Monday, February 20, 2017

Friendship 7: 55 Years Later

Today, we mark the 55th anniversary of Mercury-Atlas 6, or better known as Friendship 7. This mission continues to be a memorable mission in American space history. Let’s take a look at a short history of this important flight!

After two successful sub-orbital flights in 1961, NASA was looking to achieve Earth orbit with the Mercury Program. By that time the USSR had already achieved this feat, therefore the pressure was building on the American space program to catch up to the Soviet efforts. Doing this would be easier said than done as NASA would quickly find out.

To put an American astronaut in orbit would require a version of the Atlas booster, which had a less than terrific flight record as an ICBM (Intercontinental Ballistic Missile). Regardless of the risk, it was the only ticket NASA had to achieve low Earth orbit. After a successful flight of the Mercury capsule and Atlas rocket with the chimpanzee Enos, the time for an American astronaut to reach orbit was near.

John H. Glenn Jr. was selected to fly Mercury-Atlas 6 (Friendship 7), and was poised to become the first American to orbit the Earth. Glenn’s mission had a tumultuous beginning after two postponements in late January for weather and a fuel leak in the Atlas. Finally, Mercury-Atlas 6 would fly on February 20, 1962, but hiccups continued on the 20th with four separate launch countdown holds. Once those issues were resolved, John Glenn roared into space with an estimated 60 million people watching on television.

Concerns about how an astronaut would handle lengthy exposure to zero-gravity quickly dissipated as Glenn handled the new environment easily. One particularly interesting moment of the mission occurred when Glenn reported seeing “fire flies” around the spacecraft as the craft entered a sunrise moment of an orbit. It was later confirmed that the “fire flies” came from frost on the reaction control jets.

MA-6 did encounter some problems. A yaw attitude control jet became clogged, which caused Glenn to stop using the automatic control system. The largest complication of the mission came from a faulty signal that indicated a heat shield clamp was released early. Mission Control could not confirm whether the heat shield was fully attached—causing a major scare. Ultimately, the retrorocket pack, the rockets that performed the de-orbit burn, was left attached to hold the heat shield in place as a precaution. After completing three orbits, the capsule began re-entry to end the mission. Friendship 7 splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean with a mission time just shy of five hours. The capsule and American hero John Glenn was recovered by a U.S. Navy destroyer (USS Noa).

This mission represented an important moment for the U.S. space program because it demonstrated that NASA could at least match Soviet space achievements. John Glenn quickly became the national hero the nation needed, and a source of great pride for a country engaged in a geopolitical battle with the Soviets. Glenn’s successful flight paved the way for further space achievements that allowed the United States to take the lead in the Space Race by the mid-1960s.

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Learn more about Mercury-Atlas 6 with these links!

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