(Redirected from Atlas (rocket))
The
Mercury spacecraft ''Friendship 7'', carrying astronaut
John Glenn, was launched on an Atlas rocket.''
'Atlas' is a family of
U.S. space
launch vehicles. The original
Atlas missile was designed in the late 1950s. It was a
liquid-fuel rocket burning
LOX and
RP-1 in three engines configured in an unusual "stage-and-a-half" or "Parallel Staging" design: two of its three engines were jettisoned during ascent, but its fuel tanks and other structural elements were retained. Various
Atlas II models were launched 63 times between 1991 and 2004. There were only 6 launches of the
Atlas III, all between 2000 and 2005. The
Atlas V is still in service, with launches planned through 2009.
Atlas family evolution
Original Atlas
The first successful test launch of an
Atlas missile was on
December 17,
1957.
[1]
Approximately 350 Atlas missiles were built. Many were eventually converted to orbital launch vehicles after they were removed from service as missiles.
Early Atlas rockets were also built specifically for non-military uses. On
December 18,
1958, An Atlas was used to launch the ''Signal Communication by Orbiting Relay Equipment''
(SCORE) satellite, which was, "The first prototype of a communications satellite, and the first test of any satellite for direct practical applications."
[2][3]
Atlas boosters were also used for four manned
Project Mercury missions. On
February 20,
1962 it launched ''Friendship 7,'' which made three earth orbits carrying
John Glenn, the first U.S.
astronaut to orbit the Earth. Identical Atlas boosters successfully launched three more manned Mercury orbital missions in 1962-63.
Beginning in 1960 the
Agena upper-stage, powered by
hypergolic fuel, was used extensively on Atlas launch vehicles. The
United States Air Force,
NRO and
CIA used them to launch
SIGINT satellites.
[4] NASA used them in the
Ranger program to obtain the first close-up images of the surface of the Moon and for
Mariner 2, the first spacecraft to flyby another planet. Each of the
Agena target vehicles used for
space rendezvous missions was launched on an Atlas rocket.
Beginning in 1963 the
LH2-fueled
Centaur upper stage was also used on dozens of Atlas launches.
NASA launched the
Surveyor program lunar lander spacecraft and most of the Mars-bound
Mariner program spacecraft with Atlas-Centaur launch vehicles.
Atlas II

Atlas evolution.
In May 1988, the
Air Force chose
General Dynamics (now
Lockheed-Martin) to develop the Atlas II.
Atlas III
The Atlas III was used between 2000 and 2005. Atlas III was the first member of the Atlas family to use "normal" staging. Its first stage used a single
RD-180 engine.
Atlas V
The Atlas V is built in
Decatur, Alabama by
United Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin and
Boeing. The first Atlas V launch was on
August 21,
2002. In late 2009 an Atlas V is scheduled to launch the
Mars Science Laboratory rover mission.
References
1.
Atlas ICBM Chronology Rusty Barton
2.
Project SCORE
3.
SCORE (Signal Communication by Orbiting Relay Equipment)
4.
Atlas/Agena D SLV-3A Mark Wade