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Explorers Program
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=== Early Explorer satellites === [[File:Ignition of Jupiter-C with Explorer 1.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|right|Launch of Explorer 1 on the Juno I launch vehicle.]] [[File: Explorer1.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|right|Explorer 1, the first Earth satellite orbited by the United States]] The Explorers Program began as a [[United States Army|U.S. Army]] proposal ([[Project Orbiter]]) to place a "civilian" [[satellite|artificial satellite]] into orbit during the [[International Geophysical Year]] (IGY). Although that proposal was rejected in favor of the [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]]'s [[Project Vanguard]], which made the first sub-orbital flight [[Vanguard TV0]] in December 1956, the [[Soviet Union]]'s launch of [[Sputnik 1]] on 4 October 1957 (and the resulting "[[Sputnik crisis]]") and the failure of the [[Vanguard 1]] launch attempt resulted in the Army program being funded to match the Soviet space achievements. [[Explorer 1]] was launched on the Juno I on 1 February 1958, becoming the first U.S. satellite, as well as discovering the [[Van Allen radiation belt]]. Four follow-up satellites of the Explorer series were launched by the Juno I launch vehicle in 1958, of which [[Explorer 3]] and [[Explorer 4]] were successful, while [[Explorer 2]] and [[Explorer 5]] failed to reach orbit.<ref name=Boehm-NASA>{{citation-attribution|1=J. Boehm, H.J. Fichtner and Otto A. Hoberg, [https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/atoms/files/explorer_i_boehm_document.pdf EXPLORER SATELLITES LAUNCHED BY JUNO 1 AND JUNO 2 VEHICLES] NASA Report}}</ref> The Juno I vehicle was replaced by the [[Juno II]] in 1959.
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