MISS 18

Spacecraft:
(no serial number)
Launch Vehicle:
Atlas
Scheduled Launch:
1 Oct 1960
Last Scheduled:
11 Sep 1958

⇑ Mission List ⇑

Designation: MISS A O(U)-3
Description: 3rd MISS Atlas unmanned orbital

The beginning of the Air Force's Man In Space Soonest (MISS) program has been traced back to a staff meeting of General Thomas S. Power, Commander of the Air Research and Development Command (ARDC) in Baltimore on 15 February 1956. Power wanted studies to begin on manned space vehicles that would follow the X-15 rocketplane. These were to include winged and ballistic approaches - the ballistic rocket was seen as being a militarily useful intercontinental troop and cargo vehicle.

The Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1 on 4 October, creating a political furor and giving new priority and urgency to the military's space efforts. On 15 October the NACA held a technical conference to resolve the final configuration for the Manned Glide Rocket Research System. The agreed delta-winged flat-bottom configuration would evolve into the X-20 Dyna-Soar.

Nevertheless, interest continued in the ballistic reentry vehicle as a more immediate approach to human spaceflight, and this was the track that MISS pursued. After first considering the Thor/Nomad launch vehicle, another look at Atlas performance figures suggested that it would be able to place the MISS spacecraft in orbit without the need for a second stage, saving both cost and development time, and the Air Force switched to the Atlas as the orbital launch vehicle for MISS.

Having invested nearly half a year defining the technical and cost requiredments to put a man in orbit as quickly as possible, the Air Force felt that it was in a strong position to move ahead with the program. On 16 July 1958 Congress passed the National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958, and NASA was created out of the NACA and some Army and Navy rocket laboratories. But there was still a chance the White House would support MISS if costs could be kept to under $50 million in FY 1959. They could present the project as so far along, and with so low a cost to complete, that it would be a big setback to start all over with NASA, despite President Eisenhower's view that the was no military necessity for a man in space. However, the Air Force needed $106.6 million in FY 1959, and anything less would delay the project. Instead, on 25 July 1958 the civilian leadership in the Pentagon terminated the Air Force program to give the soon to be created NASA a clear field to put the first American in orbit.

References:
Encyclopedia Astronautica.
Wikipedia.