Developed as a part of the
Explorer Project, the original goal for the launch vehicle was to place an
artificial satellite into
orbit. Following the
Soviet Union's launch of
Sputnik 1 on October 4, 1957 (and the resulting "
Sputnik crisis") and the failure of the
Vanguard 1 launch attempt, the program received funding to match the Soviet space achievements. The launch vehicle family name was suggested in November 1957 by
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) Director
Dr. William Pickering, who proposed the name
Juno, after the Roman goddess and queen of the gods, as well as for its position as the satellite-launching version of the
Jupiter-C. The fourth stage for the Juno I launch vehicle was derived following the September 1956 test launch of a Jupiter-C for the
Army Ballistic Missile Agency, which could have been the world's first satellite launch, had a fourth stage been loaded and fueled. A fourth stage would have allowed the nose cone to overshoot the target and enter orbit. The first launch of a Juno I launch vehicle was in early 1958, with the successful launch of
Explorer 1 satellite on February 1, 1958, at 03:47:56
GMT, after the Soviet Union's
Sputnik 1 on October 4, 1957. == Launch vehicle ==