraft. This component was designed to collect micrometeorites during orbital flight. Actually the air lock could accommodate a wide variety of experiments, such as ejecting objects into space and into reentry trajectories, and exposing objects to a space environment for observation and retrieval for later study. Because of the modular construction, the air lock could be adapted to the Gemini and Apollo spacecraft.
1963 April 22 - .
08:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8A92.
- Cosmos 15 - .
Payload: Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 8. Mass: 4,720 kg (10,400 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: Korolev bureau.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: Vostok.
Spacecraft: Zenit-2 satellite.
Duration: 5.00 days. Decay Date: 1963-04-27 . USAF Sat Cat: 569 . COSPAR: 1963-011A. Apogee: 336 km (208 mi). Perigee: 194 km (120 mi). Inclination: 65.00 deg. Period: 89.80 min. Area survey photo reconnaissance satellite. Also carried weather, radiation experiments..
1963 April 23-24 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Gemini successful crew escape possible based on Titan II tests. - .
Nation: USA.
The Gemini Abort Panel met. Martin-Baltimore's analysis of the last three Titan II flight tests tended to show that successful crew escape would have been possible. McDonnell presented data on spacecraft structural capabilities, but lack of data on what to expect from Titan II catastrophic failure meant that spacecraft structural capabilities remained a problem. Also some questions had existed as to what could happen to the adapter retrosection during and after an abort. A study had been made of this problem, assuming a 70,000 foot altitude condition, and there appeared to be no separation difficulties. This study investigated the period of up to 10 seconds after separation, and there was no evidence that recontact would occur.
1963 April 23 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF05.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 April 23 - .
20:48 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Electron density Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 199 km (123 mi).
1963 April 23 - .
22:07 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Blandine.
Launch Vehicle:
Veronique.
- Aeronomy /ionosphere mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 140 km (80 mi).
1963 April 24 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 April 24 - .
20:59 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg OSTF1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas E.
- Research and development test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,600 km (900 mi). First successful E missile from OSTF-1, SMS 576.
1963 April 25 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
Launch Pad: V-2?.
Launch Vehicle:
R-12.
- Nation: Ukraine.
Agency: MVS.
Apogee: 402 km (249 mi).
1963 April 26 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/4.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Operational test launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 April 26 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Dragon 1.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Test mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 58 km (36 mi).
1963 April 26 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC5.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Scout X-2M.
FAILURE: Failure..
Failed Stage: U.
- P 35-4 - .
Payload: OPS 1298. Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Program: DMSP.
Class: Earth.
Type: Weather satellite. Spacecraft: Program 35.
Decay Date: 1963-04-26 . Military weather satellite to provide targetting information for reconnaisance satellites..
1963 April 26 - .
18:31 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: EAG-154.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 April 26 - .
20:13 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Agena D.
FAILURE: Attitude sensors were misaligned. No orbit..
Failed Stage: U.
- KH-5 9055A - .
Payload: KH-5 s/n 9055A. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-5.
Decay Date: 1963-04-26 . Mission failed..
1963 April 27 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-C.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Dinner Party - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
Titan II (N-8) was the second research and development missile and the first successful flight test vehicle to be launched from a silo at Vandenberg AFB. This was the first successful Titan II launch and flight after three consecutive failures, one (N-7) at Vandenberg and two (N-18 and N-21) at the Atlantic range. Research and development launch. Mk 6 re-entry vehicle.
1963 April 27 - .
02:03 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC11.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
- ABRES REX-II re-entry vehicle test flight - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Spacecraft: ABRES.
Apogee: 1,400 km (800 mi).
1963 April 28 - .
LV Family:
N1.
Launch Vehicle:
N1 1964.
- N1 Plans - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft: L3-1963,
OS-1 (1965),
TMK-1.
An Inter-Institution Soviet considers Korolev's N1 plans. He believes the first booster will be launched in 1965. The N1 is to have a payload capability of 75 tonnes to a 250 km altitude orbit, 50 tonnes to a 3000 km altitude orbit, and 16 tonnes in geostationary orbit. It could launch spacecraft capable of landing men on the moon and returning them to earth, or manned flybys of Mars or Venus. Three to ten launches would be needed for such missions, with the components being docked together in low earth orbit. The N1 can also be used to launch a large space station for military research. After the N1 discussion a decision is made that cosmonauts will not have to spend more than three to four days in a spacecraft mock-up on the ground to prove their readiness for flight. A simulation of the entire flight duration is not necessary.
1963 April 28 - .
08:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8A92.
- Cosmos 16 - .
Payload: Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 10. Mass: 4,720 kg (10,400 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: Korolev bureau.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: Vostok.
Spacecraft: Zenit-2 satellite.
Duration: 10.00 days. Decay Date: 1963-05-08 . USAF Sat Cat: 571 . COSPAR: 1963-012A. Apogee: 379 km (235 mi). Perigee: 201 km (124 mi). Inclination: 64.70 deg. Period: 90.30 min. Program partially completed. Part of the information lost due to failure of engine block stabilization system. Area survey photo reconnaissance satellite. Also performed radiation measurements..
1963 April 30 - .
- NASA / Department of Defense dispute over Gemini management responsibility. - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: McNamara,
Seamans.
Spacecraft: Gemini.
In a NASA position paper, stimulated by Secretary of Defense McNamara's testimony on the fiscal year 1964 budget and an article in Missiles and Rockets interpreting his statements, Robert C. Seamans, Jr., NASA Associate Administrator, stressed NASA's primary management responsibility in the Gemini program. McNamara's remarks had been interpreted as presaging an Air Force take-over of Project Gemini. Seamans recognized the vital role of the Department of Defense in Gemini management and operations but insisted that NASA had the final and overall responsibility for program success.
1963 April 30 - .
Launch Site:
Kindley.
Launch Complex:
Kindley COOP.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Deacon Judi.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 90 km (55 mi).
1963 April 30 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF03.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 April 30 - .
04:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Ultraviolet Photometer Ultraviolet astronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 197 km (122 mi).
1963 May 1 - .
1963 May - .
Launch Vehicle:
N1.
- Nuclear N1 designs - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Glushko,
Korolev.
At the end of 1961 the Glushko and Bondaryuk bureaux completed their draft projects on nuclear thermal engines for space vehicle upper stages. It was decided to continue work on development of an engine in the 30 to 40 tonne thrust range. In the following year Korolev was asked to study application of such engines, followed by a specific demand in May 1963 from the Scientific-Technical Soviet for specific recommendations. For a Mars expedition, it was calculated that the AF engine would deliver 40% more payload than a chemical stage, and the V would deliver 50% more. But Korolev's study also effectively killed the program by noting that his favoured solution, a nuclear electric ion engine, would deliver 70% more payload than the Lox/LH2 stage. Further investigation of nuclear thermal stages for the N1 does not seem to be pursued. Bondaryuk and Glushko turned to Chelomei and his competing UR-700 rocket for future application of such stages.
1963 May - .
- Subdirectorate for Nuclear Operations was formed within the Twelfth Directorate - .
Nation: Russia.
As the number of ballistic missiles deployed increased, a specialised Subdirectorate for Nuclear Operations was formed within the Twelfth Directorate..
1963 May 1 - .
Launch Site:
Al Kahir.
Launch Vehicle:
Al Kahir missile.
- Meteorological test - .
Nation: Egypt.
Agency: EGAO.
Apogee: 80 km (49 mi).
1963 May 1 - .
10:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A1.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
The Titan I research and development flight test program ended with the launch of missile V-4 from Vandenberg. V-4 self-destructed over the launch pad, recording one of the seven failures in the Titan I flight test program that began in .
1963 May 1 - .
16:59 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Blandine.
Launch Vehicle:
Veronique.
- Aeronomy /ionosphere mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 160 km (90 mi).
1963 May 2 - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Complex:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Vehicle:
Seliger.
- Seliger rocket reaches 120 km altitude. - .
Nation: Germany.
Related Persons: Seliger.
Seliger launched his 12.8 m long, three-stage rocket at an attempt to reach an altitude of 150 km. The effects of his contracts with the military were apparent. The 74th Panzer batallion at Altenwalde provided security, field communications, two jeeps as command posts, and a helicopter to search for the missile after the flight. The first launch of the day was that of a single-stage rocket to 50 km altitude. The mission was to measure high altitude winds and test the new parachute recovery system. The payload was successfully recovered in Wernerwald. Preparation of the three stage rocket took three hours, leading up to the planned 16:00 launch time. The 6 m long rocket lifted off at 16:03 but only reached an altitude of 120 km.
1963 May 2 - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Vehicle:
Seliger 1.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Germany.
Agency: DRG.
Apogee: 50 km (31 mi).
1963 May 2 - .
15:03 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
LV Family:
Seliger 1.
Launch Vehicle:
Seliger 3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Germany.
Agency: DRG.
Apogee: 120 km (70 mi).
1963 May 2 - .
17:03 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Extreme ultraviolet Mon 2 / XR / RPA Solar ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 232 km (144 mi).
1963 May 2 - .
17:59 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Mud Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A APU,UVP,IR,flow Test/Ultraviolet Astronomy/Technolgy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 63 km (39 mi). Maximum Speed - 5612 kph. Maximum Altitude - 63820 m. Carried earth background radiation instrument in support of Midas reconnsat development. Air dropped in Mud Lake DZ..
1963 May 3 - .
- Qualification drop test series for the earth landing system - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Parachute,
CSM Recovery.
At El Centro, Calif., Northrop Ventura conducted the first of a series of qualification tests for the Apollo earth landing system (ELS). The test article, CM boilerplate 3, was dropped from a specially modified Air Force C-133. The test was entirely successful. The ELS's three main parachutes reduced the spacecraft's rate of descent to about 9.1 meters (30 feet) per second at impact, within acceptable limits.
1963 May 4 - .
- Kamanin informed that a dual spaceflight has been decreed within the next 6 weeks. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Alekseyev, Semyon,
Bykovsky,
Khrunov,
Korolev,
Leonov,
Tereshkova,
Titov,
Volynov.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Only today is Kamanin informed that a dual flight has been decreed within the next 3 to 6 weeks. The women are ready, but Bykovskiy and Volynov need a few parachute jumps and training in the hot mock-up. Leonov and Khrunov need additional centrifuge training as well. Bykovskiy and Volynov should be ready by 30 May, and Leonov and Khrunov by 15 June. Therefore earliest possible launch date is 5 to 15 June. Alekseyev's bureau is as always the pacing factor. He can adapt one of the female ejection seats for Bykovskiy, but not for Volynov. The space suit for Leonov will only be completed by 30 May. Kamanin talks to Korolev about dumping Alekseyev's bureau in the future. Cosmonaut parachute trainer Nikitin agrees that Bykovskiy can complete his parachute qualification at Fedosiya on 9-10 May. Further bad behaviour by Titov is reported during a trip to Kiev. He insulted an officer ('I am Titov, who are you?') and then had general's wives intervene on his behalf to get him out of trouble.
1963 May 5 - .
- NASA awarded Letter Contract NAS 9-1484 to North American for the Paraglider Landing System Program. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Gemini,
Gemini Parachute,
Gemini Paraglide.
Work under the contract was to be completed by May 1, 1964, and initial funding was $6.7 million. This contract reflected a reorientation of the paraglider program. Its primary purpose was to develop a complete paraglider landing system and to define all the components of such a system. Among the major tasks this entailed were: (1) completing the design, development, and testing of paraglider subsystems and building and maintaining mock-ups of the vehicle and its subsystems; (2) modifying the paraglider wings procured under earlier contracts to optimize deployment characteristics and designing a prototype wing incorporating aerodynamic improvements; (3) modifying the two full-scale test vehicles produced under Contract NAS 9-167 to incorporate prototype paraglider landing system hardware, modifying the Advanced Paraglider Trainer produced under Contract NAS 9-539 to a tow test vehicle, and fabricating a new, second tow test vehicle; and (4) conducting a flight test program including half-scale tow tests, full-scale boilerplate parachute tests, full-scale deployment tests, and tow test vehicle flight tests. Contract negotiations were completed on July 12, and the final contract was dated September 25, 1963.
1963 May 6 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Gemini/Titan II improvement program. - .
Nation: USA.
The Gemini Program Planning Board approved the Air Force Systems Command development plan for the Gemini/Titan II improvement program. The plan covered the development work required to man-rate the Titan II beyond the requirements of the Titan II weapon system and included three major areas: (1) reducing longitudinal oscillation levels to NASA requirements, (2) reducing the incidence of stage II engine combustion instability, and (3) cleaning up the design of stage I and II engines and augmenting the continuing engine improvement program to enhance engine reliability. The work was to be funded by the Titan Program Office of Air Force Ballistics Systems Division and managed by the Titan II/Gemini Coordination Committee, which had been established April 1. NASA found the plan satisfactory.
1963 May 7 - .
- Yerkina excluded from Vostok 6 - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Yerkina.
Flight: Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Yerkina was excluded from Vostok 6 due to her performance during the three day test in the hot mock-up. She took off her boots after one day, and ate only three rations in three days. She was weak and fainted after coming out of the spacecraft. .
1963 May 7 - .
11:38 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC17B.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Delta B.
- Telstar 2 - .
Mass: 79 kg (174 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: ATT.
Class: Communications.
Type: Civilian communications satellite. Spacecraft: Telstar.
USAF Sat Cat: 573 . COSPAR: 1963-013A. Apogee: 10,802 km (6,712 mi). Perigee: 972 km (603 mi). Inclination: 42.70 deg. Period: 225.30 min. Active repeater. Spacecraft engaged in practical applications and uses of space technology such as weather or communication (US Cat C). .
1963 May 7 - .
20:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: NRCC.
Apogee: 139 km (86 mi).
1963 May 7 - .
21:11 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- JHU Airglow 5 Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 223 km (138 mi).
1963 May 8 - .
- Birth of Clemens Lothaller - .
Nation: Austria.
Related Persons: Lothaller.
Austrian engineer cosmonaut, 1989-1991. Doctorate degree from University of Vienna, 1987. One of five Austrian candidates in 1992 ESA selection. Made short list twice, but not selected in 1992 and 1998. Later had his own medical practice..
1963 May 8 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF06.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 May 8 - .
17:23 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 166 km (103 mi).
1963 May 9 - .
- Cosmonauts Tour Glushko Factory - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Alekseyev, Semyon,
Glushko,
Khrunov,
Komarov,
Korolev.
Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft Bus: Sokol.
Spacecraft: Sokol SK-1.
Victory Day Holiday in the Soviet Union. The cosmonauts toured Glushko's engine factory. Glushko has 11,000 employees at four locations. The resentment between Glushko and Korolev, going back to their time in the Gulag, is apparent. Korolev calls during the tour but Glushko does not return his call. Later Alekseyev contacts Kamanin and proposes that Komarov be the back-up cosmonaut for Vostok 5 rather than Khrunov - because he hasn't finished the suit yet for Khrunov!
1963 May 9 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC16.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Research and development test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi). Mk 6 re-entry vehicle..
1963 May 9 - .
18:02 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- CSIRO VLF Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 203 km (126 mi).
1963 May 9 - .
20:06 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC3E.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Agena B.
- Midas 7 - .
Payload: Midas / Agena TV 1206. Mass: 2,000 kg (4,400 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Early warning satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: Midas.
USAF Sat Cat: 574 . COSPAR: 1963-014A. Apogee: 3,680 km (2,280 mi). Perigee: 3,609 km (2,242 mi). Inclination: 87.30 deg. Period: 166.40 min. MIDAS 7 was the first operational MIDAS mission and the first equipped with the W-37 sensor. During its six weeks of operation, MIDAS 7 recorded nine US ICBM launches, including the first missile launch ever detected from space..
- Dash 1 - .
Mass: 1.00 kg (2.20 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Technology.
Type: Military technology satellite. Spacecraft: Dash.
USAF Sat Cat: 589 . COSPAR: 1963-014D. Apogee: 3,724 km (2,313 mi). Perigee: 3,558 km (2,210 mi). Inclination: 87.30 deg. Period: 166.30 min.
- TRS 2 - .
Payload: ERS 5. Mass: 1.00 kg (2.20 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft: TRS.
Decay Date: 1973-07-31 . USAF Sat Cat: 579 . COSPAR: 1963-014B. Apogee: 4,902 km (3,045 mi). Perigee: 2,269 km (1,409 mi). Inclination: 87.20 deg. Period: 165.00 min. Solar cells damage data. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
- TRS 3 - .
Payload: ERS 6. Mass: 1.00 kg (2.20 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft: TRS.
USAF Sat Cat: 608 . COSPAR: 1963-014C. Apogee: 3,691 km (2,293 mi). Perigee: 3,591 km (2,231 mi). Inclination: 87.30 deg. Period: 166.40 min. Solar cells damage data. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
1963 May 10 - .
- Birth of Lisa Marie Caputo Nowak - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Nowak.
American test pilot mission specialist astronaut 1996-2007. US Navy test pilot. 1 spaceflight, 12.8 days in space. Flew to orbit on STS-121 (2006)..
1963 May 10 - .
- Birth of Michael John McKay - .
Nation: Canada.
Related Persons: McKay, Michael.
Canadian engineer payload specialist astronaut, 1992-1995..
1963 May 10 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC25A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 May 10 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Blandine.
Launch Vehicle:
Veronique.
- Coronagraph Solar ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 135 km (83 mi). No recovery. Solar corona (UV) / Ptr mission..
1963 May 10 - .
14:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Solar extreme ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 214 km (132 mi).
1963 May 11 - .
- Vostok 5 / Vostok 6 Planning - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Keldysh,
Khrunov,
Korolev,
Leonov,
Ponomaryova,
Rudenko,
Solovyova,
Tereshkova,
Volynov,
Yerkina.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Korolev reports still problems with components of the electrical system from the Kharkov factory -- the same problems that existed in 1962. The cosmonauts will go to Tyuratam on 27/28 May, with launch planned for 3/5 June. Bykovskiy is named prime for Vostok 5, with Volynov his backup. Tereshkova is named prime for Vostok 6, with Solovyova and Ponomaryeva both as her backups. This selection is however made despite strong support for Ponomaryeva as prime by Keldysh and Rudenko.
1963 Early in the Month - .
- STL to build the mechanically throttled descent engine for the Apollo LEM - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM Descent Propulsion.
Grumman selected Space Technology Laboratories (STL) to develop and fabricate a mechanically throttled descent engine for the LEM, paralleling Rocketdyne's effort. Following NASA and MSC concurrence, Grumman began negotiations with STL on June 1..
1963 May 11 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LC-B.
LV Family:
Hopi.
Launch Vehicle:
Kiva/Hopi.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF CRL.
Apogee: 300 km (180 mi).
1963 May 12 - .
- Cooper ready for Mercury MA-9 mission. - .
Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Dr. Charles A. Berry, Chief, Aerospace Medical Operations Office, Manned Spacecraft Center, pronounced Gordon Cooper in excellent mental and physical condition for the upcoming Mercury-Atlas 9 (MA-9) mission..
1963 May 12-19 - .
- 1020 news staff to cover Mercury MA-9. - .
Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Some 1,020 reporters, commentators, technicians, and others of the news media from the U.S. and several foreign countries gathered at Cape Canaveral, with another 130 at the NASA News Center in Hawaii, to cover the Mercury-Atlas 9 (MA-9) mission. .
Additional Details: here....
1963 May 13 - .
- Korolev fights excessive VVS staff at Tyuratam. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Alekseyev, Semyon,
Bykovsky,
Cooper,
Korolev.
Flight: Mercury MA-9,
Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft Bus: Sokol.
Spacecraft: Sokol SK-1.
The VVS wants to send 55 staff to Tyuratam for the launches, but Korolev wants no more than 25. This is just possible - 11 cosmonauts, 8 engineers, and vital support staff only. Bykovskiy was to start a two day run in the hot mock-up, but it was called off due to defects with his suits - the biosensors were wired to his helmet microphone! The suit seems not even to have been tested before delivery. Alekseyev was supposed to have it ready by 9 May, now it will only be ready for use by 14 May. Gordon Cooper is scheduled for a 34 hour Mercury flight tomorrow....
1963 May 13 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-D.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Flying Frog - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). Research and development launch. Mk 6 re-entry vehicle..
1963 May 14 - .
- Tereshkova and Solovyova rated most ready to fly on Vostok 6. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Ponomaryova,
Solovyova,
Tereshkova,
Yerkina.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Tereshkova and Solovyova are most ready to fly and will be sent to Fedosiya for sea training first. Ponomaryova and Yerkina will follow tomorrow. Bykovskiy started his run in the hot mock-up at 10:00 am. .
1963 May 14 - .
- Attempt to launch Mercury MA-9 - .
Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
An attempt was made to launch Mercury-Atlas 9 (MA-9), but difficulty developed in the fuel pump of the diesel engine used to pull the gantry away from the launch vehicle. This involved a delay of approximately 129 minutes after the countdown had reached T-60 minutes. After these repairs were effected, failure at the Bermuda tracking station of a computer converter, important in the orbital insertion decision, forced the mission to be canceled at T-13 minutes. At 6:00 p.m. e.d.t., Walter C. Williams reported that the Bermuda equipment had been repaired, and the mission was rescheduled for May 15, 1963.
1963 May 14 - .
- Advanced Ballistic Reentry System (ABRES) program established. - .
Related Persons: ABRES.
Spacecraft: ABRES.
The Advanced Ballistic Reentry System (ABRES) program, Program 627A, was established as a Defense Department joint-service program for reentry vehicle research, development, and testing. The Deputy for Ballistic Missile Reentry Systems (D/BMRS) office, established at Headquarters Ballistic Systems Division at Norton AFB in February 1963 would manage the program. The program director for ABRES would be Colonel Darwin C. Middlekauff, BSD's Deputy for Ballistic Missile Reentry Systems.
1963 May 14 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
Launch Pad: Bacchus?.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 150 km (90 mi).
1963 May 14 - .
15:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Paraglider Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 185 km (114 mi).
1963 May 14 - .
20:11 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Hidden Hills DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Heating,UVP,IR Test/Ultraviolet Astronomy/Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 29 km (18 mi). Maximum Speed - 5792 kph. Maximum Altitude - 29140 m. Air dropped in Hidden Hills DZ..
1963 May 15 - .
1963 May 15 - .
13:04 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC14.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- Mercury MA-9 - .
Call Sign: Faith 7. Crew: Cooper.
Backup Crew: Shepard.
Payload: Mercury SC20. Mass: 1,376 kg (3,033 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA Houston.
Class: Manned.
Type: Manned spacecraft. Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Duration: 1.43 days. Decay Date: 1963-05-16 . USAF Sat Cat: 576 . COSPAR: 1963-015A. Apogee: 265 km (164 mi). Perigee: 163 km (101 mi). Inclination: 32.50 deg. Period: 88.70 min. Final Mercury mission, Faith 7, was piloted by Astronaut L. Gordon Cooper, Jr..
1963 May 15 - .
18:22 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
Launch Pad: Bacchus?.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- MPE Ba-3 Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 155 km (96 mi).
1963 May 15 - .
18:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Delamar Dry Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 003.
FAILURE: Nose gear scoop door opens at Mach 5.2..
- X-15A Opt Deg/Trav Probe Test/Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 37 km (22 mi). Maximum Speed - 6204 kph. Maximum Altitude - 37860 m. Lost both nose landing gear tires and forward fuselage buckled after APU gear box pressure loss. Air dropped in Delamar Dry Lake DZ..
1963 May 16 - .
- Bykovsky's ordeal in Vostok-5 hot mock-up to be ended on third day. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Cooper.
Flight: Mercury MA-9,
Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
It is decided that extending Bykovskiy's ordeal in the hot mock-up to a third day makes no sense. The IAKM doctors are utterly incompetent. Cooper has landed after a successful flight. The US is now hot on our tail in the space race. .
1963 May 16 - .
04:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Firefly IV CLAIRE Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 156 km (96 mi).
1963 May 16 - .
14:38 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Sonmiani.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Rehbar 3? (Na) Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 146 km (90 mi).
1963 May 16 - .
- Landing of Mercury MA-9 - .
Return Crew: Cooper.
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Cooper.
Flight: Mercury MA-9.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
After 22 orbits, virtually all spacecraft systems had failed, and Cooper manually fired the retrorockets and the spacecraft reentered the atmosphere, landing safely in the Pacific Ocean at 23:24 GMT, 34 hours, 19 minutes, and 49 seconds after liftoff. Cooper was reported in good condition, and this turned out to be the final Mercury flight.
