Agena — History, Uses, and Key Facts
History (brief)
- Developed by Lockheed as the RM-81 Agena upper stage and satellite bus beginning in the mid‑1950s for the U.S. WS‑117L reconnaissance program.
- First Thor–Agena launched in 1959; Agena became operational through early 1960s with multiple versions (A, B, D).
- Agena‑D (standardized variant) first flew in 1963 and became the most‑launched U.S. upper stage; final Agena flight was 12 February 1987.
- Total launches across variants: ~365.
Key technical facts
- Manufacturer: Lockheed (Lockheed Missile & Space).
- Role: Rocket upper stage and general‑purpose satellite bus (could provide power, communications, attitude control, and payload support).
- Dimensions (Agena‑D typical): ~1.5 m diameter, ~6.3 m length.
- Propulsion: Bell XLR‑series liquid‑propellant engine (e.g., XLR‑81/XLR‑8096); hypergolic fuel (UDMH) and oxidizer (IRFNA/HDA).
- Restart capability: Engine could be restarted in orbit multiple times by radio command.
- Power: Onboard batteries (and optional solar) providing onboard electrical power and three‑axis stabilization.
Main uses and missions
- Military reconnaissance satellites (Corona/Discoverer, KH/Gambit series).
- Target vehicle and docking support for NASA Gemini missions (notably Gemini–Agena docking tests).
- Launch vehicle upper stage for planetary and Earth science probes (Mariner, Lunar Orbiter, Seasat).
- Communications and signals‑intelligence payloads for the USAF (SDS, Jumpseat).
- Served both as an ascent stage (separating payload) and as an integrated spacecraft (payload built into Agena bus).
Notable achievements
- Enabled early U.S. electro‑optical and film‑return reconnaissance programs (Corona).
- Supported crewed docking experiments in the Gemini program.
- Versatile “first general‑purpose satellite” concept — acted as both stage and operational spacecraft across civil and classified missions.
Legacy
- Demonstrated reliable, restartable upper‑stage technology and modular satellite bus design; widely used across 1959–1987.
- Influenced later upper stages and satellite bus concepts; important in Cold War space and early planetary exploration.
Sources: Wikipedia (RM‑81 Agena), Encyclopedia Britannica, historical launch directories (Lockheed/USAF records).
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