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Across the Universe: Stories of the Belt

By Br. Guy Consolmagno  |  7 Feb 2019

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This entry is part 10 of 201 in the series Across the Universe

This column first ran in The Tablet in February 2018

January 31 [2018] marked the sixtieth anniversary of the launch of Explorer 1, the first American spacecraft to orbit the Earth. I was five years old; it affected my dreams and aspirations, not to mention my education in science, over the next twenty years.

A model of Explorer 1, held by JPL’s Director William Pickering, scientist James Van Allen and rocket pioneer Wernher von Braun (from left to right). The team was gathered at a news conference at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C., to announce the satellite’s successful launch. America’s first satellite, Explorer 1 had launched a few hours before, on Jan. 31, 1958, at 10:48 p.m. EST. Image courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech

As the story goes, the American rocket and satellite was thrown together in 90 days to answer the launch of Russia’s Sputnik satellite the previous October… and the disaster of our Vanguard rocket, which had blown up on the launch pad. It most notable achievement was the discovery of the Van Allen Belts.

Twenty years later, Dr. James Van Allen spoke at my graduate class in space sciences. I recall him describing how he chose to put a Geiger counter into the Explorer satellite because it was cheap, off the shelf, and provided data that was easy to radio back to Earth. They hoped to detect ionized gas when the Explorer’s orbit dipped down into the upper atmosphere. Instead, at the high point of its orbit the geiger counter went wild. 

Van Allen told us that a student of his, knowing how geiger counters famously detect the ions made by the decay of radioactive elements, ignored the fact that there are essentially no atoms at all in space, just a vacuum, and deduced that this signal somehow meant that “space itself is radioactive!” That got a good laugh from us. (Van Allen recognized those detected ions as a belt of high energy cosmic particles trapped by the Earth’s magnetic field; they protect life on Earth from cosmic radiation, and make the auroras we call the Northern Lights.)

NASA drawing of the Van Allen radiation belts around the Earth

Years later I heard a Russian scientist claim that the second Sputnik satellite (the one with the Laika the dog) also had a Geiger counter, and it should have found the belts first. But he said it malfunctioned before launch and they dared not delay the launch to fix it because Khrushchev wanted to brag about Sputnik 2 during the 40th anniversary celebrations of the October Revolution. 

I can’t confirm the first story; I heard it more than 40 years ago, and Dr. Van Allen died in 2006. The second story, alas, has its problems. Wikipedia tells me that Sputnik 2 was indeed launched to celebrate the October Revolution, and it did  indeed carry a Geiger counter. But apparently the Geiger counter worked fine; the problem was that it encountered the radiation belts only when the satellite was on the other side of the Earth from Russia, out of range of their radio receivers.

Do I really remember Explorer 1? Or do I only remember saying I remembered it? Our history of events that occurred within our memories often involves remembering not the events themselves but the stories we tell about those events.

We have our own memories. We also recall on the memories of others who were also there, on our memories of the stories they tell; and we rely on what was written of those stories, perhaps much later than the events. It’s no surprise that details may vary from one Gospel to another. But the essential points do survive (the Russians had a geiger counter and could have found Van Allen’s belts first) even as the details of the circumstances drift from telling to telling.

One story I will swear to, however. After Van Allen’s talk, my fellow grad student Cliff Stoll asked Van Allen for his belt: the one holding up his trousers. For many years, it could be found in the library of Lunar Lab at the University of Arizona, strapped around a big Earth globe.

Circa 1975… about the time Van Allen visited. The photo is of Gerard Kuiper, whoa died in 1973; the guy holding it up is Cliff Stoll, who got Van Allen’s belt. Can you spot me? I remember those days just fine; what I don’t remember is turning old and gray.
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