Mercury-Atlas 8

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Mercury-Atlas 8
Mission insignia
Mission statistics
Mission name Mercury-Atlas 8
Spacecraft name Σ (Sigma) 7
Spacecraft mass 1,370.0 kilograms (3,020 lb)
Crew size 1
Call sign Sigma 7
Booster Atlas
Launch pad LC-14 (CCAF)
Launch date October 3, 1962, 12:15:11 UTC
Landing October 3, 1962, 21:28:22 UTC
32°7′30″N, 174°45′00″W
Mission duration 09:13:11
Number of orbits 6
Apogee 285 kilometres (154 nmi)
Perigee 153 kilometres (83 nmi)
Orbital period 89 min.
Orbital inclination 32.5°
Distance traveled 231,718 kilometres (143,983 mi)
Maximum velocity 28,257 kilometres per hour (17,558 mph)
Peak acceleration 8.1 g (79 m/s²)
Crew photo
Walter "Wally" Marty Schirra, Jr.
Walter "Wally" Marty Schirra, Jr.
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Mercury-Atlas 8 was a Mercury program manned space mission launched on October 3, 1962. The spacecraft was named Sigma 7 and completed six earth orbits piloted by astronaut Wally Schirra. It was the first flawless Mercury mission.

Contents

[edit] Crew

Number in parentheses indicates number of spaceflights by each individual prior to and including this mission.

[edit] Backup Crew

[edit] Mission parameters

[edit] See also

[edit] Mission highlights

Schirra's was the first of two longer-duration Mercury missions. After Carpenter's flawed reentry, the emphasis returned to engineering rather than science (Schirra even named his spacecraft "Sigma" for the engineering symbol meaning "summation.") The six-orbit mission lasted nine hours and 13 minutes, much of which Schirra spent in what he called "chimp configuration," a free drift that tested the Mercury's autopilot system. Schirra also tried "steering" by the stars (he found this difficult), took photographs with a Hasselblad camera, exercised with a bungee­cord device, saw lightning in the atmosphere, broadcast the first live message from an American spacecraft to radio and TV listeners below, and made the first splashdown in the Pacific. This was the highest flight of the Mercury program, with an apogee of 283.24km (176mi), but Schirra later claimed to be unimpressed with space scenery as compared to the view from high-flying aircraft. "Same old deal, nothing new," he told debriefers after the flight. Sigma 7 landed near the international date line in the Pacific Ocean, 275 miles (440 km) NE of Midway Island. The landing coordinates were near 32° 7' 30" N - 174° 45' W.

Mercury spacecraft # 16 - Sigma 7, used in the Mercury-Atlas 8 mission, is currently displayed at the United States Astronaut Hall of Fame, Titusville, Florida.

[edit] Trivia

During the course of the mission, Schirra revealed his membership in the Ancient Order of Turtles.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] External links

[edit] References