1963 May 17 - .
- Problems with Titov again. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Titov,
Volynov.
Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft Bus: Sokol.
Spacecraft: Sokol SK-1.
Problems with Titov again. While on a road trip with a journalist, he left a satchel with sensitive and classified papers unattended in his car - documents from Korolev, secret state decrees by the Supreme Soviet, etc. At 12:30 Volynov took Bykovskiy's place in the hot mock-up. Examination of Bykovskiy's suit showed that it had been incorrectly assembled.
1963 May 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC25A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 May 17 - .
23:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LC-A.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Blue Scout Jr SLV-1C.
- ERCS 279L Communications mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 May 18 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC60/8.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Combat training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 May 18 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC60/7.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Combat training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 May 18 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC60/6.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Combat training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 May 18 - .
01:06 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Firefly IV SARAH Aeronomy sodium release mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 185 km (114 mi).
1963 May 18 - .
05:14 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC43.
Launch Pad: LC43D.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 May 18 - .
08:55 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Firefly IV DORIS Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 167 km (103 mi).
1963 May 18 - .
10:06 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Firefly IV BLANCHE Aeronomy sodium release mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 187 km (116 mi).
1963 May 18 - .
22:21 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
- KH-6 8002 - .
Payload: KH-6 s/n 8002 / Agena D 1165 / OPS 0924. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-6.
Decay Date: 1963-05-27 . USAF Sat Cat: 578 . COSPAR: 1963-016A. Apogee: 506 km (314 mi). Perigee: 147 km (91 mi). Inclination: 74.50 deg. Period: 91.00 min. KH-6. Second launch of KH-6. Operation was successful but no film was used. Officially: Spacecraft Engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A)..
1963 May 20 - .
- Volynov completes three days in the Vostok 5 hot mock-up. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Volynov.
Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
1963 May 20 - .
Launch Site:
Salto di Quirra.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Sodium release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 May 20 - .
02:09 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kagoshima.
LV Family:
Kappa.
Launch Vehicle:
Kappa 9M.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: Japan.
Agency: ISAS.
Apogee: 345 km (214 mi).
1963 May 21 - .
- The cosmonauts are informed of the selections for the Vostok 5/6 flights. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Khrunov,
Korolev,
Leonov,
Ponomaryova,
Solovyova,
Tereshkova,
Volynov,
Yerkina.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Korolev asks Ponomaryova why she is so sad - 'I am not sad, but serious, as always'..
1963 May 21 - .
Launch Site:
Reggane.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 150 km (90 mi).
1963 May 21 - .
Launch Site:
Ile du Levant.
Launch Pad: CERES.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 150 km (90 mi).
1963 May 21 - .
Launch Site:
Salto di Quirra.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Sodium release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 May 21 - .
Launch Site:
Salto di Quirra.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Sodium release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 May 21 - .
05:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Far ultraviolet Telescope Far ultraviolet astronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 192 km (119 mi).
1963 May 21 - .
18:25 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
Launch Pad: Bacchus?.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- MPE Ba-4 Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 125 km (77 mi).
1963 May 22 - .
- Vostok 5 ready for launch on 10 June. - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
It is reported that the spacecraft will be ready for launch on 5 June and the launch vehicle on 10 June. .
1963 May 22 - .
- Kennedy leaves decision to NASA for Mercury MA-10 flight - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Kennedy.
Flight: Mercury MA-10.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
President Kennedy at a regular press conference responded to a question regarding the desirability of another Mercury flight by saying that NASA should and would make that final judgement..
1963 May 22 - .
01:10 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Firefly IV IRENE Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 135 km (83 mi).
1963 May 22 - .
03:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar Mayak-2.
LV Family:
R-12.
Launch Vehicle:
Kosmos 63S1.
- Cosmos 17 - .
Payload: DS-A1 s/n 2. Mass: 322 kg (709 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: MO.
Program: DS.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft Bus: DS.
Spacecraft: DS-A1.
Completed Operations Date: 1963-05-30 . Decay Date: 1965-06-02 . USAF Sat Cat: 580 . COSPAR: 1963-017A. Apogee: 658 km (408 mi). Perigee: 251 km (155 mi). Inclination: 48.90 deg. Period: 93.70 min.
Carried military experiments to test communications and navigation equipment needed for command and control of Soviet nuclear forces (later used on the Uragan navigation satellites). Also conducted operational monitoring of cosmic rays, radiation from nuclear tests, and natural and artifically-produced radiation belts.
1963 May 22 - .
04:38 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
Launch Complex:
Wallops Island LA3.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Scout X-3.
- RFD-1 re-entry vehicle test flight - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 145 km (90 mi).
1963 May 22 - .
05:10 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Sodium-Lithium release trail Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 186 km (115 mi).
1963 May 22 - .
08:51 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Sodium-Lithium release trail Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 184 km (114 mi).
1963 May 23 - .
- Major redesign of the Apollo guidance computer - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
CSM Guidance,
LM Guidance.
MIT suggested a major redesign of the Apollo guidance computer to make the CM and LEM computers as similar as possible. NASA approved the redesign and the Raytheon Company, subcontractor for the computer, began work..
1963 May 23 - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
LV Family:
Spartan.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus DM-15S.
- ZK-20 DM-15S Agena - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 May 23 - .
05:13 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Sodium-Lithium release trail Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 May 23 - .
08:46 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 May 24 - .
LV Family:
Titan,
Atlas,
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Atlas D,E, and Titan I missiles to be phased out 1965 - 1968. - .
Headquarters USAF recommended that Atlas D,E, and Titan I missiles be phased out of SAC's active operational inventory between 1965 and 1968. The older liquid-fueled ICBMs were expensive to operate, required a large manpower commitment, were slow-reacting and thus vulnerable when compared to the more advanced Minuteman and Titan II missile that were being deployed.
1963 May 24 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
Launch Pad: Bacchus?.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 150 km (90 mi).
1963 May 24 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF07.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
The 6595th Aerospace Test Wing launched flight test missile 458, the first Minuteman I (LGM-30B) missile to be launched from Vandenberg. February 1959. Since then, a total of 57 Titan I R&D missiles had been fired - 47 from the Atlantic range and 10 from Vandenberg. Of these, 36 were complete successes, 14 were partially successful, and seven were registered as failures.
1963 May 24 - .
00:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Sodium release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 205 km (127 mi).
1963 May 24 - .
09:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Sodium release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 204 km (126 mi).
1963 May 24 - .
10:33 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8A92.
- Cosmos 18 - .
Payload: Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 11. Mass: 4,720 kg (10,400 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: Korolev bureau.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: Vostok.
Spacecraft: Zenit-2 satellite.
Duration: 9.00 days. Decay Date: 1963-06-02 . USAF Sat Cat: 586 . COSPAR: 1963-018A. Apogee: 269 km (167 mi). Perigee: 212 km (131 mi). Inclination: 64.60 deg. Period: 89.30 min. Area survey photo reconnaissance satellite. Also performed radiation measurements..
1963 May 24 - .
17:33 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC15.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Research and development test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). Mk 6 re-entry vehicle.
1963 May 25 - .
- VPK meets to approve plans for Vostok 5 and 6 flights. - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
It was proposed that Vostok 5 carry a small 1.5 kg optical telescope to allow better visual observations outside of the spacecraft..
1963 May 25 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/15.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Combat training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 May 25 - .
Launch Site:
CELPA.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- Sodium cloud Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 189 km (117 mi).
1963 May 25 - .
00:47 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Sodium release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 197 km (122 mi).
1963 May 26 - .
05:34 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Barking Sands.
LV Family:
Honest John.
Launch Vehicle:
HJ Nike.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 103 km (64 mi).
1963 May 27 - .
- Kamanin and the VVS contingent arrive at Tyuratam for the launch campaign. - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
1963 May 28 - .
- Cosmonaut's parachute trainer Nikitin killed in an accident. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Korolev,
Rudenko.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
He tangled in the air with another member of a group jump, Aleksei Novikov. Both were killed. The Vostok 5 and 6 launch vehicles and spacecraft are both in the MIK assembly wall. Work began on them two weeks ago. Nevertheless Korolev is not happy with the results. He wants the tests run over from the start. Round-the-clock work begins from this day. The bad weather and the news of Nikitin's death produce an atmosphere of gloom. Nikitin's funeral is scheduled for 30 May. Therefore the cosmonauts have delayed their departure in order to attend the funeral and will not arrive at Tyuratam until 31 May. Kamanin was very worried about the effect of Nikitin's death on the female cosmonauts' nerves. The final decree set the launch dates as 2/3 June, with landing on 7/8 June. Kamanin gets into a heated argument with Rudenko, who wants to fly all of the cosmonauts to Tyuratam on a single aircraft. He doesn't see what the big deal is -- after all, state ministers fly together all the time.
1963 May 29 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- The vertical test facility (VTF) at Martin-Baltimore was activated. - .
Nation: USA.
The VTF comprised a 165-foot tower and an adjacent three-story blockhouse with ground equipment similar to that used at complex 19. In it, the completely assembled Gemini launch vehicle was tested to provide a basis for comparison with subsequent tests conducted at complex 19. Each subsystem was tested separately, then combined systems tests were performed, concluding with the Combined Systems Acceptance Test, the final step before the launch vehicle was presented for Air Force acceptance.
1963 May 29 - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Hydac.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Javelin.
- TRUMP 1 test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF APGC.
Apogee: 131 km (81 mi). First Nike Javelin flight..
1963 May 29 - .
03:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC31B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 May 29 - .
04:35 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 May 29 - .
16:56 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC16.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
FAILURE: Failed 55 seconds after launch..
Failed Stage: 1.
- Research and development test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Titan II flight N-20, the 19th in the series of Air Force research and development flights, was launched from Cape Canaveral. It carried oxidizer standpipes and fuel accumulators to suppress longitudinal oscillations (POGO). During the spring of 1963, static firings of this configuration had been successful enough to confirm the hypothesis that POGO was caused by coupling between the missile structure and its propulsion system, resulting in an unstable closed loop system. Standpipes and accumulators, by interrupting the coupling reduced the source of instability. Flight N-20 failed 55 seconds after launch and yielded no POGO data. Although the failure was not attributed to the installed POGO fix, Air Force Ballistics Systems Division decided officially that no further Titan II development flights would carry the POGO fix because so few test flights remained to qualify the weapon system operationally. This decision did not stand, however, and the POGO fix was flown again on N-25 (November 1), as well as on two later flights.
1963 May 29 - .
18:43 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Delamar Dry Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Aero heating/VO Stab test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 28 km (17 mi). Inner panel of left windshield cracked. Maximum Speed - 6208 kph. Maximum Altitude - 28040 m. Air dropped in Delamar Dry Lake DZ..
1963 May 30 - .
- Birth of Helen Patricia 'Lenochka' Sharman - .
Nation: UK.
Related Persons: Sharman.
British engineer cosmonaut 1989-1998. Chemist. First British astronaut. First non-American, non-Soviet female astronaut. 1 spaceflight, 7.9 days in space. Flew to orbit on Soyuz TM-12 (1991)..
1963 May 30 - .
Launch Site:
CELPA.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 150 km (90 mi).
1963 May 30 - .
Launch Site:
CELPA.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 150 km (90 mi).
1963 May - .
Launch Vehicle:
Little Joe II.
- Major change to the Little Joe II launch vehicle - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM.
NASA and General Dynamics Convair negotiated a major change on the Little Joe II launch vehicle contract. It provided for two additional launch vehicles which would incorporate the attitude control subsystem (as opposed to the early fixed-fin version). On November 1, MSC announced that the contract amendment was being issued. NASA Headquarters' approval followed a week later.
1963 May - .
- First estimates of reliability for the Apollo LEM - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM.
In its first estimates of reliability for the LEM, Grumman reported a 0.90 probability for mission success and 0.994 for crew safety. (The probabilities required by NASA were 0.984 and 0.9995, respectively.).
1963 May - .
- Grumman completed the Apollo LEM M-1 mockup - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM.
Grumman completed the LEM M-1 mockup and began installing equipment in the vehicle. Also, the contractor began revising cabin front design to permit comparisons of visibility..
1963 June 1 - .
- Vostok 5/6 Flight Preparations - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Raushenbakh,
Rudenko.
Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Sunday before the launch. Rudenko goes to the Syr Darya for a swim. The cosmonauts play volleyball, then receive instruction from Rauschenbach on manual orientation of the spacecraft for re-entry. Then everyone goes to the beach for swimming and chess. Good river bass are cooked for dinner. In the evening, the film The Magnificent Seven is screened. Kamanin finds it violent but involving - the two hours go by in no time.
1963 June - .
- Most Apollo CM subsystem designs frozen - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM.
Most CM subsystem designs frozen..
1963 June 1 - .
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
- Atlas F propellant loading accident. - .
Nation: USA.
Exploded during propellant loading (Walker AFB 1).
1963 June 1 - .
- Cosmonauts and brass arrive at the cosmodrome for the Vostok 5/6 launch. - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
A meeting is held to discuss emergency recovery of the Vostoks. There is no realistic chance of their survival if they land at sea in the South Atlantic, Pacific, or Antarctic Oceans, however plans must be made. Several ships and three to four Tu-114 aircraft would be required to have any realistic chance of recovery. However these are not available.
1963 June - .
Launch Vehicle:
Proton.
- Tests of clustered Proton engines begun - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Glushko.
Glushko conducted tests of the new engine from 1961 to 1963, followed by tests of the clustered engine assembly from June 1963 to January 1965. Through use of a regenerative fuel pump cycle Glushko was able to improve the thrust of the engine by 12.5%. It was therefore decided to use only the large Glushko engine in the first stage. The first layout had one engine at the base of the core and 4 to 8 fuel tanks with peripheral engines. Now the centre engine was abandoned and the 'clean' oxidiser tank core was surrounded by six fuel tank/engine assemblies. This had the advantage of reducing the length of the stage while increasing the dry weight fraction.
1963 Jun - .
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Final Minuteman I completed - .
The final Minuteman I (LGM-30A) missile was completed at Air Force Plant 77..
1963 June 1 - .
- Program Definition for the defense communications satellite program. - .
Spacecraft: IDCSP.
Philco/Space Technology Laboratories and General Electric/Motorola initiated Phase IB, Program Definition, on the defense communications satellite program managed by Space Systems Division..
1963 June 1 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/15.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Operational test launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 June 1 - .
02:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar Mayak-2.
LV Family:
R-12.
Launch Vehicle:
Kosmos 63S1.
FAILURE: First stage failed 4 seconds after launch..
Failed Stage: 1.
- DS-MT s/n 1 - .
Payload: DS-MT. Mass: 340 kg (740 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Program: DS.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft Bus: DS.
Spacecraft: DS-MT.
Payload developed by the VNIIEM to test electric gyrodyne orientation systems. Also studied variations in the intensity of cosmic rays..
1963 June 2 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Stage I of Gemini launch vehicle 1 was erected in Martin-Baltimore's vertical test facility. - .
Nation: USA.
Stage II was erected on June 9, and posterection inspection was completed June 12. Subsystem Functional Verification Tests began June 10..
1963 June 2 - .
00:26 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Walker AFB.
Launch Complex:
Walker AFB.
Launch Pad: Walker AFB Missile Site 579.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 June 3 - .
- Vostok 5/6 Flight Preparations - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Korolev,
Ponomaryova,
Solovyova,
Tereshkova,
Volynov.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
At 9 am Tereshkova, Solovyova, and Ponomaryova practice donning and doffing their space suits. Bykovskiy and Volynov prepare their ship's logs. Korolev discusses plans for tests of the cosmonaut's ability to discern objects from space. Colonel Kirillov completes preparation of the spacecraft for flight.
1963 June 3 - .
- Birth of Yuri Yuriyevich Krikun - .
Nation: Ukraine.
Related Persons: Krikun.
Ukrainian journalist cosmonaut, 1990-1992. In 1997 unsuccessfully applied for the Ukrainian cosmonaut team..
1963 June 4 - .
- The State Commission for Vostok 5/6 launches meets. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
All is ready, but the wind is predicted to by 15 to 20 m/s on 7 June. The launch vehicle cannot be launched in winds over 15 m/s. Bykovskiy and Tereshkova are confirmed as the crew for 8 and 3 day flight durations. When they return to earth, a new and difficult life as celebrities will begin for them -- they will be known all over the world.
1963 June 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 601.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 601.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 601.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 601.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 601.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 601.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 4 - .
20:12 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg OSTF1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas E.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,600 km (900 mi).
1963 June 5 - .
- Vostok 5/6 Flight Preparations - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Volynov.
Flight: Vostok 3,
Vostok 4,
Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
On the last five days it has been 25 deg C during the days and 15 deg C at night. In the evening the classified film on Nikolayev and Popovich's flights is screened. Kamanin regrets that it cannot be made public. What the Soviet state considers secrets - the configuration of the rocket and spacecraft, the identity of the managers and launch teams - are public knowledge in the US program. A VVS Li-2 (DC-3) transport arrives at Tyuratam with three tonnes of fruit. A real treat for the launch teams. The cosmonauts spend their final night in the cottages. These are equipped with good-quality Italian air conditioners that keep the cosmonauts comfortable on their last night on earth.
1963 June 5 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 June 6 - .
- Launches of Vostok 5 and 6 delayed - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Titov.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Launches of Vostok 5 and 6 are delayed due to failure of the command radio line. There were many such failures during preparation of the spacecraft. It will take three to four days to fix. Kamanin inspects the site for the planned cosmonaut quarters on the Syr Darya river. It is located next to Khrushchev's houses (which he has handed over to Chelomei for quartering his people) and the television centre. The building will face east, with a view of the river and a wooded island. Bykovskiy is run through a first 'practice press conference' to teach him the correct responses to questions. The military officers want to minimise press contacts with the cosmonauts in any case. But the kids in the town are mad about the cosmonauts -- the chanted from 6 to 11 pm in the evening outside their quarters, and Kamanin has seen teenage girls stand in the rain for hours for a chance to see Titov (and he never even came out as promised).
1963 June 6-7 - .
- Mercury MA-10 pitched to Webb - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Webb.
Flight: Mercury MA-10.
Spacecraft: Mercury,
Mercury ECS.
Officials of the Manned Spacecraft Center made a presentation to NASA Administrator James E. Webb, outlining the benefits of continuing Project Mercury at least through the Mercury-Atlas 10 (MA-10) mission. They thought that the spacecraft was capable of much longer missions and that much could be learned about the effects of space environment from a mission lasting several days. This information could be applied to the forthcoming Projects Gemini and Apollo and could be gained rather cheaply since the MA-10 launch vehicle and spacecraft were available and nearing a flight readiness status.
1963 June 6 - .
00:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
LV Family:
R-5.
Launch Vehicle:
R-5B.
- VAO Ionosphere / plasma mission - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: AN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 June 6 - .
03:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC32B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 June 6 - .
14:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 208 km (129 mi).
1963 June 6 - .
16:16 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC25A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 8 - .
- Vostok 5/6 Flight Preparations - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
A review of the spacecraft radio problems shows that the rejection rate for production equipment is 6% against 2% guaranteed by 5-GURVO. Tereshkova sits in the Vostok 6 spacecraft, and makes a good impression on the technicians. .
1963 June 8 - .
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- Mercury MA-10 environmental control system changes - .
Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-10.
Spacecraft: Mercury,
Mercury ECS.
In preparation for the Mercury-Atlas 10 (MA-10) mission, should the flight be approved by NASA Headquarters, several environmental control system changes were made in spacecraft 15B. Particularly involved were improvements in the hardware and flexibility of the urine and condensate systems. With regard to the condensate portion, Gordon Cooper, in his press conference, indicated that the system was not easy to operate during the flight of Faith 7 (MA-9).
1963 June 8 - .
Launch Site:
Davis-Monthan AFB.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- First Titan II operational squadron activated. - .
The first Titan II operational squadron, the 570th Strategic Missile Squadron, was activated at Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona, and assigned to SAC's 390th Strategic Missile Wing..
1963 June 9 - .
- Vostok 5 is rolled out - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Vostok 5 is rolled out to the pad at 9 am. It is erected and then tested from 11:00 to 13:30. All is well and it is declared ready for launch. At 16:00 the cosmonauts take the traditional pre-launch walk along the Syr Darya. All is filmed for posterity, including the cosmonauts fishing for their dinner.
1963 June 10 - .
1963 June 11 - .
- Vostok 5 slipped to 14 June - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Korolev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
The cosmonauts spend the day on the beach. Tereshkova sits a long time with Korolev on the balcony on the second floor of the house on the river. He interviews here thoroughly to make sure she is ready for the flight. The State Commission meets at 17:00. The expected solar flare did not occur, but the Crimean Observatory claims the risk will remain high. The decision is made to defer the launches to 14/15 June.
1963 June 11 - .
05:06 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: NRCC.
Apogee: 135 km (83 mi).
1963 June 11 - .
05:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- ASE / Lunar X-ray Solar x-ray mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 302 km (187 mi).
1963 June 12 - .
- Webb rules out Mercury MA-10 shot - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Webb.
Flight: Mercury MA-10.
Spacecraft: Mercury,
Mercury Mark I.
Testifying before the Senate Space Committee, James E. Webb, the NASA Administrator, said: 'There will be no further Mercury shots . . .' He felt that the manned space flight energies and personnel should focus on the Gemini and Apollo programs. Thus, after a period of 4 years, 8 months, and 1 week, Project Mercury, America's first manned space flight program, came to a close.
1963 June 12 - .
- Skip lunar reentry trajectories studied for Apollo - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Recovery.
The Mission Analysis Branch (MAB) of MSC's Flight Operations Division studied the phenomenon of a spacecraft's "skip" when reentering the earth's atmosphere from lunar trajectories and how that skip relates to landing accuracies..
Additional Details: here....
1963 June 12 - .
- Brainerd-Holmes resignation as NASA's Deputy Associate Administrator - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Holmes, Brainard.
Program: Apollo.
D. Brainerd-Holmes announced his resignation as NASA's Deputy Associate Administrator and Director of Manned Space Flight, effective sometime in the fall. He had joined NASA in 1961 and was returning to industry..
1963 June 12 - .
- Vostok 5 preparations - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky.
Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
The next two days are spent waiting - on the beach in the heat, in fishing, and in politics between the brass at the site. .
1963 June 12 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure 1.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 150 km (90 mi).
1963 June 12 - .
Launch Site:
Tonopah.
Launch Vehicle:
Tomahawk.
- Seagull (IQSY) test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: Sandia.
Apogee: 105 km (65 mi). Seagull (IQSY). Technology test of NASA version..
1963 June 12 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC3E.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Agena B.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: U.
- Midas 8 - .
Payload: Midas / Agena TV 1204. Mass: 2,000 kg (4,400 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Early warning satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: Midas.
Decay Date: 1963-06-12 . Missile Defense Alarm System. Carried ERS-7, ERS-8 subsatellites..
- TRS 8 - .
Payload: ERS 8. Mass: 1,840 kg (4,050 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: Midas.
- TRS 7 - .
Payload: ERS 7. Mass: 1,840 kg (4,050 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: Midas.
1963 June 12 - .
09:03 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576A3.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- NTMP K-15 Atlas intercept - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,800 km (1,100 mi). K-15 Nike-Zeus intercept of Atlas ICBM..
1963 June 12 - .
09:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- K-15 Atlas Intercept - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi). K-15 Nike-Zeus intercept of Atlas ICBM..
1963 June 12 - .
23:58 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
- KH-4 9054 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9054 / Agena D 1161 / OPS 0954. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1963-07-11 . USAF Sat Cat: 590 . COSPAR: 1963-019A. Apogee: 416 km (258 mi). Perigee: 193 km (119 mi). Inclination: 81.80 deg. Period: 90.70 min. KH-4. Some imagery seriously affected by corona..
1963 June 13 - .
1963 June 13 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Gemini Titan malfunction detection system test plan. - .
Nation: USA.
Manned Spacecraft Center - Atlantic Missile Range Operations Office reported that the malfunction detection system would be flown on Titan II launches N-24, N-25, N-29, N-31, and N-32. The first launch in this so-called 'piggyback program' was scheduled for June 21. All preparations for this flight, including installation and checkout of all malfunction detection system components, were reported complete at a Titan II coordination meeting on June 14.
