Schematic drawing of Project FIRE Velocity Package. This was the design of a package used for flight tests with the Atlas rockets.
Project FIRE (Flight Investigation Reentry Environment) was a United States NASA effort to determine the effects of atmospheric entry on spacecraft materials.[1][2]
The first Project FIRE reentry package was propelled to an altitude of 122km (76 miles) by an Atlas-D Antares-2 launch vehicle (missile 263D) on 14 April 1964.[6]
Following a coasting phase that reached an apogee exceeding 800km (500 miles) the velocity package initiated the reentry vehicle's trajectory, plunging it into a trajectory at a velocity of 11,300m/s (25,000mph) with a minus 15 degree trajectory.[6] As the spacecraft descended towards Earth, a solid-fuel Antares II rocket positioned behind the payload ignited for 30 seconds, elevating the descent speed to 40,501km/h (25,166mph).[6] Temperature data from the spacecraft's instruments were transmitted to the ground, indicating an estimated exterior temperature of 11,400K (20,100°F).[6]
Approximately 32 minutes post-launch, the spacecraft made impact into the Atlantic Ocean.[6]
Gantry pull back at LC-12 for an Atlas 263D launch with Project FIRE 1
Atlas 263D rocket with Antares upper stage carrying Fire 1 re-entry capsule
FIRE 2
During the second trial, a propelled instrumented probe, referred to as a "flying thermometer", was launched into a ballistic trajectory over 805km (500 miles) high by an Atlas-D Antares-2 booster (missile 264D) on 22 May 1965.[6]
As the spacecraft initiated its descent after 26 minutes of flight, the Antares II rocket accelerated its fall. The probe entered the atmosphere at a velocity of 40,877km/h (25,400mph), generating temperatures of approximately 11,206K (19,711°F).[6] Ground stations received data on heating throughout the descent.[6]
Thirty-two minutes post-launch, and a mere six minutes after the Antares ignition, the device impacted in the Atlantic Ocean approximately 8,256km (5,130 miles) southeast of the Cape.[6]
Project FIRE 2 reentry package
Personnel of Langley Research Center at Cape Canaveral during preliminary checkout of Project FIRE velocity package before launch
Project FIRE 2 lifts off from launch complex 12 aboard an Atlas 264D, 22 May 1965
Project FIRE 2 reentry vehicle as photographed from Ascension Island
Project FIRE 2 reentry vehicle photograph notes by photographer Robert Collie