Titan IIIC/Vela satellite information film reel. Twelve satellites were built, six of the Vela Hotel design and six of the Advanced Vela design. The Vela Hotel series was to detect
nuclear tests in space, while the Advanced Vela series was to detect not only nuclear explosions in space but also in the atmosphere. All spacecraft were manufactured by
TRW and launched in pairs, either on an
Atlas-Agena or
Titan III-C boosters. They were placed in orbits of 118,000 km (73,000 miles) to avoid particle radiation trapped in the
Van Allen radiation belts. Their
apogee was about one-third of the distance to the
Moon. The first Vela Hotel pair was launched on 17 October 1963, one week after the
Partial Test Ban Treaty went into effect, and the last in 1965. They had a design life of six months, but were only actually shut down after five years. Advanced Vela pairs were launched in 1967, 1969, and 1970. They had a nominal design life of 18 months, later changed to seven years. However, the last satellite to be shut down was Vehicle 9 in 1984, which had been launched in 1969 and had lasted nearly 15 years. The Vela series began with the launch of Vela 1A and 1B on 17 October 1963, a flight also marking the maiden voyage of the Atlas-Agena SLV-3 vehicle. The second pair of satellites launched on 17 July 1964, and the third on 20 July 1965. The last launch miscarried slightly when one Atlas vernier engine shut down at liftoff, while the other vernier operated at above-normal thrust levels. This resulted in a slightly lower than normal inclination for the satellites, however the mission was carried out successfully. The problem was traced to a malfunction of the vernier LOX poppet valve. Subsequent Vela satellites were switched to the
Titan IIIC booster due to their increased weight and complexity. Three more sets were launched on 28 April 1967, 23 May 1969, and 8 April 1970. The last pair of Vela satellites operated until 1985, when they were finally shut down; the Air Force claimed them to be the world's longest operating satellites. They remained in orbit until their orbits decayed at the end of 1992. ==Instruments==