1963 June 13 - .
- Contract for Gemini space suit signed with the David Clark Company. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: G2C,
G3C,
Gemini.
The definitive contract for Gemini space suit was signed with the David Clark Company. Negotiations had been completed May 28. The estimated cost was $788,594.80, with fixed fee of $41,000 for a total cost-plus-fixed-fee contract of $829,594.80. .
1963 June 13 - .
- Vostok 5 a go for 14 June. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky.
Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
The solar activity has subsided and the launch of Vostok 5 is set for the following day. Kamanin has foreboding about the flight - eight days in space will be tough on both man and machine. .
1963 June 13 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure 1.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 150 km (90 mi).
1963 June 13 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 June 13 - .
17:06 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 616.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 14 - .
- Tereshkova meets with the command staff at 17:00, followed by dinner. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 6.
Tereshkova meets with the command staff at 17:00, followed by dinner. She has a good appetite and is ready to go for her space flight..
1963 June 14 - .
- Vostok 5 Launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Gagarin,
Khrushchev,
Kirillov,
Korolev,
Pilyugin,
Tyulin.
Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
At 8 am the State Commission meets and approves a five-hour countdown to launch of Vostok 5 at 14:00. The cosmonaut and his backup have slept well and are at medical at 9:00 for the pre-flight physical examination and donning of their space suits. At T minus 2 hours and fifteen minutes they ride the bus to the pad. A few minutes after Bykovskiy is inserted into the capsule, problems with the UHF communications channels are encountered - three of the six channels seem to be inoperable. Gagarin and Odintsov are consulted on how it will be for the cosmonaut to fly with just three channels operable - is it a Go or No-Go? Go! Next a problem develops with the ejection seat. After the hatch is sealed, a technician cannot find one of the covers that should have been removed from the ejection seat mechanism. It is necessary to unbolt the hatch and check - the seat will not eject if the cover has been left in place. At T minus 15 minutes Gagarin, Korolev, Kirillov, and Kamanin go into the bunker adjacent to the rocket.
A new problem arises -- the 'Go' light for the Block-E third stage won't illuminate on the control room console. It can't be determined if it is a failure of the stage or an instrumentation failure. It will take two to five hours to bring up the service tower and check out the stage. But if the rocket is left fuelled that long, regulations say it must be removed from the pad and sent back to the factory for refurbishment. In that case there can be no launch until August. Krylov and the State Commission would rather defer the launch to August. The last possible launch time is 17:00 in order to have correct lighting conditions for retrofire and at emergency landing zones. But Korolev, Tyulin, Kirillov, and Pilyugin have faith in their rocket, decide that the problem must be instrumentation, and recycle the count for a 17:00 launch.
The launch goes ahead perfectly at 17:00 - even all six UHF communications channels function perfectly. On orbit 4 Bykovskiy talks to Khrushchev from orbit and good television images are received from the capsule. Bykovskiy reports he can see the stars but not the solar corona. His orbit is good for eleven days.
1963 June 14 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Centaure 1.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 150 km (90 mi).
1963 June 14 - .
11:58 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8K72K.
- Vostok 5 - .
Call Sign: Yastreb (Hawk ). Crew: Bykovsky.
Backup Crew: Leonov,
Volynov.
Payload: Vostok 3KA s/n 7. Mass: 4,720 kg (10,400 lb). Nation: Russia.
Program: Vostok.
Class: Manned.
Type: Manned spacecraft. Flight: Vostok 5.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Duration: 4.96 days. Decay Date: 1963-06-19 . USAF Sat Cat: 591 . COSPAR: 1963-020A. Apogee: 131 km (81 mi). Perigee: 130 km (80 mi). Inclination: 64.90 deg. Period: 87.10 min.
Joint flight with Vostok 6. The Soviet Union launched Vostok 5, piloted by Lt. Col. Valery F. Bykovsky. Two days later Lt. Valentina V. Tereshkova, the first spacewoman, followed in Vostok 6. On its first orbit, Vostok 6 came within about five km of Vostok 5, the closest distance achieved during the flight, and established radio contact. Both cosmonauts landed safely on June 19. The space spectacular featured television coverage of Bykovsky that was viewed in the West as well as in Russia. Unlike earlier missions, only a black and white film camera was carried. Photometric measurements of the earth's horizon were made.
Mission objectives were officially: further study of the effect of various space-flight factors in the human organism; extensive medico-biological experiments under conditions of prolonged flight; further elaboration and improvement of spaceship systems.
Vostok 5 was originally planned to go for a record eight days. The launch was delayed repeatedly due to high solar activity and technical problems. Finally the spacecraft ended up in a lower than planned orbit. Combined with increased atmospheric activity due to solar levels, Vostok 5 quickly decayed temperatures in the service module reached very high levels.
Bykovsky also experienced an unspecified problem with his waste management system (a spill?) which made conditions in the cabin 'very uncomfortable'. He was finally ordered to return after only five days in space.
To top it all off, once again the Vostok service module failed to separate cleanly from the reentry sphere. Wild gyrations ensued until the heat of reentry burned through the non-separating retraining strap.
1963 June 15 - .
Launch Vehicle:
R-16.
- R-16 accepted into service. - .
Nation: Russia.
Decree 'On adoption into armaments of the R-16 surface variant' was issued..
1963 June 15 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Proton.
- First tests of RD-253 engine cluster for Proton. - .
Nation: Russia.
Manufacturer: Chelomei bureau.
Program: GR-2.
Ground tests of the clustered engine assembly ran from June 1963 to January 1965..
1963 June 15 - .
14:29 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Agena D.
- Lofti 2A - .
Mass: 26 kg (57 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Class: Technology.
Type: Communications technology satellite. Spacecraft: Lofti.
Decay Date: 1963-07-18 . USAF Sat Cat: 601 . COSPAR: 1963-021B. Apogee: 876 km (544 mi). Perigee: 170 km (100 mi). Inclination: 69.90 deg. Period: 95.10 min. VLF experiments. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
- SURCAL 1B - .
Mass: 3.00 kg (6.60 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Radar calibration target. Spacecraft: SURCAL.
Decay Date: 1963-07-05 . USAF Sat Cat: 597 . COSPAR: 1963-021F. Apogee: 802 km (498 mi). Perigee: 172 km (106 mi). Inclination: 69.90 deg. Period: 94.40 min. Surveillance Calibration. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
- RADOSE 112 - .
Payload: NRL PL 112 / Poppy 2B (Poppy 20-inch). Mass: 25 kg (55 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Naval SIGINT. Spacecraft: Poppy.
Decay Date: 1963-07-30 . USAF Sat Cat: 600 . COSPAR: 1963-021D. Apogee: 875 km (543 mi). Perigee: 170 km (100 mi). Inclination: 69.90 deg. Period: 95.10 min. Poppy naval signals intelligence satellite. Official and secondary mission: Radiation dosimeter measurements. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A)..
- USN satellite - .
Payload: NRL PL130 / Poppy 2C / RADOSE (Poppy 24-inch). Mass: 35 kg (77 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Naval SIGINT. Spacecraft: Poppy.
Decay Date: 1963-07-27 . USAF Sat Cat: 598 . COSPAR: 1963-021E. Apogee: 859 km (533 mi). Perigee: 170 km (100 mi). Inclination: 69.90 deg. Period: 94.90 min. Poppy naval signals intelligence satellite..
1963 June 16 - .
- Vostok 5 day 3 / Vostok 6 launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Gagarin,
Khrushchev,
Korolev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Bykovskiy slept well, his pulse was 54. The ground station could observe him via television - he made no motion while sleeping. On orbit 23 the cosmonaut was to communicate with earth, but no transmissions were received. Gagarin asks him why, and Bykovskiy simply replies that he had nothing to say and had already had a communications session with Zarya-1. But this was not true, they also reported no transmissions. At 07:00 he is asleep again, pulse 48-51. An hour later Korolev calls and discusses the impending launch of Vostok 6, 11 hours later.
At 12:15 Tereshkova is on the pad. Her pulse skyrockets to 140 aboard the elevator to the top of the rocket. 10 to 15 minutes later she is in the capsule and testing radio communications with ground control. There are no problems with the spacecraft or launch vehicle during the countdown - everything goes perfectly, just as it did on 12 April 1961 when Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space. Tereshkova handles the launch and ascent to orbit much better than Popovich or Nikolayev according to her biomedical readings and callouts. Kamanin feels reassured that it was no mistake to select her for the flight.
The launch of the first woman into space creates a newspaper sensation throughout the world. Direct orbit-to-orbit communications between Tereshkova and Bykovskiy are excellent. She talks to Khrushchev and the Soviet leadership soon thereafter. This was truly a great victory for Communism!
1963 June 16 - .
01:49 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC5.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Scout X-3.
- Transit 5A-3 - .
Payload: Transit 5A-3. Mass: 55 kg (121 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Program: Transit.
Class: Navigation.
Type: Navigation satellite. Spacecraft: Transit.
Decay Date: 1990-08-03 . USAF Sat Cat: 594 . COSPAR: 1963-022A. Apogee: 360 km (220 mi). Perigee: 350 km (210 mi). Inclination: 89.80 deg. Period: 91.60 min.
First operational prototype with a redesigned power supply. A malfunction of the memory occurred during powered flight that kept it from accepting and storing navigation messages, and the oscillator stability was degraded during launch. The satellite could not be used for navigation, but it was the first to achieve gravity-gradient stabilization, and its other subsystems performed well.
1963 June 16 - .
09:29 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8K72K.
- Vostok 6 - .
Call Sign: Chayka (Seagull ). Crew: Tereshkova.
Backup Crew: Ponomaryova,
Solovyova.
Payload: Vostok 3KA s/n 8. Mass: 4,713 kg (10,390 lb). Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Korolev.
Program: Vostok.
Class: Manned.
Type: Manned spacecraft. Flight: Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Duration: 2.95 days. Decay Date: 1963-06-19 . USAF Sat Cat: 595 . COSPAR: 1963-023A. Apogee: 166 km (103 mi). Perigee: 165 km (102 mi). Inclination: 64.90 deg. Period: 87.80 min.
Joint flight with Vostok 5. First woman in space, and the only Russian woman to go into space until Svetlana Savitskaya 19 years later. On its first orbit, Vostok 6 came within about five km of Vostok 5, the closest distance achieved during the flight, and established radio contact. Flight objectives included: Comparative analysis of the effect of various space-flight factors on the male and female organisms; medico-biological research; further elaboration and improvement of spaceship systems under conditions of joint flight. It was Korolev's idea just after Gagarin's flight to put a woman into space as yet another novelty. Khrushchev made the final crew selection. Korolev was unhappy with Tereshkova's performance in orbit and she was not permitted to take manual control of the spacecraft as had been planned.
1963 June 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: EAG-154.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 17 - .
18:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Attitude control test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 182 km (113 mi).
1963 June 18 - .
- Blue Gemini - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Dynasoar,
Gemini.
McNamara believed that the Pentagon needed no manned military spacecraft. His first step in the destruction of Dynasoar was the proposal of a 'Blue Gemini' spacecraft. This would use the two-manned spacecraft being developed by NASA to conduct military manned space experiments scheduled for DynaSoar. General Curtis LeMay countered that the country needed both programs - Blue Gemini and DynaSoar. McNamara responded by insisting that a specific military mission be immediately defined for the X-20, or he would cancel it.
1963 June 18 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF04.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 June 18 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Blandine.
Launch Vehicle:
Veronique.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 160 km (90 mi).
1963 June 18 - .
Launch Site:
Barbados Site.
Launch Complex:
Barbados HARP gun 16 inch.
LV Family:
Martlet.
Launch Vehicle:
Martlet 2.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: HARP.
Apogee: 92 km (57 mi).
1963 June 18 - .
00:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
LV Family:
R-5.
Launch Vehicle:
R-5B.
- VAO Aeronomy / ionosphere mission - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: AN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 June 18 - .
03:28 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
Launch Complex:
Kwajalein RN.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 177 km (109 mi).
1963 June 18 - .
04:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 June 18 - .
04:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
LV Family:
Long Tom.
Launch Vehicle:
HAT.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: Australia.
Agency: WRE.
Apogee: 88 km (54 mi).
1963 June 18 - .
18:34 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Delamar Dry Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Alt, UVP, Tail p Test/Ultraviolet Astronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 68 km (42 mi). Maximum Speed - 5694 kph. Maximum Altitude - 68180 m. Air dropped in Delamar Dry Lake DZ..
1963 June 19 - .
- Vostok 5 and Vostok 6 return to earth - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Korolev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
In the morning Tereshkova manually oriented the spacecraft for re-entry easily and held the position for 15 minutes. She was very happy with the result. At 9:00 the state commission took their places in the command post. At 9:34:40 the retrofire command was sent to Vostok 6. After a few seconds, telemetry was received indicating that the engine burn was proceeding normally. The nerves of the commission members finally settled down, but Tereshkova did not call out each event as required. No report of successful solar orientation was received, no report of retrofire, and no report of jettison of the service module. Things remained very tense in the command post - no communications were received from the capsule at all. Knowledge that the spacecraft was returning normally were only received via telemetry, including the signal that the parachute opened correctly from above the landing site. Both spacecraft landed two degrees of latitude north of the aim point. It was calculated that this could have occurred by duplicate landing commands having been sent, but such a failure could not be duplicated in post-flight tests of ground equipment.
Many errors occurred in the entire landing sequences, including actions of the VVS recovery forces. The conditions of the cosmonauts were only reported several hours after their landings. Big crowds gathered at both landing sites. Bykovskiy spent the night in Kustan, then left on 20 June aboard an Il-14 for Kuibyshev. Tereshkova spent her first night in Karaganda, then flew in an Il-8 to Kuibyshev. Many congratulatory phone calls were received from the Soviet leadership. Korolev declared he had no longer had the time to personally direct Vostok flights and wanted to hand the spacecraft over to the military for operational use. He could then concentrate on development of the Soyuz and Lunik spacecraft.
1963 June 19 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Blandine.
Launch Vehicle:
Veronique.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 38 km (23 mi).
1963 June 19 - .
09:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC17B.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Delta B.
- Tiros 7 - .
Payload: Tiros G (A-52). Mass: 135 kg (297 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA Greenbelt.
Program: Tiros.
Class: Earth.
Type: Weather satellite. Spacecraft: Tiros.
Decay Date: 1994-06-03 . USAF Sat Cat: 604 . COSPAR: 1963-024A. Apogee: 349 km (216 mi). Perigee: 338 km (210 mi). Inclination: 58.20 deg. Period: 91.40 min. Returned over 150000 cloud cover images. Spacecraft engaged in practical applications and uses of space technology such as weather or communication (US Cat C)..
1963 June 19 - .
17:33 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- LeRC LH2 test Technology test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 189 km (117 mi).
1963 June 19 - .
1963 June 19 - .
1963 June 20 - .
- Vostok 5/6 cosmonaut debriefing - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Korolev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Korolev, Tyulin, and Rudenko left Tyuratam aboard an An-12, followed by 60 others (cosmonauts, officers, engineers) aboard an An-10. General Goreglyad requests that 'extraneous' staff remain in Kuibyshev, while the rest will proceed on to Moscow with Bykovskiy and Tereshkova. The aircraft arrive at 11:30 in Kuibyshev, then go to the debriefing building on the Volga river. There the debriefing of the two cosmonauts began at 13:00. After the debriefings, in the evening, Korolev took the cosmonauts for a trip on the Volga. Kamanin was infuriated - partying would ruin the post-flight medical tracking.
1963 June 20 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-C.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Thread Needle - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). Research and development launch. Mk 6 re-entry vehicle..
1963 June 20 - .
03:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
Launch Complex:
Kwajalein RN.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 180 km (110 mi).
1963 June 20 - .
05:20 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 June 20 - .
14:25 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- NRL Coronagraph test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 195 km (121 mi).
1963 June 21 - .
- Vostok 5/6 cosmonaut debriefing - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Tomorrow morning the entire entourage would depart for Moscow. But on this day at the house on the Volga the cosmonauts were subjected to the attentions of seventy doctors, 100 correspondents, and a large additional number of KGB supervisors, military officers, and engineers. Tereshkova looked fresh and her first press conference with sixty correspondents went well - she made no big errors.
1963 June 21 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/15.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
FAILURE: Failure.
- BD - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 June 21 - .
16:44 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: EAG-154.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 22 - .
- Design of the Apollo CM's stabilization and control system frozen - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Guidance.
North American officially froze the design of the CM's stabilization and control system..
1963 June 22 - .
- Vostok 5/6 cosmonaut welcome in Moscow - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Khrushchev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
The big day for the cosmonauts. Departure for Moscow was scheduled for 10:30, with the meeting with Khrushchev at Vnukovo planned for 15:00. A sensitive issue - who would exit the aircraft first - Tereshkova, the main celebrity, or Bykovskiy, the senior cosmonaut and the first one launched? An enormous motorcade takes the entourage from the house on the Volga to the airport. Tereshkova and Kamanin are in the lead automobile, followed by Bykovskiy in the second, then the correspondents and so far in others, at five minute intervals. Huge crowds all along the route chant 'Valya! Valya! During the flight to Moscow Kamanin goes over Tereshkova's speech with her. When she and Bykovskiy get off the plane and march up to the tribune, a completely new life will begin for them. After the immense reception at the airport, they go with the leadership to a huge rally at Red Square.
1963 June 24 - .
- Controversy over Tereshkova's performance - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Keldysh,
Korolev,
Tereshkova,
Tyulin,
Yazdovskiy.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
The cosmonauts are prepared by Keldysh, Tyulin, and Korolev for their first big press conference. Yazdovskiy has inserted a paragraph in the official press release about Tereshkova's poor emotional state while in space. He claims she experienced overwhelming emotions, tiredness, and a sharply reduced ability to work and complete all of her assigned tasks. Kamanin takes him aside and asks him not to exaggerate her difficulties during the flight. She only had tasks assigned for the first day. When the flight was extended for a second, and then a third day, there was essentially nothing for her to do. The ground command did nothing to support her during those additional days. She certainly was never tired, never objected, but rather did all she could to complete fully the flight program.
1963 June 24 - .
- Manned Orbital Research Laboratory concept contracts. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: MORL.
LaRC Director Floyd L. Thompson announced that two aerospace firms, The Boeing Company of Seattle and Douglas Aircraft Company, Inc., of Santa Monica, had been selected for final negotiations for study contracts of a Manned Orbital Research Laboratory (MORL) concept. Additional Details: here....
1963 June 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 610.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 610.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 610.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 610.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 610.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 610.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 June 24 - .
19:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: CARDE.
Apogee: 171 km (106 mi).
1963 June 24 - .
23:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: CARDE.
Apogee: 162 km (100 mi).
1963 June 25 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Martin-Baltimore received the stage II fuel tank for Gemini launch vehicle 2 from Martin-Denver. - .
Nation: USA.
This was a new tank, replacing a tank rejected for heat treatment cracks. Stage II oxidizer tank and stage I fuel and oxidizer tanks were received July 12 after a roll-out inspection at Martin-Denver July 1-3..
1963 June 25 - .
- Vostok 5/6 returned cosmonauts traditional meeting with Korolev - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Korolev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
The returned cosmonauts have the traditional meeting with Korolev at the design bureau and hand over their flight logs. The new cosmonaut group is presented as well. Korolev is in a good mood, and makes an especially long-winded speech. Tereshkova has to leave early, at 12:00, to attend yet another press conference and a woman's congress. These activities kept her going until 22:00 in the evening - a gruelling schedule indicative of what was to come.
1963 June 25 - .
Launch Site:
Barking Sands.
LV Family:
Tomahawk.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Tomahawk.
- Nitehawk-9 test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: Sandia.
Apogee: 250 km (150 mi).
1963 June 25 - .
13:20 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Visible Dayglow Aeronomy / aurora mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: KPNO.
Apogee: 213 km (132 mi).
1963 June 25 - .
17:53 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Delamar Dry Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 003.
- X-15A Opt Deg/Trav Probe Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 34 km (21 mi). Maximum Speed - 6293 kph. Maximum Altitude - 34080 m. Air dropped in Delamar Dry Lake DZ..
1963 June 26 - .
- Frictionless platform to simulate extravehicular activity - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: A7L.
MSC announced that it had contracted with the Martin Company to develop a frictionless platform to simulate the reactions of an extravehicular astronaut in five degrees of freedom-pitch, yaw, roll, forward-backward, and side-to-side. MSC Crew Systems Division would use the simulator to test and evaluate space suits, stabilization devices, tethering lines, and tools.
1963 June 26 - .
- First full-scale firing of the Apollo SM engine - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Electrical.
The first full-scale firing of the SM engine was conducted at the Arnold Engineering Development Center. At the start of the shutdown sequence, the engine thrust chamber valve remained open because of an electrical wiring error in the test facility. Consequently the engine ran at a reduced chamber pressure while the propellant in the fuel line was exhausted. During this shutdown transient, the engine's nozzle extension collapsed as a result of excessive pressure differential across the nozzle skin.
1963 June 27 - .
- Vostok 5/6 cosmonauts pose for their official colour photographs. - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
1963 June 27 - .
Launch Site:
Ile du Levant.
Launch Pad: CERES.
Launch Vehicle:
Berenice.
- Re-entry Vehicle test - .
Nation: France.
Agency: ONERA.
Apogee: 270 km (160 mi).
1963 June 27 - .
00:37 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
- KH-4 9056 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9056 / Agena D 1166 / OPS 0999. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1963-07-26 . USAF Sat Cat: 609 . COSPAR: 1963-025A. Apogee: 338 km (210 mi). Perigee: 199 km (123 mi). Inclination: 81.60 deg. Period: 89.90 min. KH-4. Experimental camera carried. Film affected by light leaks..
- Hitch Hiker 1 - .
Payload: P-11 No. 2. Mass: 80 kg (176 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: SIGINT. Spacecraft Bus: P 11.
Spacecraft: SSF.
USAF Sat Cat: 614 . COSPAR: 1963-025B. Apogee: 2,506 km (1,557 mi). Perigee: 323 km (200 mi). Inclination: 82.10 deg. Period: 114.10 min. Radiation data. First successful flight of P-11 bus, mainly used for radar signals intelligence gathering..
1963 June 27 - .
17:56 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Delamar Dry Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Alt/UVP/IR/HorScan Test/Ultraviolet Astronomy/Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 86 km (53 mi). Maximum Speed - 5511 kph. Maximum Altitude - 86870 m. Third astronaut wings flight (USAF definition). Air dropped in Delamar Dry Lake DZ..
1963 June 28 - .
- Apollo Pioneer tri-conical solid parachutes canceled - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Parachute.
A cluster of two Pioneer tri-conical solid parachutes was tested; both parachutes failed. Because of this unsatisfactory performance, the Pioneer solid-parachute program was officially canceled on July 15..
1963 June 28 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF02.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 June 28 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/15.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Combat training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 June 28 - .
Launch Site:
Teikovo.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 June 28 - .
02:34 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC31B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 June 28 - .
14:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- NRL NE3.129? Solar / solar extreme ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 204 km (126 mi).
1963 June 28 - .
21:19 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
Launch Complex:
Wallops Island LA3.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Scout X-4.
- GRS - .
Payload: CRL 1. Mass: 99 kg (218 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFC.
Class: Earth.
Type: Magnetosphere satellite. Spacecraft: GRS.
Decay Date: 1983-12-14 . USAF Sat Cat: 612 . COSPAR: 1963-026A. Apogee: 1,306 km (811 mi). Perigee: 413 km (256 mi). Inclination: 49.70 deg. Period: 102.10 min. Geophysical Research Satellite; space gas data. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
1963 June 29 - .
1963 June 29 - .
16:46 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Gyro-resonance Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 156 km (96 mi).
1963 June 29 - .
22:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena B.
- OPS 1440 - .
Payload: Ferret 4 / Agena B 2314. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: SIGINT. Spacecraft: Ferret.
Decay Date: 1969-10-26 . USAF Sat Cat: 613 . COSPAR: 1963-027A. Apogee: 530 km (320 mi). Perigee: 487 km (302 mi). Inclination: 82.30 deg. Period: 94.80 min.
An Air Force Thor/Agena B launched from Vandenberg established a number of distinctive records. It was the 200th Thor to be launched since Number 101 was launched at Cape Canaveral on 25 January 1957. It was the first, last and only-Thrust Augmented Thor/Agena B to be used by the Air Force. It was the final Agena B (#2314) to be employed with a Thor booster.
