While the first launches for
Sputnik 1 satellites could be done with the two stage booster
Sputnik, to achieve escape velocity required by the
Luna programme, a third stage was needed. The task of developing the specified engine was entrusted to OKB-154 (KBKhA), which did the job in 9 months. The engine received intra name RO-5. The first flight of a
Luna 8K72, which included the new Block-E stage propelled by the RD-0105 was on September 23, 1958. It was supposed to launch the
Luna E-1 No.1 probe, but ended 92 seconds after launch when the rocket broke up from longitudinal vibration, causing the strap-ons to separate from the vehicle, which then crashed downrange. Neither was successful the second flight of a Luna 8K72 (October 11, 1958), which was to launch the
Luna E-1 No.2 probe and ended 104 seconds after launch when the rocket again disintegrated from vibration. The third flight of a Luna 8K72 (December 4, 1958), which was to launch the
Luna E-1 No.3 probe, also ended 245 seconds after launch when the Block-I core stage shut down from loss of engine lubricant. On January 2, 1959, as part of the Luna 8K72's Block-E stage, the engine RD-0105 finally performed its first successful mission, the launch of
Luna 1. It was also the first deep space engine ignition, the first spacecraft to reach
escape velocity and, while the spacecraft missed the Moon with which it was supposed to crash, it became the first human made object to enter a
heliocentric orbit. On September 14, 1959, the RD-0105 propelled
Luna 2 towards the Moon. It was the first spacecraft
to reach the surface of the Moon, and the first man-made object to land on another celestial body. It took with it a pennant with the
State Emblem of the
USSR. On August 19, 1960, the RD-0105 propelled
Korabl-Sputnik 2 mission. It was the third
Vostok spacecraft and the first spaceflight to send animals into orbit and return them safely back to Earth. On December 22, 1960, the RD-0109 had its first flight on a
Vostok-K Block-E. Regrettably, the gas generator of the rocket third stage suffered a failure and the RD-0109 could not prove itself in flight. That chance came with the second
Vostok-K launch, where the RD-0109 successfully launched the
Korabl-Sputnik 4 mission to orbit. On April 12, 1961, the RD-0109, as part of the Block-E stage of the
Vostok-K 8K72K rocket, propelled the historic
Vostok 1 to orbit making
Yuri Gagarin the first human to go to
outer space and the first to orbit the Earth. On June 16, 1963, the RD-0109 propelled the
Vostok 6 making
Valentina V. Tereshkova the first woman to orbit Earth. == Versions ==