Project Mercury

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May 22
NASA-UAP-D013, Mercury Atlas 7, May 24, 1962
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May 22
NASA-UAP-D011, Mercury Atlas 9 Audio Excerpt, May 15, 1963
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May 22
NASA-UAP-D010, Mercury Atlas 9 Audio Excerpt, May 15, 1963
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May 22
NASA-UAP-D014, Mercury-Redstone 4, July 21, 1961
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govMay 22

NASA-UAP-D010, Mercury Atlas 9 Audio Excerpt, May 15, 1963

Approximately one hour and 41 minutes into the final and longest flight of Project Mercury, Mercury-Atlas 9 mission (MA-9) Faith 7 Pilot L. Gordon Cooper Jr. notes that he sees “John’s fireflies,” referring to John Glenn’s term from the Mercury-Atlas 6 mission. NASA later determined that the “fireflies” are attributable to frozen condensation separating from the spacecraft body. The white, green-hued appearance of this phenomenon results from sunlight reflecting off frozen condensation.

govMay 22

NASA-UAP-D011, Mercury Atlas 9 Audio Excerpt, May 15, 1963

During the final and longest flight of Project Mercury, Mercury-Atlas 9 mission (MA-9) Faith 7 Pilot L. Gordon Cooper Jr. describes the brilliant blue of sunrise beneath the haze layer of the Earth’s atmosphere. As he approaches sunrise, he describes small, luminous, brilliant white particles drifting away from the spacecraft. Cooper describes observing “fireflies” after deploying beacons, which are spherical mission-related equipment with xenon strobe lights.

govMay 22

NASA-UAP-D013, Mercury Atlas 7, May 24, 1962

During the fourth crewed spaceflight and second orbital flight of Project Mercury, Mercury-Atlas 7 (MA-7), Aurora 7 pilot Scott Carpenter describes white particles in view that appear to move at “random” and “look exactly like snowflakes.” He describes these phenomena as reflective, and that some seemed to move faster than the Aurora 7 spacecraft.

govMay 22

NASA-UAP-D014, Mercury-Redstone 4, July 21, 1961

During the recovery of the fourth launch and second crewed spaceflight of Project Mercury, Mercury-Redstone 4 (MR-4) Liberty Bell 7, the recovery team discusses a dye pack in the water that did not activate.

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