1963 June 30 - .
Launch Site:
Davis-Monthan AFB.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Davis-Monthan AFB - .
The first Titan II flight at Davis-Monthan AFB was turned over to SAC's 570th Strategic Missile Squadron..
1963 June 30 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC60/7.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Operational test launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 July 1-2 - .
- Apollo CM boilerplate 6 shipped - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM.
North American shipped Apollo CM boilerplate 6 and its ground support equipment to WSMR..
1963 July 1 - .
1963 July 10 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn V.
- Pregnant Guppy FAA certification - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Aero Spacelines' "Pregnant Guppy," a modified Boeing Stratocruiser, won airworthiness certification by the Federal Aviation Agency. The aircraft would be used to transport major Apollo spacecraft and launch vehicle components..
1963 July 1 - .
- Birth of Dr Edward Tsang Lu - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Lu.
American engineer mission specialist astronaut 1994-2007. 3 spaceflights, 206.0 days in space. Flew to orbit on STS-84 (1997), STS-106, Soyuz TMA-2..
1963 July 1 - .
Launch Site:
,
Vandenberg.
- All Air Force missile test and space launching responsibilities under Space Systems Division. - .
The 6555th Aerospace Test Wing at Patrick AFB, Florida, was transferred from BSD to SSD. This brought all Air Force missile test and space launching responsibilities under Space Systems Division..
1963 July 1 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 July 1 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC32B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). The first Minuteman I (LGM-30B) Wing II configuration flight test missile to be launched from Cape Canaveral was launched from Silo 32B. .
1963 July 1 - .
Launch Site:
Barking Sands.
LV Family:
Tomahawk.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Tomahawk.
- Nitehawk-9 test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: Sandia.
Apogee: 250 km (150 mi).
1963 Jul - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Vehicle:
Temp.
- 9K71 Phase 2 No. 12 - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 July 2 - .
1963 July 2 - .
14:18 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Honest John.
Launch Vehicle:
Javelin.
- Topside sounder Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 934 km (580 mi).
1963 July 2 - .
16:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 616.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 July 2 - .
16:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 616.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 July 3 - .
- STL go-ahead to develop a parallel descent engine for the Apollo LEM - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM Ascent Propulsion,
LM Descent Propulsion.
Space Technology Laboratories received Grumman's go-ahead to develop the parallel descent engine for the LEM. At the same time, Grumman ordered Bell Aerosystems Company to proceed with the LEM ascent engine. The contracts were estimated at $18,742,820 and $11,205,415, respectively.
1963 July 3 - .
- Cosmonaut controversies - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Anikeyev,
Filatyev,
Nelyubov,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
A fight ensues over the release of the motion picture film of the flight. The Kremlin leadership still does not want to show the 'secret' launch cadres, rocket and spacecraft configurations, etc. There is also conflict with the planned dismissal of cosmonauts Nelyubov, Anikeyev, and Filatyev, with the flown cosmonauts using their connections with the political hierarchy to try and overturn the decisions of their military commanders. Finally, Tereshkova started a campaign to get a posthumous Hero of the Soviet Union medal for cosmonaut parachute trainer Nikitin. This particularly irritated the military command since as far as they were concerned Nikitin died due to his own error and killed another parachutist in the process. In no way was this deserving of a medal, but the award would convey significant financial benefits to his family and Tereshkova fought on. This was indicative of the quick turnaround celebrity brought to the cosmonauts - from obedient junior officers, anxious not to lose a chance for a spaceflight, to aggressive campaigners, willing to take on even members of the General Staff for what they thought was right.
1963 July 3 - .
Launch Site:
Malmstrom AFB.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Malmstrom AFB - .
The first three-squadron, 150-missile Minuteman wing, the 341st Strategic Missile Wing at Malmstrom AFB, Montana, was completed and turned over to SAC..
1963 July 3 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC25A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 July 3 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 July 3 - .
Launch Site:
Ile du Levant.
Launch Pad: CERES.
Launch Vehicle:
Berenice.
- Re-entry Vehicle test - .
Nation: France.
Agency: ONERA.
Apogee: 270 km (160 mi).
1963 July 3 - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- K-23 Atlas Intercept - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 July 3 - .
09:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Structure Test / ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 199 km (123 mi).
1963 July 3 - .
21:13 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576C.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas E.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,600 km (900 mi). Atlas 69E successfully led off the seven-missile Atlas E operational program launch series from Vandenberg. .
1963 July 5 - .
21:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF05.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). Flight test missile 518 was launched from Vandenberg AFB. This was the last of 31 Minuteman I (LGM-30A) research and development missiles to be launched - 23 from Cape Canaveral and eight from Vandenberg. .
1963 July 6 - .
00:36 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
LV Family:
R-5.
Launch Vehicle:
R-5B.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: AN.
Apogee: 400 km (240 mi).
1963 July 7 - .
- Kamanin presses for specialised cosmonaut training - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Rudenko,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
In a two hour meeting with Rudenko, Kamanin attempts to convince him of the need for specialised cosmonaut training (qualifying as spacecraft commander, pilot, navigator, engineer, etc.) for future multi-crew spacecraft. Kamanin points out that in five to seven years they will be routinely flying 2 or 3 place spacecraft and need to start differentiating training now in order to be ready in time. However Rudenko remains unconvinced. Meanwhile Bykovskiy and Tereshkova are at the cosmonaut training centre, completing their flight reports. Kamanin faces difficulties in booking a hotel for the entire cosmonaut group in the Crimea in August --- he can't find any place with fifty vacancies, and concludes he'll have to split the group up. Pressure is coming from the Foreign Ministry for Tereshkova to make an early trip to Brazil, but she is already booked for two or three tours of friendly socialist countries beginning on 30 August and any additional trips can only be made after those are completed.
1963 July 8 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/15.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Combat training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 July 9 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/15.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Combat training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 July 9 - .
20:12 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Delamar Dry Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Opt Deg/TravP/RAS Technology/test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 69 km (42 mi). Maximum Speed - 5842 kph. Maximum Altitude - 69010 m. Air dropped in Delamar Dry Lake DZ..
1963 July 10 - .
- Odintsev pressing criticism of Tereshkova - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 6.
Odintsev is still trying to formally criticise Tereshkova for her flight performance. He charges that she was drunk when she reported to the launch pad and while in orbit was insubordinate, disregarding direct orders from the Centre. Kamanin knows this to be absolutely not true. Both cosmonauts and workers at the cosmonaut training centre report that is impossible to work with Odintsev any more - they want him out.
1963 July 10 - .
- Prototype engine for the Apollo SM reaction control system - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM RCS.
The Marquardt Corporation began testing the prototype engine for the SM reaction control system. Preliminary data showed a specific impulse slightly less than 300 seconds..
1963 July 10 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8A92.
FAILURE: Shutdown of Block B strap-on engine stage 1.9 seconds after liftoff. Pad damaged..
Failed Stage: 0.
- Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 12 - .
Payload: Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 12. Mass: 4,720 kg (10,400 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: Vostok.
Spacecraft: Zenit-2 satellite.
Decay Date: 1963-07-10 . Area survey photo reconnaissance satellite..
1963 July 10 - .
02:46 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 204 km (126 mi).
1963 July 10 - .
17:02 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Extreme ultraviolet Mon / RPA Solar ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 225 km (139 mi).
1963 July 11 - .
23:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF03.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 July 12 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Effects on pilot performance of longitudinal oscillations (POGO) of the Gemini launch vehicle. - .
Nation: USA.
Gemini Project Office (GPO) completed a test program on the centrifuge at Ames Research Center to evaluate the effects on pilot performance of longitudinal oscillations (POGO) of the Gemini launch vehicle. When subjected to oscillatory g-loads ranging from 0 to ± 3g superimposed on a steady-state load of 3.5g, pilot perception and performance decreased markedly above ± 0.25g. Primary effects were impaired pilot vision, reduced eye scan rate, masked sensory perception and kinesthetic cues, and degraded speech. GPO reconfirmed the need to reduce POGO to a maximum of 0.25g.
1963 July 12 - .
- Korolev wants review of Tereshkova's flight performance - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Korolev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Kamanin discusses future cosmonaut book plans with writer Riabchikov. He is interrupted by a call from Korolev. Korolev wants Tereshkova and Bykovskiy in his office the following morning at 10 am sharp and he wants a full explanation for Tereshkova's poor self- samochuviniy on orbits 32 and 42, about her pvote, her poor appetite during the flight, and her failure to complete some assigned tasks. He blames Kamanin for providing her with inadequate training prior to the flight -- which Kamanin finds a joke since he had never received any support in the past from Korolev for his requests for more and better training of the cosmonauts in high-G and zero-G situations. Korolev had also never listened to any of Kamanin's complaints about the need to improve the living conditions for the cosmonaut on the Vostok spacecraft.
1963 July 12 - .
20:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC4W.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Agena D.
1963 July 13 - .
1963 July 14 - .
21:03 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Eclipse cal Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 172 km (106 mi).
1963 July 15 - .
Launch Vehicle:
R-16.
- R-12U, R-14U, and R-16U silo-based missiles accepted into service. - .
Nation: Russia.
Decree 'On adoption into armaments of the R-12U, R-14U, and R-16U shaft versions' was issued..
1963 July 15-16 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Little Joe II.
- Little Joe II qualification test vehicle shipped - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM.
The Little Joe II qualification test vehicle was shipped from the General Dynamics Convair plant to WSMR, where the test launch was scheduled for August..
1963 July 15 - .
- 271 applications for the astronaut program - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
MSC had received 271 applications for the astronaut program. Seventy-one were military pilots (one from the Army, 34 from the Navy, 26 from the Air Force, and 10 from the Marines). Of the 200 civilians applying, three were women..
1963 July 15 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan IIIC.
- Approval for the continued development of the Titan III. - .
Related Persons: ,
McNamara.
After a detailed, six-month review of the Titan III program, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara approved the continued development of the Titan III..
1963 July 16 - .
1963 July 16 - .
- 30-day test of life support systems for a manned space station - .
Nation: USA.
Five men began a 30-day engineering test of life support systems for a manned space station in The Boeing Company space chamber. At Seattle, five men began a 30-day engineering test of life support systems for a manned space station in The Boeing Company space chamber. The system, designed and built for NASA's Office of Advanced Research and Technology, was the nation's first to include all life-support equipment for a multimanned, long-duration space mission (including environmental control, waste disposal, and crew hygiene and food techniques). In addition to the life support equipment, a number of crew tests simulated specific problems of space flight. Five days later, however, the simulated mission was halted because of a faulty reactor tank.
1963 July 16-August 15 - .
- Testing of the launch escape system pitch control motor - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM LES.
North American reported that Lockheed Propulsion Company had successfully completed development testing of the launch escape system pitch control motor..
1963 July 16 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A2.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 July 17 - .
- Rudenko meets Odintsev - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Rudenko,
Tereshkova.
Rudenko meets Odintsev but does not give him the word of his removal directly. The decision will wreck Odintsev's career - his next assignment would have been command of an Air Army. Odintsev fretted over the number of stars on his uniform and fawned over academics -- he never looked after his own people, which would have prevented things coming to this.
1963 July 18 - .
- Pratt and Whitney to develop fuel cells for the Apollo LEM - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM Electrical.
Grumman selected Pratt and Whitney to develop fuel cells for the LEM. Current LEM design called for three cells, supplemented by a battery for power during peak consumption beyond what the cells could deliver. Grumman and Pratt and Whitney completed contract negotiations on August 27, and MSC issued a letter go-ahead on September 5. Including fees and royalties, the contract was worth $9.411 million.
1963 July 18 - .
18:07 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Mud Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 003.
- X-15A VO Stability test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 31 km (19 mi). Maximum Speed - 6315 kph. Maximum Altitude - 31940 m. Air dropped in Mud Lake DZ..
1963 July 19 - .
- Marquardt begins development of the Apollo LEM reaction control thrusters - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM RCS.
Grumman directed the Marquardt Corporation to begin development of the LEM reaction control system thrusters. Negotiations had begun on March 11 on the definitive subcontract, a cost-plus-incentive-fee type with a total estimated cost of $10,871,186..
1963 July 19 - .
- Cosmonaut tour plans through December 1963. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Cosmonaut tour plans are firmed up for September-December 1963.. Tereshkova and Bykovskiy are to be given a gruelling schedule, having to visit Bulgaria, Mongolia, Italy, Switzerland, Norway, Mexico, India, Ghana, and Indonesia. .
1963 July 19 - .
00:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Agena D.
- KH-4 9057 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9057 / Agena D 1412 / OPS 1266. Mass: 1,150 kg (2,530 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1963-08-13 . USAF Sat Cat: 621 . COSPAR: 1963-029A. Apogee: 382 km (237 mi). Perigee: 197 km (122 mi). Inclination: 82.90 deg. Period: 90.40 min. KH-4. Best mission to date..
1963 July 19 - .
01:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC25A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 July 19 - .
03:51 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC3E.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Agena B.
- Midas 9 - .
Payload: Midas / Agena TV 1207. Mass: 2,000 kg (4,400 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Early warning satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: Midas.
USAF Sat Cat: 622 . COSPAR: 1963-030A. Apogee: 3,726 km (2,315 mi). Perigee: 3,676 km (2,284 mi). Inclination: 88.40 deg. Period: 167.90 min. The final Air Force Atlas D/Agena B (75D/1207) was launched from Vandenberg AFB. Missile Defense Alarm System. Did not eject ERS 10 subsatellite..
- TRS 10 - .
Payload: ERS 10. Mass: 45 kg (99 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Class: Earth.
Type: Magnetosphere satellite. Spacecraft: ERS.
COSPAR: 1963-030xx.
- Dash 2 - .
Mass: 1.00 kg (2.20 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Technology.
Type: Military technology satellite. Spacecraft: Dash.
Decay Date: 1971-04-12 . USAF Sat Cat: 624 . COSPAR: 1963-030D. Apogee: 3,839 km (2,385 mi). Perigee: 3,573 km (2,220 mi). Inclination: 88.50 deg. Period: 168.00 min. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
- TRS 4 - .
Payload: ERS 9. Mass: 2.00 kg (4.40 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft: TRS.
USAF Sat Cat: 635 . COSPAR: 1963-030B. Apogee: 3,736 km (2,321 mi). Perigee: 3,661 km (2,274 mi). Inclination: 88.40 deg. Period: 167.80 min. Radiation damage data. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
1963 July 19 - .
05:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Ultraviolet spectrograph Ultraviolet astronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 185 km (114 mi).
1963 July 19 - .
18:20 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Smith Ranch Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
1963 July 20 - .
1963 July 20 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan IIIC.
- World's largest solid-rocket motor test fired. - .
The first full-scale, five-segment solid-propellant booster motor for the Titan III, the world's largest solid-rocket motor (SRM), was test fired at the United Technology Center's test facility. The motor produced over 1,000,000 pounds of thrust during its 110-second firing.
1963 July 20 - .
05:44 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
Launch Complex:
Wallops Island LA3.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Scout X-3A.
FAILURE: Failure..
- Reentry 3 re-entry vehicle test flight - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 2.00 km (1.20 mi).
NASA launched a Scout rocket with a nose cone of experimental heatshield material from Wallops Island, Va. The rocket was intentionally destroyed when it deviated from its course a few seconds after liftoff. The nose cone had been expected to reenter the atmosphere at 27,934 kilometers (18,600 miles) per hour to test the material's thermal performance under heating loads near those of a lunar reentry.
1963 July 20 - .
15:18 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- OSO B spectrometer Solar ultraviolet / eclipse mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 213 km (132 mi).
1963 July 20 - .
21:03 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Operation Probe High Ionosphere / eclipse mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 196 km (121 mi).
1963 July 20 - .
21:05 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- Operation Probe High Eclipse mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 143 km (88 mi).
1963 July 20 - .
21:13 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Opn Probe High Ionosphere / eclipse / solar x-rays mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 199 km (123 mi).
1963 July 20 - .
21:40 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Opn Probe High Ionosphere / eclipse / solar x-rays mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 July 20 - .
21:54 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 300A.
- Thermosphere Probe 3 Aeronomy / eclipse mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 338 km (210 mi).
1963 July 20 - .
22:10 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Opn Probe High Ionosphere / eclipse / solar x-rays mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 192 km (119 mi).
1963 July 22 - .
- Conference on space cabin ecology. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Keldysh,
Korolev,
Voronin.
Spacecraft Bus: TMK.
Spacecraft: TMK-1.
Keldysh, Korolev, Voronin, and Kamanin attend a conference on space cabin ecology. Presentations are made by IAKM, OKB-124, the Biology Institute, and the Physiology Institute. In two to three years the USSR expects to orbit spacecraft of 78 to 80 tonnes, which will be assembled in earth orbit to produce larger spacecraft. These will not only fly around the moon, but also be used to fly to Venus, Mars, and other planets. Although it will take years, many technical problems have to be solved before such a spacecraft can be built. How to shield the crew from radiation? How best to regenerate the air? How to recycle the water? Can the crew survive for long flights in zero-G, or must some form of artificial gravity be provided? If so, what is the best method? How can the psychological health of the crew best be maintained on long flights?
It is reported that a lot of test stand work has been completed and is underway on closed ecological systems for recycling the air and water. One kilogram of chlorella algae can produce 27 kg of oxygen per day. Since each man will require 25 kg of oxygen per day, 2 kg of chlorella per crew member will be adequate. Therefore the problem of recycling the cabin atmosphere is considered already solved.
Food requirements per crew member are 2.5 to 3.0 kg/day, or about one tonne per year. It is expected that in two to three years development will be complete of a system that will recycle 80% of the food. A 150 kg device will produce 400 to 600 g of food per day, or 100 to 200 kg per year.
1963 July 22 - .
- Johnson requests statement on the importance to national security of a space station. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Dynasoar,
MOL.
Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson requested the Secretary of the Defense to prepare a statement on the importance to national security of a space station..
1963 July 23 - .
- Hamilton Standard began development of the ECS for the Apollo LEM - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM ECS.
Grumman authorized Hamilton Standard to begin development of the environmental control system (ECS) for the LEM. The cost-plus-incentive-fee contract was valued at $8,371,465. The parts of the ECS to be supplied by Hamilton Standard were specified by Grumman.
1963 July 23 - .
- George E Mueller named NASA Deputy Associate Administrator - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Holmes, Brainard,
Mueller.
Program: Apollo.
George E. Mueller, Vice President for Research and Development of Space Technology Laboratories, was named NASA Deputy Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight to succeed D. Brainerd Holmes, effective September 1..
1963 July 23 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan IIIC.
- First test firing of Transtage propulsion system - .
At its Sacramento test facility, the Aerojet-General Corporation conducted the first test firing of the twin-engine propulsion system that would power the Titan III upper stage..
1963 July 23 - .
06:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Ultraviolet spectrograph Ultraviolet astronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 177 km (109 mi).
1963 July 24 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 July 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC31B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 July 25 - .
- Gagarin released from the hospital - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin.
Gagarin is released from the hospital after his tonsillectomy. .
1963 July 25 - .
14:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Solar X-rays Spectrum 2 Solar x-ray mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 July 25 - .
22:38 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Honest John.
Launch Vehicle:
Exos sounding rocket.
- Refractive Index Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 623 km (387 mi).
1963 July 26 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC29A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 July 26 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Nike X R&D test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 July 26 - .
14:33 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC17A.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Delta B.
1963 July 26 - .
19:19 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg OSTF1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas E.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 300 km (180 mi).
1963 July 26 - .
21:19 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- D region e density Aurora / ionosphere mission Aurora / ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 143 km (88 mi).
1963 July 27 - .
- Korolev on future manned space flight plans. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin,
Korolev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Another meeting is held with Korolev on future manned space flight plans. The same plans are presented as have been discussed for over a year - one animal flight, three manned flights for 10 days / to 1000 km. This issue must be resolved. Soyuz will not fly before 1965 - therefore Vostok must be flown or there will no Soviet manned spaceflights in 1964. In reality Soyuz is likely to be delayed, and 6 to 8 Vostoks are needed, not just 4. Equipment to be tested on the flights included soft landing equipment, a back-up retrofire engine, long-range communications systems, and scientific experiments. The physicians are too conservative - zero-G is obviously not as big an issue as thought. There should be nothing to prevent flight of non-pilot passengers. Korolev points out that if the cosmonaut is consumed by fear, or if any serious problem arises, as long as you can survive for an hour an emergency return to earth can be made. Within an hour the passenger will be in Cuba or Vladivostok. Kamanin would like Gagarin to be appointed next head of the cosmonaut centre, but this is opposed by Rudnev and Vershinin. Tereshkova has talked to Khrushchev - he's now supporting award of a Hero of the Soviet Union medal to Nikitin.
1963 July 27 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/15.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Operational test launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 July 27 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF06.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 July 27 - .
00:10 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kronogard.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Sweden.
Agency: RTG.
Apogee: 126 km (78 mi).
1963 July 29 - .
23:28 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kronogard.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Sweden.
Agency: RTG.
Apogee: 128 km (79 mi).
1963 July 30 - .
- Modifications to the basic Apollo spacecraft to extend capabilities to a 100-day orbital lifetime. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft Bus: Apollo CSM.
Spacecraft: Apollo X.
At the request of NASA Hq, MSC contracted with North American to determine what engineering modifications to the basic Apollo spacecraft would be required to extend that vehicle's mission capabilities to a 100-day orbital lifetime..
Additional Details: here....
1963 July 30 - .
16:16 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC18A.
Launch Pad: LC18A.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Blue Scout Jr.
- OAR 22-1 / AFCRL-1 / 21 Plasma / radio astronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 11,100 km (6,800 mi).
1963 July 30 - .
18:36 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576C.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas E.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,600 km (900 mi).
1963 July 31 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Titan I engineering transferred to AFLC. - .
The Titan I weapon system acquisition phase was completed and engineering responsibility for the Titan I (WS 107B) was transferred from Ballistic Systems Division (AFSC) to AFLC..
1963 July 31 - .
00:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
- KH 4A-07 - .
Payload: KH-6 s/n 8003 / Agena D 1167 / OPS 1370. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-6.
Decay Date: 1963-08-12 . USAF Sat Cat: 626 . COSPAR: 1963-032A. Apogee: 455 km (282 mi). Perigee: 152 km (94 mi). Inclination: 74.90 deg. Period: 90.60 min. KH-6. Third and final KH-6 mission (LANYARD). Mission was successful but image quality was poor. Officially: Spacecraft Engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A)..
1963 July 31 - .
20:52 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- ST COOL WATER I test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 1 - .
- Birth of Koichi Wakata - .
Nation: Japan.
Related Persons: Wakata.
Japanese engineer mission specialist astronaut 1992-on. 4 spaceflights, 347.4 days in space. Flew to orbit on STS-72 (1996), STS-92, STS-119, Soyuz TMA-11M..
1963 August 1 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Executive management responsibility for the Titan I transferred to Norton AFB. - .
Executive management responsibility for the Titan I weapon system (WS 107A-2) was transferred from BSD (AFSC) to San Bernardino Air Materiel Area (AFLC), Norton AFB, California..
1963 August 1 - .
08:06 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Bennett Mass Spec 2 Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 232 km (144 mi).
1963 August 1 - .
23:27 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kronogard.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Sweden.
Agency: RTG.
Apogee: 126 km (78 mi).
1963 August 2 - .
- No further Soviet manned flights in 1963 - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Korolev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 7.
It is clear that there may be no Soviet manned flights in 1963, and certainly not in the spring. It is possible the unmanned biosat Vostok will be flown in the second half of 1963. Korolev's plate is full with other work -- Soyuz development, several Zenit reconnaissance satellite launches, lots of Luniks. Meanwhile Kamanin is completely occupied with cosmonaut tours and publicity. Over 200,000 cosmonaut fan letters have been received -- they can't handle them all, a special unit will have to be created just to handle the mail. The KGB has assigned Yevgeniya Pavlovna Kassirova to accompany Tereshkova on her travels. She is a good choice, has foreign travel experience and excellent English.
1963 August 2 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn V.
- Grumman to design the LEM to have a thrusting capability with the Apollo CSM attached - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
CSM SPS.
North American asked MSC if Grumman was designing the LEM to have a thrusting capability with the CSM attached and, if not, did NASA intend to require the additional effort by Grumman to provide this capability. North American had been proceeding on the assumption that, should the service propulsion system (SPS) fail during translunar flight, the LEM would make any course corrections needed to ensure a safe return trajectory. Additional Details: here....
