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Planetary Science

PIONEER 4

activePlanetary ScienceHeliocentric

Pioneer 4 is an American spin-stabilized uncrewed spacecraft that was launched as part of the Pioneer program on a lunar flyby trajectory and into a heliocentric orbit making it the first probe of the United States to escape from the Earth's gravity. Launched on March 3, 1959, it carried a payload similar to Pioneer 3: a lunar radiation environment experiment using a Geiger–Müller tube detector and a lunar photography experiment. It passed within 58,983 km (36,650 mi) of the Moon's surface. However, Pioneer 4 did not come close enough to trigger its photoelectric sensor. The spacecraft was still in solar orbit as of 1969. It was the only successful lunar probe launched by the U.S. in 12 attempts between 1958 and 1963; only in 1964 would Ranger 7 surpass its success by accomplishing all of its mission objectives.

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Launch

Launch date
March 3, 1959 at 05:10 AM UTC
Launch site
Cape Canaveral SFS, USA
Launched by
Juno II →
Operator
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Mission
Pioneer 4
Launch record
View full launch →

Trajectory

Regime
Interplanetary — Heliocentric
Reference body
Heliocentric

Identity

COSPAR (Int'l)
1959-013A
NORAD catalog №
113
Object type
Payload
Owner / operator
United StatesUnited States
Status
active