The spacecraft, named Sputnik after the Russian word for “satellite,” was launched at 10:29 p.m. Moscow time from the Tyuratam launch base in the Kazakh Republic.
Traveling at 18,000 miles an hour, its elliptical orbit had an apogee (farthest point from Earth) of 584 miles and a perigee (nearest point) of 143 miles.
Visible with binoculars before sunrise or after sunset, Sputnik transmitted radio signals back to Earth strong enough to be picked up by amateur radio operators
Sputnik was launched to correspond with the International Geophysical Year, a solar period that the International Council of Scientific Unions declared would be ideal for the launching of artificial satellites to study Earth and the solar system.
Note
The first U.S. satellite, Explorer, was launched on January 31, 1958.
By then, the Soviets had already achieved another ideological victory when they launched a dog into orbit aboard Sputnik 2.
The Soviet space program went on to achieve a series of other space firsts in the late 1950s and early 1960s -
1st Man in Space
1st Woman in Space
1st Three Men in Space
1st Space Walk
1st spacecraft to impact the moon
1st to orbit the moon
1st to impact Venus and
1st craft to soft-land on the moon.
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