1963 August 2 - .
Launch Site:
Point Mugu.
Launch Platform: F-3B.
LV Family:
Sparoair.
Launch Vehicle:
Sparoair I.
- Ultraviolet astronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN NMC.
Apogee: 107 km (66 mi).
1963 August 2 - .
21:43 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Sergeant.
Launch Vehicle:
Shotput.
- San Marco Satellite test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 294 km (182 mi).
1963 August 2 - .
23:33 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Density Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 151 km (93 mi).
1963 August 5 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn I.
- First static firing test of Saturn S-IV stage for SA-5 - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
In what was to have been an acceptance test, the Douglas Aircraft Company static fired the first Saturn S-IV flight stage at Sacramento, Calif. An indication of fire in the engine area forced technicians to shut down the stage after little more than one minute's firing. A week later the acceptance test was repeated, this time without incident, when the vehicle was fired for over seven minutes. (The stage became part of the SA-5 launch vehicle, the first complete Saturn I to fly.)
1963 August 5 - .
LV Family:
Minuteman.
- Phillips made BSD Vice Commander. - .
Brigadier General Samuel C. Phillips became BSD's Vice Commander, and Brigadier General John L. McCoy took over General Phillips' job as Deputy Commander for Minuteman..
1963 August 5 - .
Launch Site:
Fort Wingate.
Launch Vehicle:
Redstone.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 90 km (55 mi). Successful missile test. Missed aimpoint by 216 m..
1963 August 5 - .
16:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC32B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 August 6 - .
06:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar Mayak-2.
LV Family:
R-12.
Launch Vehicle:
Kosmos 63S1.
- Cosmos 19 - .
Payload: DS-P1 s/n 3. Mass: 355 kg (782 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: MO.
Program: DS.
Class: Military.
Type: Military target satellite. Spacecraft Bus: DS.
Spacecraft: DS-P1.
Completed Operations Date: 1964-03-29 . Decay Date: 1964-03-30 . USAF Sat Cat: 632 . COSPAR: 1963-033A. Apogee: 497 km (308 mi). Perigee: 267 km (165 mi). Inclination: 49.00 deg. Period: 92.10 min. Prototype ABM radar target; supported developmental experiments for ABM systems..
1963 August 7 - .
22:29 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kronogard.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Sweden.
Agency: RTG.
Apogee: 130 km (80 mi).
1963 August 8 - .
Launch Site:
Malmstrom AFB.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Malmstrom AFB - .
Official turnover ceremonies for Minuteman Wing I took place at Malmstrom AFB, Montana..
1963 August 8 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 August 8 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF02.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 August 9 - .
- McNamara sees necessity of multi-manned orbital flights of long duration. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Dynasoar,
MOL.
In his reply to the Vice President, Secretary McNamara stressed the necessity of multi-manned orbital flights of long duration..
1963 August 9 - .
LV Family:
MMRBM.
- MMRBM cancelled. - .
The Defense Department informed Congress that the Mobile Mid-Range Ballistic Missile (MMRBM) was cancelled. Phase I work would continue but under separate contracts..
1963 August 9 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 617.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 9 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 617.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational Test - Flight over 65 minutes - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 10 - .
03:17 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Niijima.
LV Family:
LS-C.
Launch Vehicle:
LS-A.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Japan.
Agency: STA.
Apogee: 50 km (31 mi).
1963 August 10 - .
04:58 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Niijima.
LV Family:
STA.
Launch Vehicle:
S-A.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Japan.
Agency: STA.
Apogee: 50 km (31 mi).
1963 August 11 - .
- Kamanin picks up a new Volga automobile. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Korolev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 6,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Kamanin picks up a new Volga automobile. It cost him 5513 roubles, but one door doesn't fit and the trunk is scarred with excess hardened resin. Sukarno has asked for Tereshkova and Bykovskiy to visit Indonesia for two weeks in August, but this is impossible.
In a three hour meeting Korolev goes over his future flight plans for Vostok. The first flight will be unmanned, with a biological payload, in February or March 1964. The flight is to last 10 or 11 days and take the specimens up to 600 to 1000 km altitude, into the lower reaches of the Van Allen radiation belts. This will be followed by three cosmonaut flights of ten days with significant military and scientific experiments. A new ground control system will be installed and tested to handle all in-flight emergencies. A new autonomous on-board navigation system will be flight tested. Korolev wants the military to take over conduct of future Vostok flights - they are taking up to much of his time and nerves. He has told this repeated to Khrushchev and Brezhnev without result. Meanwhile Kamanin lobbies within the military hierarchy for the removal of Odintsev. It is decided that the matter will be taken up at the next meeting of the Military Soviet.
1963 August 13 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC25A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 13 - .
04:59 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/15.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Combat training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 757 km (470 mi).
1963 August 14 - .
- Definitive contract for Apollo command and service modules signed - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Webb.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM.
NASA Administrator James E. Webb signed the definitive contract with North American for the development of the Apollo CSM. This followed by almost two years North American's selection as prime contractor, The $938.4 million cost-plus-fixed-fee agreement was the most valuable single research and development contract in American history. The contract called for the initial production (i.e., through May 15, 1965) of 11 mockups, 15 boilerplate vehicles, and 11 production articles.
1963 August 15 - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- K-26 Titan Intercept - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi). K-26 Nike-Zeus intercept of Titan I ICBM..
1963 August 15 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A1.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi). K-26 Nike-Zeus intercept of Titan I ICBM..
1963 August 17 - .
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Centaur.
- Centaur first firing using both RL-10 engines. - .
General Dynamics' Convair/Astronautics fired the Centaur liquid hydrogen/ liquid oxygen upper stage for the first time using both RL-10 engines..
1963 August 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 611.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 611.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 611.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 611.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 611.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 17 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 611.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 19 - .
Launch Site:
Ellsworth AFB.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Ellsworth AFB - .
Work on the first squadron of Minuteman Wing II, the 66th Strategic Missile Squadron of the 44th Strategic Missile Wing at Ellsworth AFB, South Dakota, was completed..
1963 August 19 - .
Launch Site:
Fort Wingate.
Launch Vehicle:
Redstone.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 90 km (55 mi). Successful missile test. Missed aimpoint by 267 m..
1963 August 20 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC29A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 20 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC60/8.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Military training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 August 21 - .
23:23 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC15.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Research and development / Pod T-202 test / plume study mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
Titan II development flight N-24 was launched from the Atlantic Missile Range. This was the first of five flight tests in the Gemini malfunction detection system (MDS) piggyback series. All MDS parameters were lost 81 seconds after liftoff because of a short circuit in the MDS. Operation in the second flight (N-25 on November 1) was normal except for two minor instrumentation problems. Three more test flights (N-29 on December 12, 1963; N-31 on January 15, 1964; and N-33 on March 23, 1964) verified the performance of the Gemini MDS under actual conditions of flight environment and engine operation.
1963 August 22 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar Mayak-2.
LV Family:
R-12.
Launch Vehicle:
Kosmos 63S1.
FAILURE: First stage failed..
Failed Stage: 1.
- DS-A1 s/n 3 - .
Payload: DS-A1. Mass: 30 kg (66 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Program: DS.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft Bus: DS.
Spacecraft: DS-A1.
Carried military experiments to test communications and navigation equipment needed for command and control of Soviet nuclear forces (later used on the Uragan navigation satellites). Also conducted operational monitoring of cosmic rays, radiation from nuclear tests, and natural and artifically-produced radiation belts.
1963 August 22 - .
18:05 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Smith Ranch Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 003.
- X-15A VO,Spectrom,Photom Test/Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 107 km (66 mi). Unofficial world altitude record. Maximum Speed - 6105 kph. Maximum Altitude - 107960 m. Second X-15 astronaut flight (FAI definition); fifth astronaut wings flight (USAF definition). Air dropped in Smith Ranch Lake DZ..
1963 August 23 - .
LV Family:
Saturn V.
- Two contracts in its program to develop large-solid-propellant motors (Program 623A). - .
Headquarters Space Systems Division awarded two contracts in its program to develop the technology for large-solid-propellant motors (Program 623A). Thiokol Chemical Corporation and Aerojet-General Corporation received contracts for demonstration static firings of 260-inch diameter, solid-propellant rocket motors of approximately 3 million, pounds thrust. Following the test firings, one of the contractors would be selected to continue development of the 260-inch motor.
1963 August 23 - .
17:01 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 617.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 23 - .
17:41 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 617.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 24 - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- K-28 Atlas Intercept - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 August 24 - .
02:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kagoshima.
Launch Complex:
Kagoshima L.
LV Family:
Lambda.
Launch Vehicle:
Lambda 2.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: U.
- Ionosphere / test - .
Nation: Japan.
Agency: ISAS.
Apogee: 51 km (31 mi).
1963 August 24 - .
09:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg OSTF1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas E.
- NTMP/OT DASO test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,600 km (900 mi).
1963 August 25 - .
00:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
- KH-4A 1001 - .
Payload: KH-4A s/n 1001 / Agena D 1162 / OPS 1419. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4A.
Decay Date: 1963-09-12 . USAF Sat Cat: 636 . COSPAR: 1963-034A. Apogee: 320 km (190 mi). Perigee: 161 km (100 mi). Inclination: 75.00 deg. Period: 89.40 min. KH-4A. First mission of KH-4A. Some film was fogged. Two buckets but 1001-2 was never recovered..
1963 August 26 - .
- MSC received proposals for the visual displays for the Apollo LEM simulator - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM Crew Station.
MSC received proposals for the visual displays for the LEM simulator. Because of the changed shape of that vehicle's windows, however, Grumman had to return those proposals to the original bidders, sending revised proposals to MSC in December. Farrand Optical Company was selected to develop the display, and the Center approved Grumman's choice. Negotiations between Grumman and Farrand were completed during March 1964.
1963 August 27 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC31B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 August 28 - .
16:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC36.
Launch Vehicle:
Little Joe II.
- QTV Spacecraft test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 8.00 km (4.90 mi).
The Little Joe II qualification test vehicle was launched from White Sands Missile Range, N Mexico. Its objectives were to prove the Little Joe's capability as an Apollo spacecraft test vehicle and to determine base pressures and heating on the missile. These aims were achieved. The lone failure was a malfunction in the destruct system.
1963 August 28 - .
23:10 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B3.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- ST COOL WATER II test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,800 km (1,100 mi).
1963 August 29 - .
Launch Site:
Ellsworth AFB.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Ellsworth AFB - .
The 67th Strategic Missile Squadron of the 44th Strategic Missile Wing at Ellsworth AFB was completed and turned over to SAC by Ballistic Systems Division's Site Activation Task Force (SATAF)..
1963 August 29 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF07.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 August 29 - .
20:31 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2 Agena D.
- KH-4 9033 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9033 & Lampo / Agena D 1169 / OPS 1561. Mass: 1,000 kg (2,200 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1963-11-07 . USAF Sat Cat: 637 . COSPAR: 1963-035A. Apogee: 324 km (201 mi). Perigee: 292 km (181 mi). Inclination: 81.90 deg. Period: 90.80 min. The first Thor standard launch vehicle, SLV-2, with an Agena D upper stage vehicle, was launched from Vandenberg AFB. KH-5; deployed ELINT subsatellite. Considered to be best mission to date in Argon program..
- LAMPO - .
Payload: 0.1 Square Meter Target. Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Naval signals intelligence satellite. Spacecraft: LAMPO.
Decay Date: 1963-09-29 . USAF Sat Cat: 638 . COSPAR: 1963-035B. Apogee: 422 km (262 mi). Perigee: 315 km (195 mi). Inclination: 81.90 deg. Period: 92.00 min. The first Thor standard launch vehicle, SLV-2, with an Agena D upper stage vehicle, was launched from Vandenberg AFB. Radar monitoring. Not identified as a subsatellite ferret by McDowell..
1963 August 30 - .
- Study for a military, orbiting, space station. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Dynasoar,
MOL.
The Director of Defense for Research and Engineering approved a study program for a military, orbiting, space station..
1963 August 30 - .
- Lunar Orbiter program approved - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Seamans.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Lunar Orbiter.
NASA Associate Administrator Robert C. Seamans, Jr., approved the Lunar Orbiter program. Objectives of the program were reconnaissance of the moon's topography, investigation of its environment, and collection of selenodetic information.
The document called for five flight and three test articles. The Lunar Orbiter spacecraft would be capable of photographing the moon from a distance of 22 miles above the surface. Overall cost of the program was estimated at between $150 and $200 million.
1963 August 30 - .
- Washington-to-Moscow hot line - .
Nation: Russia.
Washington-to-Moscow hot line communications link opens, designed to reduce risk of accidental war .
1963 August 30 - .
- Enabling decree for Plesetsk cosmodrome. - .
Nation: Russia.
Decree 'On formation of NIIP-53 at Angara' was issued..
1963 August 30 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC25A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 30 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A3.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 August 30 - .
Launch Site:
Teikovo.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 August 30 - .
06:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/3.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- T - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 754 km (468 mi).
1963 August - .
- Full-scale cardboard model of the Apollo LEM - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM Landing Gear,
LM RCS.
Grumman built a full-scale cardboard model of the LEM to aid in studying problems of cockpit geometry, specifically the arrangement of display panels. This mockup was reviewed by MSC astronauts and the layout of the cockpit was revised according to some of their suggestions.
Also Grumman reported that a preliminary analysis showed the reaction control system plume heating of the LEM landing gear was not a severe problem. (This difficulty had been greatly alleviated by the change from five to four landing legs on the vehicle.
1963 August 31 - .
- Gemini spacecraft to make land landings. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Gemini,
Gemini Parachute.
Gemini Project Office (GPO) reported that it was investigating the use of a parasail and landing rocket system to enable the Gemini spacecraft to make land landings. Major system components were the parasail, drogue parachute, retrorocket, control system, and landing rocket. Unlike the conventional parachute, the parasail was capable of controlled gliding and turning. Landing rockets, fired just before touchdown, reduced the spacecraft terminate rate of descent to between 8 and 11 feet per second. Research and development testing was being conducted by the Landing and Impact System Section of Systems Evaluation and Development Division at Manned Spacecraft Center, while McDonnell had just completed a limited study of the advantages and disadvantages, including time required, of incorporating the new landing system on the spacecraft. GPO briefed NASA Headquarters on the system September 6, when it was decided that no further action would be taken on the parasail.
1963 September 1-7 - .
- Design of control panel for the Apollo CM was 90 percent complete - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Cockpit.
MSC reported that design of the control and displays panel for the CM was about 90 percent complete. North American was expected to release the design by September 20. Qualification testing of the panels would begin around December 1..
1963 September - .
- Korolev earth orbit rendezvous L3 manned lunar lander design. - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft Bus: Soyuz.
Spacecraft: L3-1963.
This L3 design was a 200 tonne direct-lander requiring three launches of his giant N1 rocket and assembled in low earth orbit..
1963 September 1 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC110L.
Launch Vehicle:
N1.
- Construction begins of N1 launch complex - .
Nation: Russia.
Program: Lunar L3.
1963 September 1 - .
Launch Site:
Sary Shagan.
Launch Complex:
Sary Shagan LC6.
LV Family:
A-35.
Launch Vehicle:
A-350Zh.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: PKO.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 September 3 - .
22:36 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Mass spectrometer Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 288 km (178 mi).
1963 September 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 602.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A1.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 September 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 602.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A1.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 September 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 602.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A1.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 September 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 602.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A1.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 September 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 602.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A1.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 September 4 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 602.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A1.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 September 4 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/3.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- T - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 September 4 - .
13:11 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- CR nuclei Cosmic rays mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 228 km (141 mi).
1963 September 5 - .
Launch Site:
Barbados Site.
Launch Complex:
Barbados HARP gun 16 inch.
LV Family:
Martlet.
Launch Vehicle:
Martlet 3A.
1963 September 5 - .
03:41 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 September 6 - .
- Apollo CM boilerplate destroyed during tests - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Parachute.
At El Centro, Calif., CM boilerplate (BP) 3, a parachute test vehicle, was destroyed during tests simulating the new BP-6 configuration (without strakes or apex cover). Drogue parachute descent, disconnect, and pilot mortar fire appeared normal. However, one pilot parachute was cut by contact with the vehicle and its main parachute did not deploy. Because of harness damage, the remaining two main parachutes failed while reefed. Investigation of the BP-3 failure resulting in rigging and design changes on BP-6 and BP-19.
1963 September 6 - .
- Tereshkova accused of a scandal in Gorkiy. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 6.
The militia claims that Tereshkova was drunk and created a scandal with a militia officer in Gorkiy. She categorically denies being drunk, but does admit to having a confrontation with a militia captain. .
1963 September 6 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Department of Defense approved the Titan II Augmented Engine Improvement Program. - .
Nation: USA.
On November 15, Aerojet-General received an Air Force contract to develop and test new engine components to correct weak and potentially dangerous problem areas of engine design. Aerojet-General had already initiated the development effort on September 30. The goal was to enhance engine reliability by a complete redesign rather than resort to piecemeal fixes as problems came up. While the primary goal was not achieved, the program did yield several side benefits, including the correction of several minor design deficiencies, the improvement of welding techniques, and the development of better assembly procedures.
1963 September 6 - .
LV Family:
Atlas,
Thor.
- NASA and DoD announced a new agreement for NASA's use of Air Force-developed Agena vehicles. - .
Space Systems Division was to be responsible for design, engineering, and acceptance testing of basic Atlas and Thor vehicles and the Agena D upper stages. NASA would buy these from the Air Force, modify them as needed, and launch the Atlas/Agenas from the Atlantic Missile Range while the Air Force conducted all Atlas/Agena and Thor/Agena launches from Vandenberg.
1963 September 6 - .
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1.
- Mark 12 reentry vehicle - .
Headquarters USAF approved General Electric as the contractor for the Mark 12 reentry vehicle system for the Minuteman ICBM..
1963 September 6 - .
19:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC4W.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Agena D.
- KH 7-02 - .
Payload: KH-7 no. 2 / OPS 1947. Mass: 2,000 kg (4,400 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NRO,
USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-7.
Decay Date: 1963-09-13 . USAF Sat Cat: 641 . COSPAR: 1963-036A. Apogee: 243 km (150 mi). Perigee: 171 km (106 mi). Inclination: 94.40 deg. Period: 88.70 min. KH-7 type satellite. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
1963 September 6 - .
21:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- OSO B experiment Solar mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 222 km (137 mi).
1963 September 6 - .
21:59 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B2.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- ST COOL WATER III test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 September 7 - .
1963 September 8 - .
- The 16 astronauts began training in water and land parachute landing techniques. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Gemini,
Gemini Parachute.
This training was necessary because in low level abort (under 70,000 feet) the pilot would be ejected from the spacecraft and would descend by personnel parachute. A towed 24-foot diameter parasail carried the astronauts to altitudes as high as 400 feet before the towline was released and the astronaut glided to a landing.
1963 September 9 - .
16:02 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Electrojet Magnetospheric mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 169 km (105 mi).
1963 September 10 - .
Launch Site:
Fort Wingate.
Launch Vehicle:
Redstone.
FAILURE: Control system malfunction immediately prior to impact..
- Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 90 km (55 mi). Missile test failure. Missed aimpoint by 4,393 m..
1963 September 10 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/3.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Military training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 September 11 - .
14:24 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- LeRC LH2 test Technology test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 165 km (102 mi).
1963 September 11 - .
21:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- ST COOL WATER IV test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,700 km (1,000 mi).
1963 September 12 - .
- Gemini, Apollo, and X-20 studied for military space missions. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
Dynasoar,
Gemini,
MOL.
The President's Scientific Advisory Committee requested a briefing from the Air Force on possible military space missions, biomedical experiments to be performed in space, and the capability of Gemini, Apollo, and the X-20 vehicles to execute these requirements.
1963 September 12 - .
- Unmanned lunar landing spacecraft to be sterilized - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Surveyor.
NASA announced that, in the future, unmanned lunar landing spacecraft e.g., Rangers and Surveyors) will be assembled in "clean rooms" and treated with germ-killing substances to reduce the number of microbes on exposed surfaces. These sterilization procedures, less stringent than earlier methods, were intended to prevent contamination of the lunar surface and, at the same time, avoid damage to sensitive electronic components. Heat sterilization was suspected as one of the reasons for the failure of Ranger spacecraft.
1963 September 12 - .
06:20 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Andoya.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Ferdinand 4 Ionosphere / plasma / solar mission - .
Nation: Norway.
Agency: NDRE.
Apogee: 136 km (84 mi).
1963 September 14 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Gemini delay of three weeks in the battery qualification program. - .
Nation: USA.
Gemini Project Office reported a delay of about three weeks in the battery qualification program. McDonnell had sent a team to investigate the problem of high porosity welds in titanium battery cases. Another problem had turned up with the batteries in prequalification vibration test. The batteries vibrated excessively, although they did not fail electrically; the vibration's amplification factor was apparently low enough to be remedied by potting.
1963 September 16 - .
- Enabling decree for Plesetsk cosmodrome. - .
Nation: Russia.
Decree 999-347 'On creation or the space and missile cosmodrome at NIIP-53 at Mirniy/Plesetsk' was issued..
1963 September 16-18 - .
- Inspection of first Apollo LEM ascent stage mockup - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM.
NASA representatives held a formal review of Grumman's LEM M-1 mockup, a full-scale representation of the LEM's crew compartment. MSC decided that (1) the window shape (triangular) and visibility were satisfactory; (2) a standing position for the crew was approved, although, in general, it was believed that restraints restricted crew mobility; (3) the controllers were positioned too low and lacked suitable arm support for fine control; and (4) crew station arrangement was generally acceptable, although specific details required further study.
1963 September 17 - .
- Cosmonaut training group formed for planned 1964 Vostok flights - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Belyayev,
Gorbatko,
Khrunov,
Komarov,
Leonov,
Shonin,
Volynov,
Zaikin.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Belyaev, Komarov, Shonin, Khrunov, Zaikin, Gorbatko, Volynov, and Leonov are assigned..
1963 September 17 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A2.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 September 18 - .
- AiResearch awarded contract for the Apollo CM environmental system - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM ECS.
The AiResearch Manufacturing Company announced that it had been awarded a $20 million definitive contract for the CM environmental system. (AiResearch had been developing the system under a letter contract since 1961..
1963 September 18 - .
09:39 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC17B.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor DSV-2F.
- ASSET 1 re-entry vehicle test flight - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 56 km (34 mi).
A Thor (SLV-2) booster lifted the first Aerothermodynamic/Elastic Structural Systems Environmental Tests (ASSET) program vehicle (ASV-1) on a successful suborbital flight from Cape Canaveral. The ASSET program was designed to test materials and study flight characteristics of glide reentry vehicles. SSD provided the boosters and launch services for the program, while Flight Dynamics Laboratory was responsible for overall program management. Suborbital test of small scale spaceplane model to test materials for the X-20 Dynasoar. Aero-thermodynamic structural test vehicle (ASV) for heat shield tests. Booster flew to peak altitude of 62 km, then pitched down, driving the spacecraft to separation at 59 km and 4,906 m/s. The spacecraft was sited under its parachute in the recovery zone at Ascension Island, but the flotation bag broke and it sank into the Atlantic.
1963 September 19 - .
- Changes in the Apollo CM's landing requirements - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Parachute,
CSM Recovery.
MSC made several changes in the CM's landing requirements. Impact attenuation would be passive, except for that afforded by the crew couches and the suspension system. The spacecraft would be suspended from the landing parachutes in a pitch attitude that imposed minimum accelerations on the crew. A crushable structure to absorb landing shock was required in the aft equipment bay area.
1963 September 20 - .
- President Kennedy suggested Russian-American cooperation in space - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Kennedy.
Program: Apollo.
President John F. Kennedy, during an address before the United Nations General Assembly, suggested the possibility of Russian-American "cooperation" in space. Though not proposing any specific program, Kennedy stated that, "in a field where the United States and the Soviet Union have a special capacity - the field of space - there is room for new cooperation, for further joint efforts in the regulation and exploration of space. I include among these possibilities," he said, "a joint expedition to the moon. . . . Surely we should explore whether the scientists and astronauts of our two countries - indeed, of all the world - cannot work together in the conquest of space, sending some day in this decade to the moon, not the representatives of a single nation, but the representatives of all humanity." Additional Details: here....
