, Wallops, 16 Feb 1961 In the late 1950s, NASA established the Scout program to develop a multistage solid-propellant space booster and research rocket. The U.S. Air Force also participated in the program, but different requirements led to some divergence in the development of NASA and USAF Scouts. The basic NASA Scout configuration, from which all variants were derived, was known as Scout-X1. It was a four-stage rocket, which used the following motors: • 1st stage:
Aerojet General Algol • 2nd stage:
Thiokol XM33
Castor • 3rd stage:
Allegany Ballistics Laboratory X-254 Antares • 4th stage: Allegany Ballistics Laboratory
X-248 Altair Scout's first-stage motor was based on an earlier version of the Navy's Polaris missile motor; the second-stage motor was developed from the Army's Sergeant surface-to-surface missile; and the third- and fourth-stage motors were adapted by NASA's Langley Research Center; Hampton, VA, from the Navy's Vanguard launch vehicle. The
Scout X-1 first flew successfully on 10 October 1960, after an earlier failure in July 1960. The rocket's first stage had four stabilizing fins, and the vehicle incorporated a gyro-based guidance system for attitude stabilization to keep the rocket on course.
Satellites orbited •
San Marco 1, the first Italian satellite (in 1964), launched by an Italian crew. • San Marco 2, the second Italian satellite (in 1967) and first in the world launched from a sea platform. Three more
San Marco satellites would use Scout rockets. Italy owned
San Marco platform launched in 1967-1984 Scout rockets only. •
AEREOS and AEROS B atmospheric research •
Ariel 3, the first satellite designed and constructed in the United Kingdom, and four other
Ariel satellites (Ariel 2, 4, 5 and 6) including first satellite for radioastronomy -
Ariel 2. •
Magsat, the first globally complete 3D map of Earth's magnetic fields. •
Transit satellites, a prototype satellite Transit 5A was launched 1962-12-19 by a Scout X-3. On four different flights, Scout rockets placed two Transit satellites in orbit with a single launch. The last of these, on 1988-08-25, launched Transit-O 31 and Transit O-25 on a Scout G rocket. •
OFO-A, launched bullfrogs into space for biological experiments (1970) • FR-1, a French satellite used to study VLF propagation (1965) •
Astronomical Netherlands Satellite, ANS was the first Dutch satellite (30 August 1974). (ANS; also known as Astronomische Nederlandse Satelliet) was a space-based
X-ray and
ultraviolet telescope. • Miniature Sensor Technology Integration Series 2 (MSTI-2), launched into low earth orbit on 8 May 1994 local time aboard the last NASA SCOUT booster. == Scout X-1A ==