NASA Logo, National Aeronautics and Space Administration
National Space Science Data Center Header

IMP-B

NSSDC ID: 1964-060A

Description

Explorer 21 (IMP 2) was a solar-cell and chemical-battery powered spacecraft instrumented for interplanetary and distant magnetospheric studies of energetic particles, cosmic rays, magnetic fields, and plasmas. Each normal telemetry sequence of 81.9 s in duration consisted of 795 data bits. After every third normal sequence there was an 81.9-s interval of rubidium vapor magnetometer analog data transmission. Initial spacecraft parameters included a local time of apogee at noon, a spin rate of 14.6 rpm, and a spin direction of 41.4-deg right ascension and 47.4-deg declination. The significant deviation of the spin rate and direction from the planned values and the achievement of an apogee of less than half the planned value adversely affected data usefulness. Otherwise, spacecraft systems performed well, with nearly complete data transmission for the first 4 months and for the sixth month after launch. Data transmission was intermittent for other times, and the final transmission occurred on October 13, 1965.

Alternate Names

  • Explorer 21
  • IMP 2
  • 00889

Facts in Brief

Launch Date: 1964-10-04
Launch Vehicle: Delta
Launch Site: Cape Canaveral, United States
Mass: 135.0 kg

Funding Agency

  • NASA-Office of Space Science Applications (United States)

Discipline

  • Space Physics

Additional Information

Experiments on IMP-B

Data collections from IMP-B

Questions or comments about this spacecraft can be directed to: Coordinated Request and User Support Office.

 

Personnel

Name Role Original Affiliation E-mail
Mr. Everett J. Pyle General Contact NASA Goddard Space Flight Center  
Mr. Paul Butler Project Manager NASA Goddard Space Flight Center  
Ms. Della Stewart General Contact NASA Goddard Space Flight Center  
Mr. C. J. Creveling General Contact NASA Goddard Space Flight Center  
Dr. Frank B. McDonald Project Scientist NASA Goddard Space Flight Center fm27@umail.umd.edu
[USA.gov] NASA Logo - nasa.gov