with
Pioneer 1 at Cape Canaveral in Florida|201x201pxThor was first used as a launch vehicle during the testing program of the warhead reentry vehicle for the
Atlas missile. For these three tests a Thor core stage was topped by the
Able second stage. Able used the Aerojet
AJ-10-40 engine from the
Vanguard second stage. The first such launch, 116, was lost on 23 April 1958 due to a turbopump failure in the main engine. The recovery of the reentry vehicles on the succeeding two attempts were not successful. Three
mice, one on each vehicle, died in these tests. The Able stage from the Atlas reentry vehicle tests was upgraded to become the Able I with a third stage consisting of an unguided Altair X-248 solid-fuel rocket motor. A Thor Able I was used in an attempt to place the 84 lb (38 kg)
Pioneer 0 spacecraft into lunar orbit where it would take pictures of the lunar surface with a TV camera. The mission ended prematurely at 73.6 seconds after launch on 17 August 1958 due to a turbopump failure. On 7 August 1959, a Thor-Able was used to successfully launch
Explorer 6, the first satellite to transmit pictures of Earth taken from orbit.
Ablestar with Transit VBN-2 (December 1963) Ablestar was a
liquid-propellant rocket stage burning hypergolic propellants fed from gas-pressurized propellant tanks. It was used as the
upper stage, and provided improved performance. On 13 April 1960, a Thor-Ablestar launched
Transit 1B, the first experimental satellite of what eventually became the
Global Navigation Satellite System. On 22 June 1960, a Thor-Ablestar launched the first
Galactic Radiation and Background (GRAB) electronic intelligence (ELINT) satellite for the
United States Navy. These now-declassified satellites operated under a cover story of providing solar radiation data and included an electronics package to detect Soviet air defense radar signals. GRAB-1 was the world's first successful
reconnaissance satellite, preceding the first
Corona mission to return film (Discoverer 14 on August 18) by almost two months. On 29 June 1961, the Ablestar stage used to launch
Transit 4A, which became the first object to unintentionally explode in space, creating at least 294 trackable pieces of
space debris.
Thor-Delta with
Tiros 4 (February 1962) The Delta second stage was derived from the Able second stage. Members of the
Delta rocket family derived from the Thor-Delta continue to launch satellites and space probes. By 1969, the Thor core was being used regularly both in Delta vehicles and in the USAF Standard Space Launch Vehicle (SLV-2), with thrust augmentation and a variety of upper stages. ==Thor-Agena==