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Mercury 8

Mercury-Atlas 8
A rocket firing just above its launch pad, next to a metal structure, with a large cloud of smoke at its base and some smoke around the upper section of the rocket. Flame can be seen below the cloud.
Launch of Mercury-Atlas 8
Mission type Test flight
Operator NASA
Harvard designation 1962 Beta Delta 1
SATCAT no. 433
Mission duration 09:13:15
Orbits completed 6
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft Mercury No.16
Manufacturer McDonnell Aircraft
Launch mass 1,964 kilograms (4,329 lb)
Landing mass 1,110 kilograms (2,440 lb)
Dry mass 1,242–1,374 kilograms (2,739–3,029 lb)
Crew
Crew size 1
Members Walter M. Schirra, Jr.
Callsign Sigma 7
Start of mission
Launch date October 3, 1962, 12:15:12 (1962-10-03UTC12:15:12Z) UTC
Rocket Atlas LV-3B 113-D
Launch site Cape Canaveral LC-14
End of mission
Recovered by USS Kearsarge
Landing date October 3, 1962, 21:28:22 (1962-10-03UTC21:28:23Z) UTC
Orbital parameters
Reference system Geocentric
Regime Low Earth orbit
Perigee 156 kilometers (84 nmi)
Apogee 285 kilometers (154 nmi)
Inclination 32.5 degrees
Period 88.91 minutes
Epoch October 3, 1962

Sigma 7 insignia.jpg

Mercury Astronaut Wally Schirra - GPN-2000-001351.jpg
Walter "Wally" Marty Schirra, Jr.
Project Mercury
Manned missions

Sigma 7 insignia.jpg

Mercury-Atlas 8 (MA-8) was the fifth United States manned space mission, part of NASA's Mercury program. Astronaut Walter M. Schirra, Jr., orbited the Earth six times in the Sigma 7 spacecraft on October 3, 1962, in a nine-hour flight focused mainly on technical evaluation rather than on scientific experimentation. This was the longest U.S. manned orbital flight yet achieved in the Space Race, though well behind the several-day record set by the Soviet Vostok 3 earlier in the year. It confirmed the Mercury spacecraft's durability ahead of the one-day Mercury-Atlas 9 mission that followed in 1963.

Planning began for the third U.S. orbital mission in February 1962, aiming for a six-or-seven-orbit flight to build on the previous three-orbit missions. NASA officially announced the mission on June 27, and the flight plan was finalized in late July. The mission focused on engineering tests rather than on scientific experimentation. The mission finally launched on the morning of October 3, having been delayed two weeks because of problems with the Atlas booster. A series of minor booster problems during launch and a faulty temperature controller in Schirra's pressure suit were the only technical problems noted during the flight. The spacecraft orbited in both automated and passive flight modes for prolonged periods while the pilot monitored it and carried out some minor scientific experiments. After six orbits, the capsule landed in the Pacific Ocean half a mile from the recovery carrier, and was hoisted aboard for Schirra to disembark.

The scientific results of the mission were mixed. The astronaut returned healthy after nine hours of confinement in a low-gravity environment. Observation of the Earth's surface proved unproductive, however, because of heavy cloud cover and bad photographic exposures. The public and political reaction was muted compared with that of earlier missions, as the Cuban Missile Crisis soon eclipsed the Space Race in the news. The mission was a technical success: all the engineering objectives were completed without significant malfunctions, and the spacecraft used even less fuel than expected. This confirmed the capabilities of the Mercury spacecraft and allowed NASA to plan with confidence for a day-long flight, MA-9, which had been an early goal of the Mercury program.


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