1963 September 20 - .
15:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- SX solar spectrum Solar extreme ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 208 km (129 mi).
1963 September 21 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
Launch Vehicle:
R-12.
- Nation: Ukraine.
Agency: MVS.
Apogee: 402 km (249 mi).
1963 September 23 - .
- Korolev letter sets out a space exploration plan for 1965 to 1975. - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft: L2-1963,
L3-1963,
L4-1963,
L5,
Soyuz A,
Soyuz B,
Soyuz V.
The plan included a series of lunar exploration vehicles: the L1, L2, L3, L4, and L5..
1963 September 23 - .
- First child born to someone who has been in space. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Titov.
A daughter is born to Titov. This is the first child born to someone who has been in space. .
1963 September 23 - .
LV Family:
MMRBM.
- MMRBM program reoriented - .
The MMRBM program plan was reoriented, with the "go-ahead" development decision date set for 31 July 1964..
1963 September 23 - .
Launch Site:
Fort Wingate.
Launch Vehicle:
Redstone.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 90 km (55 mi). Successful missile test. Missed aimpoint by 63 m..
1963 September 23 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-D.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Tar Top - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). Titan II (N-23) became the first Category II research and development missile to be launched successfully from Vandenberg AFB by the 6595th Aerospace Test Wing. Research and development launch. Mk 6 re-entry vehicle..
1963 September 23 - .
23:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
- KH-4A 1002 - .
Payload: KH-4A s/n 1002 / Agena D 1163 / OPS 1353. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4A.
Decay Date: 1963-10-12 . USAF Sat Cat: 668 . COSPAR: 1963-037A. Apogee: 442 km (274 mi). Perigee: 162 km (100 mi). Inclination: 74.80 deg. Period: 90.60 min. KH-4A. Severe light leaks, 1002-2 never recovered, indefinite postponement of KH-4A series..
1963 September 24 - .
04:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Firefly IV IRMA Aeronomy / ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 158 km (98 mi).
1963 September 25 - .
03:57 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 143 km (88 mi).
1963 September 25 - .
04:34 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 151 km (93 mi).
1963 September 25 - .
07:09 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 224 km (139 mi).
1963 September 25 - .
11:04 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576C.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas E.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 September 26 - .
LV Family:
Saturn I.
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn IB.
- Apollo mission plans - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM.
OMSF, MSC, and Bellcomm representatives, meeting in Washington, D.C., discussed Apollo mission plans: OMSF introduced a requirement that the first manned flight in the Saturn IB program include a LEM. ASPO had planned this flight as a CSM maximum duration mission only.
- Bellcomm was asked to develop an Apollo mission assignment program without a Saturn I.
- MSFC had been asking OMSF concurrence in including a restart capability in the S-IVB (second) stage during the Saturn IB program.
ASPO would agree to this, but only if the H-1 engine were uprated from 85,275 to 90,718 kilograms (188,000 to 200,000 pounds) of thrust, resulting in a 907-kilogram (2,000-pound) payload gain.
1963 September 26 - .
- Gagarin and Kamanin travel to Paris - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin.
Gagarin and Kamanin travel to Paris. On arrival they are taken to see the Eiffel Tower and a quick tour of the city, which Kamanin finds beautiful..
1963 September 26 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/3.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Military training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 September 26 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: EAG-154.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Steam eject mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 September 26 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF08.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 September 26 - .
04:37 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Firefly IV WANDA Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 170 km (100 mi).
1963 September 26 - .
05:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Firefly IV VIOLET Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 170 km (100 mi).
1963 September 27 - .
11:17 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC5.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Scout X-2B.
FAILURE: Failure..
Failed Stage: U.
- P 35-5 - .
Payload: OPS 1610. Mass: 40 kg (88 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Program: DMSP.
Class: Earth.
Type: Weather satellite. Spacecraft: Program 35.
Decay Date: 1963-09-27 . Military weather satellite to provide targetting information for reconnaisance satellites..
1963 September 28 - .
- Gagarin attends the IAF Congress - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin.
Gagarin receives a 20,000 franc prize from the International Astronautical Federation at the 14th IAF Congress..
1963 September 28 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg.
- Initial launch of Thor/Able-Star from Vandenberg - .
Nation: USA.
1963 September 28 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC67/21.
LV Family:
R-36.
Launch Vehicle:
R-36 8K67.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials launch (1) - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 September 28 - .
14:43 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 226 km (140 mi).
1963 September 28 - .
20:22 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Ablestar.
- Transit 5BN-1 - .
Mass: 70 kg (154 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Program: Transit.
Class: Navigation.
Type: Navigation satellite. Spacecraft: Transit.
USAF Sat Cat: 670 . COSPAR: 1963-038B. Apogee: 1,125 km (699 mi). Perigee: 1,066 km (662 mi). Inclination: 90.10 deg. Period: 107.20 min.
The first Thor/Ablestar launch from Vandenberg carried a Navy payload that became the first satellite to be operated completely with nuclear power. A SNAP-9A satellite nuclear power supply, built by the Martin Company and the Atomic Energy Commission, was used to power the satellite. First test of nuclear-powered Transit operational prototype. Carried SNAP-9A nuclear power source. The satellite achieved gravity-gradient stabilization, but upside down, making the signal level too low for operational users with low-gain antennas. However, geodetic and navigational evaluation data were obtained.
- Transit 5E-1 - .
Payload: APL SN 39. Mass: 61 kg (134 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Program: Transit.
Class: Earth.
Type: Magnetosphere satellite. Spacecraft: Transit.
USAF Sat Cat: 671 . COSPAR: 1963-038C. Apogee: 1,123 km (697 mi). Perigee: 1,065 km (661 mi). Inclination: 90.10 deg. Period: 107.10 min.
The first Thor/Ablestar launch from Vandenberg carried a Navy payload that became the first satellite to be operated completely with nuclear power. A SNAP-9A satellite nuclear power supply, built by the Martin Company and the Atomic Energy Commission, was used to power the satellite. The missions of Satellite 1963-038C were to measure omnidirectional flux of protons and electrons at various energy levels, radiation effects on transistors, and the effectiveness of thermal coatings. The satellite was launched together with a classified Department of Defense spacecraft on September 28, 1963. Its planned orbit was apogee 1120 kilometres, perigee 1070 kilometres, inclination 88.9 degrees. The satellite weighed 62 kg; its body was in the shape of an 0.46 m x 0.25 m octagonal prism. It was powered by four solar blades and transmited on 136, 162, and 324 mcs. The spacecraft was built for the Bureau of Naval Weapons. In 1967 it was still sending usable data from all systems.
1963 September 29 - .
- Gagarin tours Le Bourget airfield. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin.
1963 September 29 - .
02:37 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Honest John.
Launch Vehicle:
Javelin.
- Topside sounder Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 1,037 km (644 mi).
1963 September 30 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Backup for the injectors of the second stage engine of the Gemini launch vehicle. - .
Nation: USA.
Air Force Space Systems Division contracted with Aerojet-General for a program to develop a backup for the injectors of the second stage engine of the Gemini launch vehicle. Titan II development flights had shown the stage II engine tended toward incipient combustion instability. The Gemini Stability Improvement Program, begun as a backup, became a program aimed at maximum probability of success on December 24, 1963. The 18-month program produced a completely redesigned stage II engine injector.
1963 September 30 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Gemini launch vehicle trainer. - .
Nation: USA.
Manned Spacecraft Center awarded its first incentive-type contract to Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc., Dallas, Texas for the fabrication of a trainer to be used in the Gemini launch vehicle training program. The fixed-price-incentive-fee contract had a target cost of $90,000, a target profit of $9,000, and a ceiling of $105,000. The incentive was based on cost only and provided for an 80/20 sharing arrangement; that is, the contractor would pay from his profit 20 percent of all savings under the target cost, or, alternatively, would receive 20 percent of all savings under the target cost. This meant that the contractor's profit would be zero after $97,500 was spent, and would be minus if costs exceeded $105,000.
1963 September 30 - .
- Gagarin visits UNESCO. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 6.
Gagarin visits UNESCO in Paris, followed by an interview with Paris Match. In the evening he and Kamanin visit Maxim's. On the same day Tereshkova departs for Cuba from Moscow. This is followed by a visit to Mexico. .
1963 October - .
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- Mercury MA-10 (cancelled) - .
Call Sign: Freedom 7 II. Crew: Shepard.
Backup Crew: Cooper.
Payload: Mercury SC15B. Nation: USA.
Flight: Mercury MA-10.
Spacecraft: Mercury.
Alan Shepard, and others pushed for a six day Mercury 10 endurance mission. This would give America the manned space endurance record for the first time and also cover the biological objectives of the first two Gemini missions. The Mercury 15B capsule had already been modified for long-duration flight and Shepard had the name 'Freedom 7 II' painted on the side. But the risk and work pending on Gemini persuaded NASA managers not to undertake another mission.
1963 October 1 - .
LV Family:
R-12.
Launch Vehicle:
Kosmos 11K63.
- Kosmos scientific satellites authorised. - .
Nation: Russia.
Spacecraft Bus: SA-200.
Spacecraft: DS-1.
All-Russian Council of the National Economy (VSNKh) Decree 'Program for Space Investigations With Small Artificial Satellite, Launched on the Kosmos -- On course of work on small satellites at OKB-586' was issued..
1963 October 1 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/3.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Operational test launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 Q4? - .
Launch Site:
Point Mugu.
Launch Platform: F-3B.
LV Family:
Sparoair.
Launch Vehicle:
Sparoair I.
- NITE OWL 2 - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NMC.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 October 1 - .
10:47 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Firefly IV BECKY Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 182 km (113 mi).
1963 October 1 - .
17:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- OSO B spectrometer Solar mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 219 km (136 mi).
1963 October 1 - .
19:39 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 619.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 2 - .
15:10 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 October 3 - .
03:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
McMurdo Station.
Launch Vehicle:
Arcas.
- McMurdo 28 Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Apogee: 60 km (37 mi).
1963 October 4 - .
- Gemini spacecraft No. 1 arrived at Atlantic Missile Range and was transferred to Hangar AF. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Gemini.
After a receiving inspection (October 7) and Voltage Standing Wave Ratio Test (October 8), its instrument pallets were removed for laboratory test and checkout (October 9) while the spacecraft was being checked out, weighed, and balanced. Instrument pallets were reinstalled November 26. Individual and integrated communications, instrumentation, and environmental control systems were then performed. Final industrial area testing of the spacecraft concluded with a confidence level test on February 12, 1964.
1963 October 4 - .
Launch Vehicle:
N1.
- Gagarin identified as head of lunar cosmonauts - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin,
Tereshkova.
Program: Lunar L1.
Class: Manned.
Type: Manned spacecraft. Tereshkova announces in Havana that Gagarin head of lunar cosmonaut team..
1963 October 4 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF07.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 October 4 - .
04:18 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: EAG-154.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 4 - .
05:17 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg OSTF2.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
1963 October 5 - .
Launch Site:
Fort Wingate.
Launch Vehicle:
Redstone.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 90 km (55 mi). Successful missile test. Missed aimpoint by 131 m..
1963 October 7 - .
- Nikolayev to wed Tereshkova. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Nikolayev,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 6.
Kamanin meets with Nikolayev to discuss the timing for his enforced wedding to Tereshkova. Nikolayev is evasive, doesn't want to set a date, won't give a direct answer. Kamanin points out the wedding will be the subject of a government decree and a precise date must be set. The possible days are limited due to Tereshkova's heavy travel schedule. Nevertheless Nikolayev refuses to commit to a date in October.
1963 October 7 - .
20:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- B field probe Magnetosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 165 km (102 mi).
1963 October 7 - .
20:22 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Hidden Hills DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Checkout/Opt Deg. Test/Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 23 km (14 mi). Maximum Speed - 4560 kph. Maximum Altitude - 23710 m. Air dropped in Hidden Hills DZ..
1963 October 7 - .
21:31 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B3.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- ST COOL WATER V test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 10 km (6 mi).
1963 October 8 - .
- Joseph F Shea named manager of Apollo Spacecraft Project Office - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Low, George,
Shea.
Program: Apollo.
NASA announced the appointment of Joseph F. Shea as ASPO Manager effective October 22. He had been Deputy Director (Systems) in OMSF. George M. Low, OMSF Deputy Director (Programs), would direct the Systems office as well as his own. Robert O. Piland, Acting Manager of ASPO since April 3, resumed his former duties as Deputy Manager.
1963 October 8 - .
19:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
LV Family:
Arcas.
Launch Vehicle:
Boosted Arcas.
- UJO-1 Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: Sweden.
Agency: NASA,
RTG.
Apogee: 89 km (55 mi).
1963 October 9 - .
- Kamanin and Gagarin fly to Cuba to join Tereshkova. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Gagarin,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 6.
Kamanin and Gagarin fly to Cuba to join Tereshkova. Then over the next 13 days on to Mexico, USA, Canada, England, and East Germany. .
1963 October 9 - .
- Douglas Paracone "flying carpet" escape system from orbital space stations. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft Bus: Rescue.
Spacecraft: Paracone.
A 'flying carpet' escape system from orbital space stations had been proposed by Douglas Aircraft Company. The escape system would be a saucer shape that would expand into a blunt-nosed, cone- shaped vehicle 7.6 m across at its base. The vehicle would act as its own brake as it passed through the atmosphere. Reentry heating problems would be met by using fabrics woven with filaments of nickel-based alloys.
1963 October 9 - .
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 3.
- Mark 12 reentry vehicle - .
General Electric began development of the Mark 12 reentry vehicle for use with both the Minuteman and Polaris/Poseidon weapon systems..
1963 October 9 - .
23:14 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 158 km (98 mi).
1963 October 10 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Vehicle:
Emma.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 55 km (34 mi).
1963 October 10 - .
23:13 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 158 km (98 mi).
1963 October 12 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
Launch Vehicle:
R-UNK.
- SSATC Target - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: MVS.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi). Missile launch, unknown type..
1963 October 14 - .
05:34 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- Ionosphere / aurora mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: DRTE.
Apogee: 145 km (90 mi).
By the end of 1963 - .
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
1963 October 15 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Reconsideration of flying Gemini fixes on Titan II development flights. - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Schriever.
Personnel from Air Force Space Systems Division (SSD), Air Force Ballistic Systems Division (BSD), and Titan II contractors met in Los Angeles to reconsider flying Gemini launch vehicle (GLV) fixes on Titan II development flights. BSD, which was responsible for the weapon system development program, had halted the installation of GLV fixes on the Titan II flights because of the limited number of flights remaining to qualify the missile. General Bernard A Schriever, Commander of Air Force Systems Command (of which BSD and SSD were subordinate division), intervened in support of an active program to clean up launch vehicle problem areas. The incorporation of GLV fixes on Titan II flights resumed on November 1 with the flight of Titan II N-25.
1963 October 15 - .
09:51 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 October 15 - .
11:48 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 October 15 - .
15:09 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 October 15 - .
15:09 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
LV Family:
Long Tom.
Launch Vehicle:
HAT.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Australia.
Agency: WRE.
Apogee: 80 km (49 mi).
1963 October 15 - .
16:05 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Solar XRT Solar x-ray mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 197 km (122 mi).
1963 October 15 - .
19:22 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 October 15 - .
19:22 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
LV Family:
Long Tom.
Launch Vehicle:
HAT.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Australia.
Agency: WRE.
Apogee: 80 km (49 mi).
1963 October 16 - .
16:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 619.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 17 - .
- NASA Astronaut Training Group 3 selected. - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Aldrin,
Anders,
Bassett,
Bean,
Cernan,
Chaffee,
Collins,
Cunningham,
Eisele,
Freeman,
Gordon,
Schweickart,
Scott,
Williams, Clifton.
The group was selected to provide crew members for planned Apollo missions (then planned as 4 Saturn I missions in 1965, 2-4 Saturn IB missions in 1966, 6 Saturn V missions from 1967).. Qualifications: Qualified jet pilot with minimum 1,000 flight-hours, bachleor's degree in engineering or physical or biological sciences, under 35 years old, under 183 cm height, excellent health. US citizen.. There were 271 applications, 200 from civilians (including two women) and 71 from military pilots (including two African-Americans). President Kennedy pushed for NASA to appoint a black astronaut, but neither of the applicants met the test pilot requirements. Bobby Kennedy arranged for one of these, USAF Captain Edward Dwight, to be enrolled in the USAF Test Pilot school. He graduated, and then had the necessary qualifications. He was 28 years old, an engineering school graduate, and a B-57 bomber command pilot with 2,000 hours flying time. However NASA did not find him as well qualified as other candidates, and he was not among the 32 chosen for final physical and mental tests.
From these 32, the final 14 were selected. Of them, four would die (two in a T-38 crash, one in a car crash, and one in the Apollo 204 ground fire) before flying in space. All of the ten remaining would fly in the Apollo program.
1963 October 17 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF04.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Operational missile test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). SAC launched the first Minuteman I (LGM-30A) missile (FTM 672) from Vandenberg in its operational testing program. .
1963 October 17 - .
02:37 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC13.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Agena D.
- Vela 2 - .
Payload: Vela 1B. Mass: 220 kg (480 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Nuclear detection surveillance satellite. Spacecraft: Vela.
USAF Sat Cat: 674 . COSPAR: 1963-039A. Apogee: 116,582 km (72,440 mi). Perigee: 101,081 km (62,808 mi). Inclination: 38.70 deg. Period: 6,486.20 min.
Space Systems Division, acting.as program manager for the Defense Department, launched two Vela nuclear radiation detection satellites from Cape Canaveral aboard the first Atlas D/Agena D (SLV-3/SS-01A) launch vehicle (197D). The Vela satellites were developed and produced by the TRW Systems and were the first pair in a series of satellites designed to provide information on nuclear detonations in the atmosphere or in outer space to a distance of 100 million miles. The 297-pound satellites were placed in near-circular orbits approximately 70,000 miles above the Earth's surface. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A).
- TRS 5 - .
Payload: ERS 12. Mass: 2.00 kg (4.40 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft: TRS.
Decay Date: 1963-06-30 . USAF Sat Cat: 675 . COSPAR: 1963-039B. Apogee: 102,372 km (63,610 mi). Perigee: 953 km (592 mi). Inclination: 35.90 deg. Period: 2,319.40 min. Decay date suspect Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A)..
- Vela 1 - .
Payload: Vela 1A. Mass: 220 kg (480 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Nuclear detection surveillance satellite. Spacecraft: Vela.
USAF Sat Cat: 692 . COSPAR: 1963-039C. Apogee: 116,528 km (72,407 mi). Perigee: 101,925 km (63,333 mi). Inclination: 37.80 deg. Period: 6,519.60 min. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A)..
1963 October 17 - .
10:52 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA5B.
Launch Pad: LA5B?.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Knight.
1963 October 17 - .
16:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 187 km (116 mi).
1963 October 18 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 October 18 - .
07:09 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Blandine.
Launch Vehicle:
Veronique.
- Bio (Cat) Life science mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 155 km (96 mi).
1963 October 18 - .
09:20 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- NO2 release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: CARDE.
Apogee: 140 km (80 mi).
1963 October 18 - .
09:29 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8A92.
- Cosmos 20 - .
Payload: Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 13. Mass: 4,720 kg (10,400 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: Korolev bureau.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: Vostok.
Spacecraft: Zenit-2 satellite.
Duration: 8.00 days. Decay Date: 1963-10-26 . USAF Sat Cat: 673 . COSPAR: 1963-040A. Apogee: 296 km (183 mi). Perigee: 201 km (124 mi). Inclination: 64.80 deg. Period: 89.40 min. Area survey photo reconnaissance satellite..
1963 October 20 - .
- Birth of Julie Payette - .
Nation: Canada.
Related Persons: Payette.
Canadian engineer mission specialist astronaut 1992-2013. Engineer. Second Canadian female astronaut. 2 spaceflights, 25.5 days in space. Flew to orbit on STS-96 (1999), STS-127..
1963 October 21 - .
- The second prototype space suit was received by MSC's Crew Systems Division - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Young.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: A7L,
Apollo CSM,
CSM Hatch.
The second prototype space suit was received by MSC's Crew Systems Division. Preliminary tests showed little improvement in mobility over the first suit. On October 24-25, a space suit mobility demonstration was held at North American. The results showed that the suit had less shoulder mobility than the earlier version, but more lower limb mobility. Astronaut John W. Young, wearing the pressurized suit and a mockup portable life support system (PLSS), attempted an egress through the CM hatch but encountered considerable difficulty. At the same time, tests of the suit-couch- restraint system interfaces and control display layout were begun at the Navy's Aviation Medical Acceleration Laboratory centrifuge in Johnsville, Pa. Major problems were restriction of downward vision by the helmet, extension of the suit elbow arm beyond the couch, and awkward reach patterns to the lower part of the control panel. On October 30-November 1, lunar task studies with the suit were carried out at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in a KC-135 aircraft at simulated lunar gravity. Mobility tests were made with the suit pressurized and a PLSS attached.
1963 October 22 - .
Launch Site:
Plesetsk.
Launch Complex:
Plesetsk PU11.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Groza test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 October 23 - .
Launch Site:
Ellsworth AFB.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Ellsworth AFB - .
With the turnover of the 68th Strategic Missile Squadron, the second Minuteman wing, the 44th Strategic Missile Wing at Ellsworth AFB, was completed and transferred entirely to SAC..
1963 October 23 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/3.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Operational test launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 October 24 - .
- NASA-Industry Apollo Executives Group - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Mueller.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM.
The NASA-Industry Apollo Executives Group, composed of top managers in OMSF and executives of the major Apollo contractors, met for the first time. The group met with George E. Mueller, NASA Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight, for status briefings and problem discussions. In this manner, NASA sought to make executives personally aware of major problems in the program.
1963 October 24 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC70.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
- Silo explosion kills 7 at Baikonur - .
Nation: Russia.
On 24 October 1963 an R-9 was being prepared for launch in a silo at LC-70. Unknown to the 11 man launch crew, an oxygen leak in the fuelling system had raised the oxygen partial pressure in the silo from the 21% maximum allowed to 32%. Whie the crew was descending in a lift to the 8th level of the silo, a spark from an electrical panel created a fire in the explosive atmosphere, killing seven and destroying the silo. This happened on the same day as the Nedelin disaster three years earlier, and became the cosmodrome's 'Black Day'. Forever after no launches were attempted from Baikonur on October 24.
1963 October 24 - .
LV Family:
MMRBM.
- Mobile Mid-Range Ballistic Missile (MMRBM) contracts. - .
Due to a Congressional compromise on the requested budget of $73.1 million for FY 1964, Headquarters USAF was able to announce Mobile Mid-Range Ballistic Missile (MMRBM) contracts..
1963 October 24 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar Mayak-2.
LV Family:
R-12.
Launch Vehicle:
Kosmos 63S1.
FAILURE: Second stage failed 353 seconds after launch..
Failed Stage: 2.
- DS-A1 s/n 4 - .
Payload: DS-A1. Mass: 30 kg (66 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Program: DS.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft Bus: DS.
Spacecraft: DS-A1.
Carried military experiments to test communications and navigation equipment needed for command and control of Soviet nuclear forces (later used on the Uragan navigation satellites). Also conducted operational monitoring of cosmic rays, radiation from nuclear tests, and natural and artifically-produced radiation belts.
1963 October 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 609.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 609.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 609.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 609.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 609.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 24 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 609.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 24 - .
05:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Blandine.
Launch Vehicle:
Veronique.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Bio (Cat) Life science mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 88 km (54 mi).
1963 October 25 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- First Titan II Gemini Launch Vehicle. - .
Spacecraft: Gemini.
From the Martin Marietta Corporation, the Space Systems Division accepted the first Titan II Gemini Launch Vehicle..
1963 October 25 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
LV Family:
R-5.
Launch Vehicle:
R-5B.
- VAO Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: AN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 October 25 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC4W.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Agena D.
- Agena D - .
Mass: 2,000 kg (4,400 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-7.
Decay Date: 1963-10-31 . USAF Sat Cat: 678 . COSPAR: 1963-041B. Apogee: 276 km (171 mi). Perigee: 116 km (72 mi). Inclination: 99.00 deg. Period: 88.41 min. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
- KH 7-03 - .
Payload: KH-7 no. 3 / OPS 2196. Mass: 2,000 kg (4,400 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NRO,
USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-7.
