Launched 10 August 1960 at 20:37:54 GMT from
Vandenberg LC 75-3-5 by a
Thor DM-21 Agena-A rocket, Discoverer 13 performed according to plan. On 11 August, after 17 orbits, Discoverer 13 received a command from a ground station on
Kodiak Island to start the reentry. After the Agena pitched itself down 60 degrees, the recovery vehicle was ejected by small springs, and the new spin engine, utilizing cold gas, spun the SRV for stability. Its retrorocket fired, reducing the capsule's velocity by per second, and then the spin system despun the spacecraft. Just before it started to heat up on reentry, the orbit ejection subsystem dropped off the capsule and its heat shield. At a small parachute was deployed, strobe lights and a radio beacon were activated, and the heat shield was released. After stabilization a larger parachute was deployed. Though the SRV was supposed to have been caught in midair, the recovery airplane went off in the wrong direction, and the capsule splashed down in NNW of
Honolulu in the Pacific Ocean. A naval vessel, The
Haiti Victory, sent out a helicopter which dropped divers into the water to attach a collar to the capsule for helicopter retrieval. The SRV was brought back to the ship and then taken to
Pearl Harbor in
Oahu. Four days later, on 15 August, the American flag that Discoverer 13 carried instead of a camera was presented to President Eisenhower, the public celebration reinforcing the Corona program's civilian cover. Lockheed employees celebrated the successful flight with a party at a hotel in
East Palo Alto, California, during which they threw program manager James Plummer into the pool and then jumped in, themselves. The Agena portion of Discoverer 13 reentered on 14 November. ==Legacy==