Zwicky's Pellets ---------------- On 1957 Oct 17 at 0505 UTC the US Air Force launched a sounding rocket, Aerobee USAF-88, from Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico to an apogee of 114 km. The ejected rocket nose cap carried three explosive devices (loosely, 'grenades') which were detonated at about 80 km altitude. Charge A, built by Thomas Poulter of Stanford, was expected to accelerate about 0.1 gram of material to very high velocities of order 14 km/s; Charge B, developed by John Rinehart of Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO) in collaboration with Poulter, was designed to accelerate a slightly higher mass of particles to somewhat lower speed; Charge C, built by Fritz Zwicky of CalTech, used an iron oxide/aluminium thermite mixture that was intended to accelerate self-luminous material to velocities above 11 km/s. In the event two meteor trails were seen emanating from the explosion of the nose cone. Zwicky claimed that his pellet had reached Earth escape velocity and gone into orbit around the Sun (Engineering and Science, Jan 1958, p 20). This claim is often repeated uncritically, most recently in a fun article by Nick D'Alto in Smithsonian's Air and Space magazine: http://www.airspacemag.com/daily-planet/1957-two-tiny-pellets-were-first-man-made-objects-escape-earths-gravity-180954622/ However, Zwicky was a genius, but also very much a self-promoter. He never published a science paper on the experiment. The only serious analysis I've seen is by R. McCrosky of SAO (Observations of Simulated Meteors, Smithsonian Contributions to Astrophysics, 5, 29 (1961) which can be found at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1961SCoA....5...29M indicates that the observed meteor trails were from charges A and B, which were not self-luminous and so would only glow as they reentered the atmosphere heading down and burning up. A's speed was measured at 14.4 km/s (Earth-relative) while B's was in the range of 5 to 9 km/s. McCrosky doesn't say so explicitly, but the implication is that Zwicky's grenade didn't work. We may conclude that Poulter's Charge A pellet, with a mass around 0.1 grams, was (briefly) the first artifact to reach escape speed - but not escape velocity (i.e. it was going in the wrong direction). I really wanted the story of Zwicky's solar orbit pellets to be true, but it doesn't look good. Maybe McCrosky's analysis was wrong - I'm going to check if the relevant tracking plates are in the Harvard Plate Stacks but I doubt it, the plates from the NMSU ballistic cameras would probably have stayed in McCrosky's possession and probably no longer exist. [Edit, Oct 2017: At an altitude of 80 km, I suspect the air density is high enough that the pellets would probably have become meteors and melted, even if they were headed up instead of down. But I don't know how to do that calculation.] I conclude that Zwicky's claim is unlikely to be true and, sadly, should not be accepted as historical fact. - Jonathan McDowell, May 2017