Decay Date: 1963-10-29 . USAF Sat Cat: 677 . COSPAR: 1963-041A. Apogee: 312 km (193 mi). Perigee: 123 km (76 mi). Inclination: 99.00 deg. Period: 88.80 min. KH-7 type satellite. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A). .
1963 October 26 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Gemini launch vehicle 1 arrived at Atlantic Missile Range and was transferred to complex 19. - .
Nation: USA.
Stage I was erected in the complete vehicle erector October 28, stage II in the second stage erector October 29. The two stages were cabled together in the side-by-side configuration required for the Sequence Compatibility Firing scheduled for mid-December. A limited Electronic-Electrical Interference Test was completed November 7, and power was applied to the vehicle November 13.
1963 October 26 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 619.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 October 26 - .
02:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- Ionosphere / aurora mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: DRTE.
Apogee: 145 km (90 mi).
1963 October 28 - .
03:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC11.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- ABRES WAC-1 / Pod 21 Reentry test / plume mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Spacecraft: ABRES.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 October 28 - .
03:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Little Carter Bay.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- TSRA? - .
Nation: Bahamas.
Agency: NOTS.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 October 28 - .
03:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
LV Family:
Hydac.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Javelin.
- TRUMP - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: APGC.
Apogee: 130 km (80 mi).
1963 October 29 - .
1963 October 29 - .
02:53 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant II.
- NO2 release Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Canada.
Agency: CARDE.
Apogee: 140 km (80 mi).
1963 October 29 - .
20:42 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Hidden Hills DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Checkout/Opt Deg. Test/Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 22 km (13 mi). Maximum Speed - 4364 kph. Maximum Altitude - 22600 m. Air dropped in Hidden Hills DZ..
1963 October 29 - .
21:19 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC1W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
- KH-5 9059A - .
Payload: KH-5 s/n 9059A/Agena D 1601 / OPS 2437. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-5.
Decay Date: 1964-01-21 . USAF Sat Cat: 681 . COSPAR: 1963-042A. Apogee: 318 km (197 mi). Perigee: 283 km (175 mi). Inclination: 89.90 deg. Period: 90.60 min. KH-5; deployed ELINT subsatellite. Fourth film payload retrieved in ARGON program. Film comparable to that of 9058A. Officially: Spacecraft Engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A)..
- Hitch Hiker 2 - .
Payload: P-11 s/n A3. Mass: 80 kg (176 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NRO,
USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: SIGINT. Spacecraft Bus: P 11.
Spacecraft: SSF.
Decay Date: 1965-05-23 . USAF Sat Cat: 682 . COSPAR: 1963-042B. Apogee: 581 km (361 mi). Perigee: 288 km (178 mi). Inclination: 90.00 deg. Period: 93.30 min. Radar monitoring..
1963 October 30 - .
LV Family:
Saturn I.
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn IB.
- Manned Saturn I earth orbital flights canceled - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Mueller,
Webb.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo Lunar Landing.
NASA canceled four manned earth orbital flights with the Saturn I launch vehicle. Six of a series of 10 unmanned Saturn I development flights were still scheduled. Development of the Saturn IB for manned flight would be accelerated and "all-up" testing would be started. This action followed Bellcomm's recommendation of a number of changes in the Apollo spacecraft flight test program. The program should be transferred from Saturn I to Saturn IB launch vehicles; the Saturn I program should end with flight SA-10. All Saturn IB flights, beginning with SA-201, should carry operational spacecraft, including equipment for extensive testing of the spacecraft systems in earth orbit.
Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight George E. Mueller had recommended the changeover from the Saturn I to the Saturn IB to NASA Administrator James E. Webb on October 26. Webb's concurrence came two days later.
1963 October 30 - .
- Only at 14:30 due Tereshkova and Nikolayev finally give in. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Nikolayev,
Tereshkova.
Only at 14:30 due Tereshkova and Nikolayev finally give in. The wedding is set for three days later. 300 will attend the wedding, from Khrushchev on down. .
1963 October 30 - .
LV Family:
Thor.
- Thrust Augmented Thor Agena announced - .
The Defense Department and NASA announced that the Thrust Augmented Thor (TAT) space booster developed by the Air Force would be added to the national launch vehicles program as a booster for Agena. The TAT increased total thrust to over 330,000 pounds and would improve the Delta's payload into earth orbit from 800 to 1,000 pounds.
1963 October 30 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
LV Family:
Belier.
Launch Vehicle:
Dragon 1.
- Test mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: CNES.
Apogee: 470 km (290 mi).
1963 October 30 - .
14:26 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 October - .
- Project Luster - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
NASA tentatively approved Project Luster, a program designed to capture lunar dust deflected from the moon by meteorites and spun into orbit around the earth. An Aerobee 150 sounding rocket containing scientific equipment built by Electro-Optical Systems, Inc., was scheduled for launch in late 1964.
1963 October 31 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn V.
- First production F-1 engine delivered - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
The first production F-1 engine for the Apollo Saturn V was flown from Rocketdyne's Canoga Park, Calif., facility, where it was manufactured, to MSFC aboard Aero Spacelines' "Pregnant Guppy.".
1963 October 31 - .
- Nikolayev/Tereshkova wedding arrangements. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Nikolayev,
Tereshkova.
The highest leadership of the Soviet Union is busy making the Nikolayev/Tereshkova wedding arrangements. Tereshkova disappears for four hours during the day and doesn't show up for important meetings..
1963 October 31 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF06.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Operational missile test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 October 31 - .
16:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
Launch Complex:
Wallops Island LA1.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 187 km (116 mi).
1963 October 31 - .
18:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- D-region composition Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 112 km (69 mi).
1963 October 31 - .
21:17 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
Launch Complex:
Wallops Island LA2.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Vibration test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 134 km (83 mi).
1963 November 1 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 November 1 - .
08:56 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC31.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Sputnik 11A59.
1963 November 1 - .
20:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC15.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Research and development / Pod T test / plume study mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
Titan II development flight N-25 was launched from the Atlantic Missile Range. It carried the oxidizer surge chamber and fuel accumulator kit intended to reduce the amplitude of longitudinal vibration which had characterized earlier flights. NASA regarded 0.25g as the maximum level tolerable in manned space flight; this flight achieved a level of 0.22g, the first to fall within acceptable limits. Although the kit had been tested on only one flight, Gemini Project Office had sufficient confidence in it to decide, on November 6, to procure several more such kits for subsequent installation in Gemini launch vehicles. Two later Titan II development flights (N-29 on December 12, 1963, and N-31 on January 15, 1964) and the flight of Gemini-Titan 1 confirmed the validity of this decision. The required kits for the remaining Gemini launch vehicles were then procured.
1963 November 2 - .
- Kamanin's phone is ringing off the hook. - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Nikolayev,
Tereshkova.
Kamanin's phone is ringing off the hook. Thousands want to attend the wedding - and it turns out there will be only space for 200. Kamanin is taking all the blame for this. .
1963 November 2 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF03.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Operational missile test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 November 3 - .
- Nikolayev/Tereshkova wedding - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Khrushchev,
Nikolayev,
Tereshkova.
The wedding, attended by the top leadership of the Soviet Union, goes well. Afterwards the newlyweds continue the party with a friends-only group of 60 at Nikolayev's apartment..
1963 November 4 - .
09:34 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576A1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- ABRES REX-III re-entry vehicle test flight - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Spacecraft: ABRES.
Apogee: 1,800 km (1,100 mi). The first Advanced Ballistic Reentry System (ABRES) program launch from Vandenberg was successfully completed when SAC's Atlas D booster (232D) carried the Chrysler-built REX-3 reentry vehicle down the Pacific Missile Range. .
1963 November 4 - .
10:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 215 km (133 mi).
1963 November 4 - .
15:10 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Dayglow Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: KPNO.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 November 5 - .
- Khrushchev gives Nikolayev and Tereshkova a new apartment - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Khrushchev,
Nikolayev,
Tereshkova.
Khrushchev has given Nikolayev and Tereshkova a new apartment in Moscow. It is in a building normally reserved exclusively for the highest Communist Part members - Kutuzovskiy Prospect number 30132, Apartment 1013L. The apartment has 7 rooms and can be divided into two sections if they wish to live apart.
1963 November 5 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC90/19.
Launch Vehicle:
UR-200.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi). First UR-200 test flight. (LKI).
1963 November 7 - .
- Apollo Pad Abort Mission 1 - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM LES,
CSM Parachute.
Apollo Pad Abort Mission I (PA-1), the first off-the-pad abort test of the launch escape system (LES), was conducted at WSMR. PA-1 used CM boilerplate 6 and an LES for this test.
All sequencing was normal. The tower-jettison motor sent the escape tower into a proper ballistic trajectory. The drogue parachute deployed as programmed, followed by the pilot parachute and main parachutes. The test lasted 165.1 seconds. The postflight investigation disclosed only one significant problem: exhaust impingement that resulted in soot deposits on the CM.
1963 November 7 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LC-A.
LV Family:
Black Brant.
Launch Vehicle:
Black Brant III.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 116 km (72 mi).
1963 November 7 - .
16:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC36.
LV Family:
Apollo CSM.
Launch Vehicle:
Apollo LES.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 2.00 km (1.20 mi).
1963 November 7 - .
18:11 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Hidden Hills DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Sharp Upper Vert. test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 25 km (15 mi). Maximum Speed - 4706 kph. Maximum Altitude - 25080 m. First flight with sharp-edged vertical stabilizer. Air dropped in Hidden Hills DZ..
1963 November 8 - .
- Go-ahead to RCA to develop the Apollo LEM radar - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM,
LM Communications,
LM Guidance.
Grumman issued a go-ahead to RCA to develop the LEM radar. Negotiations on the $23.461 million cost- plus-fixed-fee contract were completed on December 10. Areas yet to be negotiated between the two companies were LEM communications, inflight test, ground support, and parts of the stabilization and control systems.
1963 November 8 - .
LV Family:
Saturn I.
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn IB.
- Uprated H-1 engine for the first stage of the Saturn IB - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
MSFC directed Rocketdyne to develop an uprated H-1 engine to be used in the first stage of the Saturn IB. In August, Rocketdyne had proposed that the H-1 be uprated from 85,275 to 90,718 kilograms (188,000 to 200,000 pounds) of thrust. The uprated engine promised a 907-kilogram (2,000 pound) increase in the Saturn IB's orbital payload, yet required no major systems changes and only minor structural modifications.
1963 November 9 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-C.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Research and development test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 November 9 - .
20:27 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2 Agena D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: U.
- KH-4 9060 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9060. Mass: 1,150 kg (2,530 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1963-11-09 . KH-4. Mission failed..
- SRV 632 - .
Mass: 1,200 kg (2,600 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
1963 November 11 - .
06:23 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Molniya 8K78.
FAILURE: During unpowered coast in parking orbit the escape stage Block L lost stable attitude. Engine ignition occurred in an incorrect direction..
Failed Stage: U.
- Cosmos 21 - .
Payload: 3MV-1A s/n 1. Mass: 890 kg (1,960 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: Korolev bureau.
Program: Mars.
Class: Venus.
Type: Venus probe. Spacecraft Bus: 3MV.
Spacecraft: Venera 3MV-1A.
Decay Date: 1963-11-14 . USAF Sat Cat: 687 . COSPAR: 1963-044A. Apogee: 231 km (143 mi). Perigee: 192 km (119 mi). Inclination: 64.80 deg. Period: 88.70 min. The stage with payload remained in Earth orbit as Cosmos-51 and burnt up on re-entry..
1963 November 11 - .
18:48 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 619.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 November 12 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn V.
- Contract for the construction of Saturn V LC-39A - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
NASA awarded a $19.2 million contract to Blount Brothers Corporation and M. M. Sundt Construction Company for the construction of Pad A, part of the Saturn V Launch Complex 39 at LOC..
1963 November 12 - .
18:58 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- JHU Airglow 6 Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 223 km (138 mi).
1963 November 13 - .
Launch Vehicle:
N1.
- N1 launch site facility construction approved. - .
Nation: Russia.
Central Committee of the Communist Party and Council of Soviet Ministers Decree 'On approval of the schedule of work for the N1 launch complexes' was issued..
1963 November 13 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan IIIC.
- First Titan III engine - .
Space Systems Division accepted the first Titan III engine from Aerojet-General at its Sacramento facilities. The first and second stage liquid engines, 430,000 and 100,000 pounds of thrust respectively, were for the Titan IIIA vehicle that would test the basic center core configuration (Stages 1 and 2) of the eventual Titan IIIC vehicle.
1963 November 13 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC31B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi). A Minuteman flight test missile with a first stage cylindrical skirt and a gas injection steering system was successfully flight tested. These were Wing VI technical innovations that would be introduced with the Minuteman II (LGM-30F) missile. .
1963 November 13 - .
22:35 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576B2.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
FAILURE: Failure.
Failed Stage: 1.
- ST COOL WATER VI test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi). SAC launched Atlas D (158) in the final Atlas D operational program launch from Vandenberg. The missile was a failure, making the final tally for the 26 launches nine failures and 17 successes. .
1963 November 13 - .
23:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Dayglow Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 262 km (162 mi).
1963 November 14 - .
- The resolution is issued on final selection of the second cosmonaut group. - .
Nation: Russia.
1963 November 14 - .
1963 November 14 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-A1.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan I.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi). K-24 Nike-Zeus intercept of Titan I ICBM..
1963 November 14 - .
Launch Site:
Kwajalein.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- K-24 Titan Intercept - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi). K-24 Nike-Zeus intercept of Titan I ICBM..
1963 November 14 - .
19:19 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Hidden Hills DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A CO/Opt Deg/Systems Test/Technology mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 27 km (16 mi). Maximum Speed - 5287 kph. Maximum Altitude - 27680 m. Air dropped in Hidden Hills DZ..
By the end of 1963 - .
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
1963 November 15 - .
- An engine hard-over maximum q manual abort was impractical for the Apollo CSM on Saturn I and IB - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
NASA and contractor studies showed that, in the event of an engine hard-over failure during maximum q, a manual abort was impractical for the Saturn I and IB, and must be carried out by automatic devices. Studies were continuing to determine whether, in a similar situation, a manual abort was possible from a Saturn V.
1963 November 16 - .
- Kuznetsov named chief of the cosmonaut training centre - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Kuznetsov,
Tereshkova.
Kuznetsov is named the new chief of the cosmonaut training centre in replacement of Odintsev..
1963 November 16 - .
10:34 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Voskhod 11A57.
- Cosmos 22 - .
Payload: Zenit-4 no. 1. Mass: 6,300 kg (13,800 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: Korolev bureau.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: Vostok.
Spacecraft: Zenit-4.
Duration: 6.00 days. Decay Date: 1963-11-22 . USAF Sat Cat: 689 . COSPAR: 1963-045A. Apogee: 376 km (233 mi). Perigee: 193 km (119 mi). Inclination: 64.90 deg. Period: 90.20 min. High resolution photo reconnaissance satellite; returned film capsule.
1963 November 16 - .
16:55 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: SSBN 619.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A2.
- Operational test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 November 17 - .
18:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150A.
- Airglow Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 370 km (220 mi).
1963 November 18 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LC-A.
LV Family:
Honest John.
Launch Vehicle:
HJ Nike Nike.
- LRL HAD-1 test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: Livermore.
Apogee: 163 km (101 mi).
1963 November 19 - .
- Plans for the next Vostok flights - .
Nation: Russia.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Plans for the next Vostok flights are discussed with the training group formed in September. Two group flights of 8 to 10 days each seem the most likely possibility. .
1963 November 20 - .
Launch Site:
,
Vandenberg.
LV Family:
Atlas.
- Point Arguello and Navy tracking stations in the Pacific transferred to the Air Force. - .
The Defense Department announced that the Naval Missile Facility at Point Arguello, California, and the Navy tracking stations in the Pacific would be transferred to the Air Force. This would include control of the Atlantic Missile Range, the Pacific Missile Range, and the satellite control facilities at Sunnyvale, California, and combine them under a single component of the Air Force.
1963 November 20 - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: EAG-154.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 November 21 - .
- Vostok 5/6 cosmonauts' Far East tour - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
The cosmonauts are to depart on a Far East tour on 27 November, but scheduling is difficult because Sukarno calls to change the dates for Indonesia nearly daily. Kamanin develops four variant scenarios. The cosmonauts are to visit Sri Lanka, Burma, and Indonesia.
1963 November 21 - .
Launch Site:
Barking Sands.
LV Family:
Tomahawk.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Tomahawk.
- Ballistic test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: Sandia.
Apogee: 292 km (181 mi).
1963 November 21 - .
12:55 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Thumba.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- ISRO 10.01 (Na) Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 208 km (129 mi).
1963 November 22 - .
- President Kennedy killed; Lyndon B. Johnson becomes President - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Johnson, Lyndon,
Kennedy.
President Kennedy shot and killed by sniper in Dallas, Tex. Lyndon B. Johnson becomes President same day .
1963 November 22 - .
- Death of John F Kennedy - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Kennedy.
American polictician, President of the United States, 1961-1963. Declared the goal of landing an American on the moon by 1970 in 1961 as a means of beating the Soviet Union in the space race..
1963 November 22 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/3.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Operational test launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 November 22 - .
21:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Barking Sands.
LV Family:
Tomahawk.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Tomahawk.
- HRT test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: Sandia.
Apogee: 292 km (181 mi).
1963 November 23 - .
- VVS Opposes Further Vostok Flights - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Kennedy,
Korolev,
Rudenko.
Flight: Vostok 10,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
News reaches Moscow that Kennedy has been assassinated. Kamanin talks with Rudenko, who is not interested in Kamanin's plans for a wider VVS role in space. Rudenko believes Korolev's promises that Soyuz will start test flights in 1964 and that no further Vostok flights are necessary. Kamanin pleads that without such flights the American Gemini program will fly unopposed and give the Americans a decisive lead in the space race. The Soviet Union could launch a modified Vostok - a three place spacecraft - to upstage Gemini but the decision has to made now. Rudenko is unmoved.
1963 November 23 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/4.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- State trials flight - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 November 24 - .
- North American final report on extended missions for the Apollo spacecraft. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft Bus: Apollo CSM.
Spacecraft: Apollo X.
North American issued the final report of its study for MSC on extended missions for the Apollo spacecraft. In stressing the supreme importance of man's role in the exploration of space-and the uncertainties surrounding the effects of prolonged exposure to the zero-gravity environment of space-the company suggested that an Earth-orbital laboratory would be an ideal vehicle for such long-term experimental evaluation, with missions exceeding a year's duration. Additional Details: here....
1963 November 25 - .
- Vostok / Soyuz Space Plans - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Korolev.
Spacecraft: Vostok.
Kamanin meets with Korolev at OKB-1. Korolev is opposed to the VVS getting out of manned space flight. The Air Force already has a good laboratory infrastructure to support such space flights. More to the point Korolev feels more at home working with pilots and is sick and tired of dealing with the artillery officers that run the rocket forces. He's been stuck with them for twenty years and its a constant stress. A resolution was issued for development of the Soyuz on 1 December. However Korolev needs 80 million roubles to build and fly four Soyuz spacecraft in 1964, but has only been allocated 30 million.
1963 November 25 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- First Titan II squadron to reach fully operational status. - .
The 570th Strategic Missile Squadron became fully operational and was turned over to SAC..
1963 November 26 - .
- Birth of Richard Robert II 'Ricky' Arnold - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Arnold, Ricky.
American teacher mission specialist astronaut, 2004-on. 2 spaceflights, 209.6 days in space. Flew to orbit on STS-119 (2009), Soyuz MS-08..
1963 November 26 - .
18:16 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- UM Composition 3 / Den Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 172 km (106 mi).
1963 November 26 - .
18:44 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Sphere / Structure Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 151 km (93 mi).
1963 November 27 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn V.
- First long-duration test firing of Apollo J-2 engine - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
At its Santa Susana facility, Rocketdyne conducted the first long-duration (508 seconds) test firing of a J-2 engine. In May 1962 the J-2's required firing time was increased from 250 to 500 seconds..
1963 November 27 - .
Launch Site:
McConnell AFB.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- McConnell AFB - .
The 533d Strategic Missile Squadron, the first Titan II squadron at McConnell AFB, Kansas, was turned over to SAC..
1963 November 27 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF07.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 November 27 - .
Launch Site:
Fort Wingate.
LV Family:
Pershing.
Launch Vehicle:
Pershing 1.
- P-72? 63 Winter 3 D - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: 41FA4.
Apogee: 180 km (110 mi).
1963 November 27 - .
Launch Site:
Eglin.
LV Family:
Viper.
Launch Vehicle:
Terrier Viper I.
- Nation: USA.
Agency: NOTS.
Apogee: 140 km (80 mi). No telem.
1963 November 27 - .
02:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC17B.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Delta C.
- Explorer 18 - .
Payload: IMP A. Mass: 62 kg (136 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA Greenbelt.
Program: Explorer.
Class: Earth.
Type: Magnetosphere satellite. Spacecraft: IMP.
Decay Date: 1965-11-30 . USAF Sat Cat: 693 . COSPAR: 1963-046A. Apogee: 197,616 km (122,792 mi). Perigee: 192 km (119 mi). Inclination: 33.30 deg. Period: 5,666.20 min. Radiation data; Interplanetary Monitoring Program. Spacecraft engaged in research and exploration of the upper atmosphere or outer space (US Cat B). .
1963 November 27 - .
17:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Solar extreme ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NRL.
Apogee: 216 km (134 mi).
1963 November 27 - .
19:03 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC36A.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Centaur.
- Atlas Centaur 2 - .
Payload: Centaur 2B. Mass: 4,620 kg (10,180 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA Cleveland.
Class: Moon.
Type: Lunar probe. Spacecraft: Surveyor.
USAF Sat Cat: 694 . COSPAR: 1963-047A. Apogee: 1,478 km (918 mi). Perigee: 469 km (291 mi). Inclination: 30.40 deg. Period: 104.60 min.
Launched from Cape Canaveral, Atlas/Centaur (AC-2) was the first successful use of the high-energy liquid hydrogen/ liquid oxygen Centaur upper stage vehicle developed for NASA by General Dynamics. The spent Centaur stage entered orbit. Launch vehicle test. Launch vehicle put dummy payload into geosynchronous transfer orbit. First successful Centaur (liquid hydrogen-fueled) flight.
1963 November 27 - .
20:17 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Hidden Hills DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Checkout mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 27 km (16 mi). Maximum Speed - 5326 kph. Maximum Altitude - 27371 m. Air dropped in Hidden Hills DZ..
1963 November 27 - .
21:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC3W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2 Agena D.
- KH-4 9061 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9061 / Agena D 1172 / OPS 2260. Mass: 1,150 kg (2,530 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1963-12-15 . USAF Sat Cat: 695 . COSPAR: 1963-048A. Apogee: 368 km (228 mi). Perigee: 182 km (113 mi). Inclination: 69.60 deg. Period: 90.00 min. KH-4. Mission failed. Return capsule separated from satellite but remained in orbit..
1963 November 28 - .
- John F Kennedy Space Center (KSC) named - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Johnson, Lyndon,
Kennedy.
Program: Apollo.
In honor of the late President John F. Kennedy, who was assassinated six days earlier, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced that LOC and Station No. 1 of the Atlantic Missile Range would be designated the John F. Kennedy Space Center (KSC), ". . . to honor his memory, and the future of the works he started . . . ," Johnson said. On the following day, he signed an executive order making this change official. With the concurrence of Florida Governor Farris Bryant, he also changed the name of Cape Canaveral to Cape Kennedy.
1963 November 28 - .
- Bykovsky achieved lunar flight duration - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Tereshkova.
Flight: Vostok 5,
Vostok 6.
According to a review of Bykovsky's flight log, Bykovsky could have successfully completed a circumlunar flight. Tereshkova would have tired on such a flight - she ate poorly and slept too much..
1963 November 28 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8A92.
FAILURE: Failure of block E upper stage. Spacecraft liquidated by APO destruct system..
Failed Stage: 2.
- Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 14 - .
Payload: Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 14. Mass: 4,720 kg (10,400 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: Vostok.
Spacecraft: Zenit-2 satellite.
Decay Date: 1963-11-28 . Area survey photo reconnaissance satellite..
1963 November 29 - .
Launch Site:
Davis-Monthan AFB.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- All 18 Titan II launchers at Davis-Monthan AFB operational. - .
