00:00On this day in space. On May 24th, 1962, NASA astronaut Scott Carpenter became the
00:07fourth American to go to space and the second American to orbit the Earth.
00:11Carpenter was one of NASA's first group of astronauts known as the Mercury 7.
00:14He was the backup pilot for John Glenn, who first orbited the Earth three months
00:19earlier. It was Carpenter who famously said, Godspeed John Glenn, during that
00:23flight. The two astronauts had very similar missions, though Carpenter's
00:27tasks involved more science experiments. They both lifted off on Mercury Atlas
00:31rockets from the same launch pad at Cape Canaveral, and they both completed three
00:35orbits in just under five hours. But one big difference between the two missions
00:38was the accuracy of their landings. Glenn had missed his target by about 50 miles,
00:43but Carpenter overshot it by about 250 miles. He ended up bobbing around in the
00:48ocean for over an hour while recovery teams tried to find him. Some NASA
00:52officials said Carpenter was distracted and had started his landing preparations
00:56late. Carpenter admitted to making some mistakes, but he also partly blamed the
01:01miss on problems with the spacecraft's controls. That's what happened on this day
01:05in space.
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