abstract | - The launch of FTV-1132 occurred at 20:39 UTC on 1 September 1962. A Thor DM-21 Agena-B rocket was used, flying from Launch Complex 75-3-5 at the Vandenberg Air Force Base. Upon successfully reaching orbit, it was assigned the Harvard designation 1962 Alpha Upsilon 1. FTV-1132 was operated in a low Earth orbit, with a perigee of kilometre (mi), an apogee of kilometre (mi), 82.8 degrees of inclination, and a period of 94.2 minutes. The satellite had a mass of kilogram (lb), and was equipped with a frame camera with a focal length of millimetre (in), which had a maximum resolution of metre (ft). Images were recorded onto -millimeter () film, and returned in a Satellite Recovery Vehicle, before the satellite ceased operations. The Satellite Recovery Vehicle used by FTV-1132 was SRV-600. Following atmospheric reentry, SRV-600 was to have been collected in mid-air by a Fairchild C-119J Flying Boxcar aircraft, however when this was attempted the parachute separated from the spacecraft, causing the capsule to fall into the sea. FTV-1132 decayed from orbit on 26 October 1964.
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