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On February 28, 1959, the U.S. Air Force launched a new spy satellite prototype called Discoverer 1.

This was the first satellite that NASA launched toward the south pole in an attempt to put it in a polar orbit. But the mission didn't go entirely according to plan. After Discoverer 1 passed out of radar range somewhere in the southern hemisphere, it went missing. The Air Force had prematurely announced that the satellite had reached orbit, but they had no way of proving it. In fact, no one had a clue about the whereabouts of Discoverer 1. A CIA report that was declassified in 1995 states that it probably crashed somewhere around the south pole.
Transcript
00:03On February 28, 1959, the US Air Force launched a new spy satellite prototype called Discoverer 1.
00:10This was the first satellite that NASA launched toward the South Pole in an attempt to put it in a
00:14polar orbit.
00:15But the mission didn't go entirely according to plan.
00:19After Discoverer 1 passed out of radar range somewhere in the southern hemisphere, it went missing.
00:24The Air Force had prematurely announced that the satellite had reached orbit, but they had no way of proving it.
00:28In fact, no one had a clue about the whereabouts of Discoverer 1.
00:32A CIA report that was declassified in 1995 states that it probably crashed somewhere around the South Pole.
00:39And that's what happened on this day in space.
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