Status
Failure
FalconSat-2
Fri Mar 24, 2006 22:30 UTC
First flight of Falcon 1, first flight of SpaceX. First orbital flight from the Marshalls. At launch, a corroded nut caused an engine fire, leading to the failure of the engine twenty five seconds into the flight. The rocket fell into the Pacific Ocean close to the launch site.
Rocket
Mission Details
FalconSat-2
FalconSAT-2 (FS 2, COSPAR 2006-F01) was a satellite built by students of the United States Air Force Academy as part of the FalconSAT program. It was intended to have been placed into low Earth orbit to study the effects of plasma on communications with spacecraft.
The FalconSAT-2 program started in late 2000, as a follow-up to FalconSAT-1. The spacecraft was based on a bus constructed by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd, with the experiments being constructed at the USAF Academy. The primary instrument aboard FalconSAT-2 was the Miniaturized Electrostatic Analyzer, or MESA. It was originally scheduled to be deployed from Space Shuttle Atlantis, on mission STS-114 in early 2003. Following the Columbia accident this mission was delayed, and FalconSAT-2 was removed from the Shuttle manifest.
It was then assigned as the payload for the maiden flight of the Falcon 1 rocket. After the engine failure, FalconSAT-2 was thrown clear off the rocket, and landed in a storage shed on Omelek Island, just a few feet from its own shipping container.