V-4 (rocket launch)

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V-4
Mission typeTest launch
OperatorWehrmacht
Apogee84.5 km (52.5 miles)
Spacecraft properties
SpacecraftV-4
Spacecraft typeA-4
ManufacturerMittelwerk GmbH
Launch mass12,500 kg
Start of mission
Launch date3 October 1942
Launch sitePeenemünde Army Research Center
End of mission
DisposalImpact
Destroyed3 October 1942
 

V-4 was the first mostly-successful launch of the Aggregat 4 rocket, later known as Vergeltungswaffe 2 (V-2). The launch occurred on the afternoon of 3 October 1942 and the rocket set a speed record of Mach 4, reached an apogee of 84.5 km (52.5 mi), thereby becoming the first artificial object to reach both the mesosphere and the thermosphere, surpassing the apogee of 42.3 km (26.3 mi) set by the Paris gun in 1918.[1][2]

At the time, the V-4 launch was considered the first time a man-made object reached outer space ("Geburtstag der Raumfahrt" ("Birthday of spaceflight")). That evening, Walter Dornberger declared in a speech at Peenemunde,

This third day of October, 1942, is the first of a new era in transportation, that of space travel...[1]

In 1960, the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) defined a boundary for space at 100 km (62 mi) (approximately the highest possible altitude where an aircraft can fly at less than orbital velocity in order not to stall) while the United States' Air Force, NASA and Federal Aviation Administration consider 50 mi (80 km) the space boundary, the lower mesopause. The V-4 launch satisfied the present-day American definition, while it didn't cross the FAI's 100-km-line. The 100-km-boundary was established much later however, and the V-4 trajectory did reach the Kármán altitude range (83 km (52 mi) ~ 100 km (62 mi)[3]), of which the 100-kilometer boundary is simply a round-number approximation.

See also[edit]


References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Dornberger, Walter (1952). V-2: Hitler's Space Age Missle – The secret weapon that almost changed the course of World War II (Bantam ed.). Bantam Books (published 1979). p. 17. ISBN 9780553126600.
  2. ^ Neufeld, Michael J. (1995). The rocket and the Reich: Peenemünde and the coming of the ballistic missile era. New York: Free Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-02-922895-1.
  3. ^ https://scholar.smu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1126&context=jalc