All 18 Titan II launchers at Davis-Monthan AFB were operational with the turnover of the second squadron, the 571st Strategic Missile Squadron, to SAC's 390th Strategic Missile Wing..
1963 November 29 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF06.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Operational missile test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 November - .
- Apollo LEM tethered flight vehicle considered - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM.
MSC directed Grumman to halt work on LEM test article 9, pending determination of its status as a tethered flight vehicle. As a result, the proposed flight demonstration of the tether coupler, using an S-64A Skycrane helicopter, was canceled..
1963 November 30 - .
- MOL orbiting laboratory program suggested. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Dynasoar,
MOL.
Largely because of NASA objections to the space station proposal, Dr. Brown suggested to the Secretary of Defense an orbiting laboratory program, employing Gemini capsule and a 1,500 cubic foot test module..
1963 December 1 - .
Launch Site:
Shijiedu.
LV Family:
T-7.
Launch Vehicle:
T-7A.
- Test mission - .
Nation: China.
Agency: Shanghai.
Apogee: 115 km (71 mi).
1963 December 2 - .
04:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
1963 December 3 - .
1963 December 3 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Correction of Titan II deficiencies for the Gemini program. - .
Nation: USA.
The Gemini Program Planning Board issued a memorandum of understanding of the correction of the Titan II deficiencies for the Gemini program. This agreement formalized NASA specifications and Air Force plans to clean up problems related to longitudinal oscillations (POGO), combustion instability, and engine improvement. The program to alleviate the POGO effect included ground proof tests of all subsystems modified to control oscillations. Flight tests of the solutions would be flown on Titan II missiles before application to the Gemini launch vehicle. For the combustion stability program, dynamic stability would be demonstrated through the use of artificially produced disturbances, with the engines being flight tested on unmanned vehicles as final proof of man-rating. Engine improvement was a program to correct all design deficiencies that had cropped up during the Titan II development flights.
1963 December 3 - .
04:59 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
Launch Pad: LA2 SL.
Launch Vehicle:
Skylark.
FAILURE: Failure.
1963 December 3 - .
08:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC67/21.
LV Family:
R-36.
Launch Vehicle:
R-36 8K67.
- Kura state trials missile launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 903 km (561 mi).
1963 December 4 - .
Launch Site:
McConnell AFB.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- McConnell AFB - .
The second McConnell Titan II squadron of LGM-25C missiles, the 532d Strategic Missile Squadron, was turned over to SAC..
1963 December 4 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 December 5 - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Complex:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Vehicle:
Seliger.
- First Cuxhaven military launches - .
Nation: Germany.
Related Persons: Seliger.
The first military launches were made from Cuxhaven since the Backfire V-2 launches of 1945. Seliger, under contract to Waffen und Luftruestung AG (Weapons and Air Development Inc) of Hamburg launched a test rocket. The altitude was restricted to 30 km by a new regulation of the Lower Saxony Economy and Trade Ministry.
1963 December 5 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- HR solar spectrum Solar ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 December 5 - .
Launch Site:
Cuxhaven.
Launch Vehicle:
Seliger 1.
- Test mission - .
Nation: Germany.
Agency: DRG.
Apogee: 30 km (18 mi).
1963 December 5 - .
19:04 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Edwards.
Launch Complex:
Delamar Dry Lake DZ.
Launch Pad: Edwards RW04/22.
Launch Platform: NB-52 008.
- X-15A Opt Deg/Sys/Mach 6 Technology/test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA,
USAF.
Spacecraft: X-15A.
Apogee: 30 km (18 mi). Maximum Speed - 6465 kph. Maximum Altitude - 30785 m. Camera test in combination with U-2 flight. Air dropped in Delamar Dry Lake DZ..
1963 December 5 - .
21:51 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2E.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Ablestar.
- Transit 5E-3 - .
Mass: 53 kg (116 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Program: Transit.
Class: Earth.
Type: Magnetosphere satellite. Spacecraft: Transit.
USAF Sat Cat: 705 . COSPAR: 1963-049C. Apogee: 1,108 km (688 mi). Perigee: 1,060 km (650 mi). Inclination: 90.10 deg. Period: 106.90 min. Radiation monitoring..
1963 December 6 - .
23:40 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
LV Family:
Lupus.
Launch Vehicle:
HAD.
- Ultraviolet absorption Solar extreme ultraviolet / aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Australia.
Agency: WRE.
Apogee: 54 km (33 mi).
1963 December 7 - .
- Crews for 1964 - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Bykovsky,
Nikolayev,
Rudenko,
Tereshkova.
Program: Vostok,
Soyuz,
Lunar L1.
Flight: Soyuz A-1,
Soyuz A-2,
Soyuz A-3,
Soyuz A-4,
Vostok 7,
Vostok 8,
Vostok 9.
Spacecraft: Soyuz A,
Soyuz B,
Soyuz V,
Voskhod.
Kamanin meets with Rudenko, to discuss selection of three crews for Vostok and three crews for Soyuz flights in 1964. Ioffe reports that the Soyuz docking simulator will be completed by 25 December. Tereshkova, Nikolayev, and Bykovsky are in Indonesia on a public relations tour, to be followed by Burma.
1963 December 7 - .
13:11 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Cajun.
- Grenades Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 103 km (64 mi).
1963 December 7 - .
13:43 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Wallops Island.
LV Family:
Deacon.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Apache.
- UM Pitot 3 Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA.
Apogee: 141 km (87 mi).
1963 December 8 - .
Launch Site:
Little Rock AFB.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Little Rock AFB - .
The first operational Titan II squadron at Little Rock AFB, the 373d Strategic Missile Squadron, was transferred to SAC..
1963 December 8 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 December 9 - .
05:24 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Fort Churchill.
LV Family:
Astrobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Astrobee 200.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Ionization detector Aeronomy / aurora mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 242 km (150 mi).
1963 December 10 - .
- Cancellation of the X-20 DynaSoar project and start of the MOL project - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: McNamara.
Spacecraft: Dynasoar,
MOL.
Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara announced cancellation of the X-20 Dyna Soar project at a news briefing at the Pentagon. McNamara stated that fiscal resources thereby saved would be channeled into broader research on the problems and potential value of manned military operations in space, chiefly the Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) project. These decisions on the X-20 and MOL had been discussed and coordinated with NASA, and, although the Air Force received responsibility for the MOL project, NASA would continue to provide technical support. By the end of 1963 $410 million had been spent on Dynasoar, with another $373 million needed through the first flight. It was decided to complete re-entry testing of the Asset subscale unmanned vehicle, at a cost of $ 41 million.
1963 December 10 - .
- MOL development approved - .
Nation: Russia.
1963 December 10 - .
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan IIIM.
- Manned Orbiting Laboratory assigned to USAF - .
Related Persons: ,
McNamara.
Spacecraft: MOL.
Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara assigned responsibility for the development of a near-earth Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) to the Air Force. First manned flight was tentatively planned for late 1967 or early 1968. A modified Titan III, the Titan HIM, would be used to place the laboratories in orbit from Vandenberg.
1963 December 10 - .
- The Department of Defense announced cancellation of the Dyna-Soar (X-20) program. - .
Spacecraft: Dynasoar.
1963 December 10 - .
03:11 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC25A.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 December 11 - .
- Douglas contracted for 10 additional Apollo S-IVB stages - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
NASA Headquarters approved a $48,064,658 supplement to the Douglas Aircraft Company, Inc., contract for 10 additional S-IVB stages, four for the Saturn IB and six for the Saturn V missions..
1963 December 11 - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC38.
LV Family:
Spartan ABM.
Launch Vehicle:
Nike Zeus.
- Nike X R&D, last WS test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: US Army.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi).
1963 December 11 - .
05:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kagoshima.
Launch Complex:
Kagoshima L.
LV Family:
Lambda.
Launch Vehicle:
Lambda 2.
- Ionosphere mission - .
Nation: Japan.
Agency: ISAS.
Apogee: 410 km (250 mi).
1963 December 12 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/3.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Military training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 December 12 - .
01:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral ETR.
Launch Platform: EAG-154.
LV Family:
Polaris.
Launch Vehicle:
Polaris A3.
FAILURE: Failure.
- Test mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 1.00 km (0.60 mi).
1963 December 12 - .
08:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kagoshima.
LV Family:
Kappa.
Launch Vehicle:
Kappa 8L.
- Aeronomy / Fields mission - .
Nation: Japan.
Agency: ISAS.
Apogee: 103 km (64 mi).
1963 December 12 - .
16:50 GMT - .
Launch Site:
White Sands.
Launch Complex:
White Sands LC35.
LV Family:
Aerobee.
Launch Vehicle:
Aerobee 150.
- Extreme ultraviolet Mon / XR / RPA Solar extreme ultraviolet mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 325 km (201 mi).
1963 December 12 - .
19:06 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Woomera.
Launch Complex:
Woomera LA2.
LV Family:
Lupus.
Launch Vehicle:
HAD.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Australia.
Agency: WRE.
Apogee: 100 km (60 mi).
1963 December 12 - .
20:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC15.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Research and development / Pod T test / plume study mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 December 13 - .
- NASA canceled five Ranger flights - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Ranger.
Spacecraft Bus: Ranger.
Spacecraft: Ranger 6-7-8-9.
NASA canceled five Ranger flights (numbers 10 through 14) designed to take high-resolution photographs of the lunar surface before impact. (Five Rangers had thus far been launched.) OSS Associate Administrator Homer E. Newell stated that NASA would depend on the remaining four Rangers, the Lunar Orbiters, and the Surveyors for information about the lunar surface. Cancellation of the flights promised to save $90 million.
1963 December 13 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF02.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Demonstration and shakedown operations launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 December 13 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC67/21.
LV Family:
R-36.
Launch Vehicle:
R-36 8K67.
FAILURE: Failure.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 0 km (0 mi).
1963 December 13 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF04.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Operational missile test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 December 13 - .
14:15 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar Mayak-2.
LV Family:
R-12.
Launch Vehicle:
Kosmos 63S1.
- Cosmos 23 - .
Payload: DS-U / Omega-1. Mass: 347 kg (765 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: MO.
Class: Technology.
Type: Navigation technology satellite. Spacecraft Bus: DS.
Spacecraft: Omega.
Decay Date: 1964-03-27 . USAF Sat Cat: 707 . COSPAR: 1963-050A. Apogee: 560 km (340 mi). Perigee: 232 km (144 mi). Inclination: 48.90 deg. Period: 92.40 min. Tested VNIIEM electric gyrodyne satellite orientation technology..
1963 December 15 - .
1963 December 16 - .
- Safety for Apollo of breathing 100 percent oxygen at 5 psi for 30 days proven - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM ECS.
MSC and the U.S. Air Force Aerospace Medical Division completed a joint manned environmental experiment at Brooks Air Force Base, Tex. After spending a week in a sea-level atmospheric environment, the test subjects breathed 100 percent oxygen at 3.5 newtons per square centimeter (5 psi) at a simulated altitude of 8,230 meters (27,000 feet) for 30 days. They then reentered the test capsule for observation in a sea-level environment for the next five days. This experiment demonstrated that men could live in a 100 percent oxygen environment under these conditions with no apparent ill effects.
1963 December 16 - .
- Yerkina wedding - .
Nation: Russia.
Related Persons: Dementiev,
Korolev,
Ponomaryova,
Tereshkova,
Tsybin,
Yerkina.
Program: Soyuz,
Lunar L1.
Flight: Soyuz A-1,
Soyuz A-2,
Soyuz A-3,
Soyuz A-4.
Spacecraft Bus: Soyuz.
Spacecraft: Soyuz A.
The cosmonaut weds at the TsPK cosmonaut centre, and 80 guests attend. Of the female cosmonauts, only Ponomaryova is not yet married. However the next female flight will be made no earlier than 1965-1966. Tereshkova looks tired after her tour to Southeast Asia - and she's supposed to go to Ghana on 10 January! Korolev claims that the Soyuz schedule, as laid out in the resolution of 4 December 1963, is still realistic. He will have the first Soyuz flight in August 1964 and the second and third in September 1964. Ivanovskiy doesn't believe it will be possible to make any flights until 1965. Korolev and Tsybin disccuss Shcherbakov's design for a rocket-propelled high-altitude glider. This concept was supported by the VVS, but Dementiev was against it and it was killed in the bureaucracy.
1963 December 16 - .
- Military manned space effort responsibility. - .
Related Persons: Schriever.
Spacecraft: MOL.
General Bernard A. Schriever, AFSC Commander, assigned Space Systems Division the responsibility for managing the entire military manned space effort, including the Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL)..
1963 December 17 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 395-D.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Research and development / Pod T? test / plume study mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 December 17 - .
17:17 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 4300C.
Launch Pad: 4300C.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Blue Scout Jr SLV-1C.
- ERCS 279L Communications mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Apogee: 1,000 km (600 mi).
1963 December 18 - .
09:52 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg 576A1.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas D.
- ABRES LORV-8 re-entry vehicle test flight - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Spacecraft: ABRES.
Apogee: 1,800 km (1,100 mi).
Atlas 109F was the final Atlas research and development flight test missile to be launched. Since the first attempted launch of a Series A Atlas on 11 June 1957, 95 Atlas missiles had been used in the R&D program - eight As, nine Bs, six Cs, 32 Ds, 24 Es, and 16 Fs. All but 12 of these were launched from Cape Canaveral. Of the 95 launches, 57 were considered successful while 38 were failures.
1963 December 18 - .
21:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC4W.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas Agena D.
- KH 7-04 - .
Payload: KH-7 no. 4 / OPS 2372. Mass: 2,000 kg (4,400 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NRO,
USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-7.
Decay Date: 1963-12-20 . USAF Sat Cat: 711 . COSPAR: 1963-051A. Apogee: 266 km (165 mi). Perigee: 122 km (75 mi). Inclination: 97.90 deg. Period: 88.50 min.
Atlas 109F was the final Atlas research and development flight test missile to be launched. Since the first attempted launch of a Series A Atlas on 11 June 1957, 95 Atlas missiles had been used in the R&D program - eight As, nine Bs, six Cs, 32 Ds, 24 Es, and 16 Fs. All but 12 of these were launched from Cape Canaveral. Of the 95 launches, 57 were considered successful while 38 were failures. KH-7 type satellite. Space craft engaged in investigation of spaceflight techniques and technology (US Cat A).
1963 December 18 - .
22:56 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg OSTF2.
LV Family:
Atlas.
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas F.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,400 km (800 mi).
Atlas 109F was the final Atlas research and development flight test missile to be launched. Since the first attempted launch of a Series A Atlas on 11 June 1957, 95 Atlas missiles had been used in the R&D program - eight As, nine Bs, six Cs, 32 Ds, 24 Es, and 16 Fs. All but 12 of these were launched from Cape Canaveral. Of the 95 launches, 57 were considered successful while 38 were failures.
1963 December 19 - .
- First three prototype Apollo fuel cells delivered - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Apollo CSM,
CSM Fuel Cell.
Pratt and Whitney Aircraft delivered the first three prototype-A fuel cells to North American..
1963 December 19 - .
1963 December 19 - .
06:00 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC32B.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1B.
- Research and development launch - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF AFSC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 December 19 - .
09:28 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC1.
LV Family:
R-7.
Launch Vehicle:
Vostok 8A92.
- Cosmos 24 - .
Payload: Zenit-2 11F61 s/n 15. Mass: 4,720 kg (10,400 lb). Nation: Russia.
Agency: Korolev bureau.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: Vostok.
Spacecraft: Zenit-2 satellite.
Duration: 9.00 days. Decay Date: 1963-12-28 . USAF Sat Cat: 712 . COSPAR: 1963-052A. Apogee: 391 km (242 mi). Perigee: 204 km (126 mi). Inclination: 65.00 deg. Period: 90.50 min. Area survey photo reconnaissance satellite..
1963 December 19 - .
18:49 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC5.
LV Family:
Scout.
Launch Vehicle:
Scout X-4.
1963 December 20 - .
- Boeing Company to build five Lunar Orbiter spacecraft - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: Lunar Orbiter.
NASA selected The Boeing Company to build five Lunar Orbiter spacecraft. Beginning in 1966, Lunar Orbiters would take close-range photographs of the moon and transmit them by telemetry back to earth. The spacecraft would also detect radiation and micrometeoroid density and supply tracking data on the gravitational field of the moon. Information derived from the project (managed by Langley Research Center) would aid in the selection of lunar landing sites.
1963 December 20 - .
LV Family:
Thor.
- RAF Thor IRBM retired. - .
The last Royal Air Force Thor IRBM squadron was inactivated and the missiles retired from the Royal Air Force inventory..
1963 December 20 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LC-A.
Launch Vehicle:
Seagull.
- Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USN.
Apogee: 50 km (31 mi).
1963 December 20 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
Launch Complex:
Baikonur LC41/3.
LV Family:
R-16.
Launch Vehicle:
R-16U.
- Military training launch - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,210 km (750 mi).
1963 December 20 - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg LF06.
LV Family:
Minuteman.
Launch Vehicle:
Minuteman 1A.
- Operational missile test - .
Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF SAC.
Apogee: 1,300 km (800 mi).
1963 December 21 - .
Launch Site:
Hammaguira.
Launch Complex:
Hammaguira Bacchus.
LV Family:
Agate.
Launch Vehicle:
Topaze VE111L.
- Test mission - .
Nation: France.
Agency: ONERA.
Apogee: 110 km (60 mi).
1963 December 21 - .
09:30 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Cape Canaveral.
Launch Complex:
Cape Canaveral LC17B.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor Delta B.
- Tiros 8 - .
Payload: Tiros H (A-53). Mass: 119 kg (262 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NASA Greenbelt.
Program: Tiros.
Class: Earth.
Type: Weather satellite. Spacecraft: Tiros.
USAF Sat Cat: 716 . COSPAR: 1963-054A. Apogee: 705 km (438 mi). Perigee: 667 km (414 mi). Inclination: 58.50 deg. Period: 98.50 min. Returned more than 100,000 cloud cover images. Spacecraft engaged in practical applications and uses of space technology such as weather or communication (US Cat C)..
1963 December 21 - .
21:45 GMT - .
Launch Site:
Vandenberg.
Launch Complex:
Vandenberg SLC2W.
LV Family:
Thor.
Launch Vehicle:
Thor SLV-2A Agena D.
- KH-4 9062 - .
Payload: KH-4 s/n 9062 / Agena D 1168 / OPS 1388. Mass: 1,500 kg (3,300 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: CIA,
NRO.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: Military surveillance satellite. Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1964-01-08 . USAF Sat Cat: 718 . COSPAR: 1963-055A. Apogee: 337 km (209 mi). Perigee: 178 km (110 mi). Inclination: 64.80 deg. Period: 89.70 min. KH-4; deployed ELINT subsatellite. Corona static fogged much of film..
- P-11 motor - .
Mass: 1,200 kg (2,600 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: USAF.
Spacecraft Bus: WS-117.
Spacecraft: KH-4.
Decay Date: 1964-01-08 . COSPAR: 1963-055xx.
- Hitch Hiker 3 - .
Payload: P-11 s/n A4. Mass: 80 kg (176 lb). Nation: USA.
Agency: NRO,
USAF.
Class: Surveillance.
Type: SIGINT. Spacecraft Bus: P 11.
Spacecraft: SSF.
Decay Date: 1964-11-07 . USAF Sat Cat: 719 . COSPAR: 1963-055B. Apogee: 394 km (244 mi). Perigee: 316 km (196 mi). Inclination: 64.50 deg. Period: 91.70 min. Radar monitoring..
1963 December 23 - .
- Motorola contract for subsystems for NASA's Deep Space Network - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Motorola, Inc., received a follow-on contract from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for the manufacture and integration of at least three S-band receiving subsystems for NASA's Deep Space Network and Manned Space Flight Network ground stations. Within the unified S-band system adopted by NASA, receiving equipment of the two networks would be identical except for a slight difference in operating frequency. This enabled all communications between ground stations and spacecraft to be on a single frequency. It also allowed more efficient power transfer between the directive antennas and the spacecraft and would greatly reduce galactic noise encountered with UHF frequencies.
1963 December 24 - .
Launch Vehicle:
N1.
- N1 ground equipment construction authorised. - .
Nation: Russia.
Decree 'On ensuring the manufacture of ground equipment for the N1' was issued..
1963 December 24 - .
- Deep Space Network commissioned. - .
Nation: USA.
1963 December 24 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
LV Family:
R-5.
Launch Vehicle:
R-5B.
- VAO Aeronomy mission - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: AN.
Apogee: 500 km (310 mi).
1963 December 25 - .
Launch Site:
Baikonur.
LV Family:
R-9.
Launch Vehicle:
R-9A.
- State trials missile test - .
Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 1,160 km (720 mi).
1963 December 26 - .
Launch Vehicle:
Saturn V.
- Extension of Apollo systems to permit more extensive exploration of the lunar surface. - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Shea,
von Braun.
Spacecraft: Apollo LM Shelter,
Apollo LM Taxi.
MSFC Director Wernher von Braun described to Apollo Spacecraft Program Manager Joseph F. Shea a possible extension of Apollo systems to permit more extensive exploration of the lunar surface. Huntsville's concept, called the Integrated Lunar Exploration System, involved a dual Saturn V mission (with rendezvous in lunar orbit) to deliver an integrated lunar taxi/shelter spacecraft to the Moon's surface. Additional Details: here....
1963 December 27 - .
- Dyna-Soar termination plan. - .
Nation: USA.
Spacecraft: Asset,
Dynasoar.
The program office again revised its termination plan..
1963 December 28 - .
LV Family:
Peacekeeper.
Launch Vehicle:
AICBM.
- Advanced ICBM program cancelled. - .
Headquarters USAF effectively cancelled BSD's Advanced ICBM program when it directed all studies to be separate line items in exploratory and advanced development areas..
1963 December 28 - .
Launch Site:
Little Rock AFB.
LV Family:
Titan.
Launch Vehicle:
Titan II.
- Final operational Titan II squadron transferred to SAC at Little Rock AFB. - .
The sixth and final operational Titan II squadron, the 374th Strategic Missile Squadron, was transferred to SAC at Little Rock AFB, Arkansas. This action completed the programmed activation..
1963 December 29-January 4 - .
- Hamilton Standard to modify the Apollo space suit helmet - .
Nation: USA.
Program: Apollo.
Spacecraft: A7L.
Based upon centrifuge test results, MSC directed Hamilton Standard to modify the space suit helmet. The vomitus port and other obstructions to the line of sight in the downward direction were deleted..
1963 December 29 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
Launch Vehicle:
R-UNK.
- Nation: Russia.
Agency: MVS.
Apogee: 200 km (120 mi). Missile launch, unknown type..
1963 December 30 - .
Launch Site:
Kapustin Yar.
Launch Complex:
Kapustin Yar V-2.
Launch Vehicle:
R-14.
- Nation: Russia.
Agency: RVSN.
Apogee: 675 km (419 mi).
1963 December 31 - .
- Samuel C Phillips new NASA Deputy Director for Apollo Program - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Mueller,
Phillips, Samuel.
Program: Apollo.
NASA announced the appointment of Air Force Brig. Gen. Samuel C. Phillips as Deputy Director of the NASA Headquarters Apollo Program Office. General Phillips assumed management of the manned lunar landing program, working under George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator of Manned Space Flight and Director of the Apollo Program Office.
1963 December 31 - .
- NASA/USAF discussions on MOL joint control and support. - .
Nation: USA.
Related Persons: Gilruth,
Mueller.
Spacecraft: MOL.
MSC Director Robert R. Gilruth apprised George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight, of recent discussions with officers from the Air Force's Space Systems Division regarding MSC's joint participation in the MOL project in the area of operational control and support. Such joint cooperation might comprise two separate areas: manning requirements for the control center and staffing of actual facilities. Gilruth suggested that such joint cooperation would work to the benefit of both organizations involved. Furthermore, because a number of unidentified problems inevitably existed, he recommended the creation of a joint NASA Air Force group to study the entire question so that such uncertainties might be identified and resolved.
1963 December 31 - .
LV Family:
Minuteman.
- Phillips appointed Deputy Director of the Apollo Program - .
Spacecraft Bus: Apollo Lunar Landing.
Spacecraft: Apollo.
Brigadier General Samuel C. Phillips, Vice Commander, Ballistic Systems Division, and former Minuteman program director, was appointed Deputy Director of the Apollo Manned Lunar Landing Program (NASA).
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