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On This Day In Space: July 7, 1961: Discoverer 26 satellite launches on secret mission

On July 7, 1961, the U.S. Air Force launched a satellite called Discoverer 26 into orbit with a classified payload.

Discoverer 26 was part of a series of reconnaissance or spy satellites whose missions were kept top-secret by the American government until 1992. While other Discoverer satellites were spying on Russia, China and the Middle East, Discoverer 26 was used to conduct experiments and new test spacecraft engineering techniques in orbit.

A Thor-Agena rocket launches the classified Discoverer 26 satellite on a secret mission for the U.S. Air Force on July 7, 1961. (Image credit: U.S. Air Force)

The mission also evaluated the Agena-B second-stage rocket booster. This part of the launch vehicle contained instruments that could measure how ions and micrometeoroids in low-Earth orbit affected the spacecraft.

After 32 trips around the planet, the satellite’s reentry capsule plunged into Earth’s atmosphere before it was successfully recovered.

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