Monkeys in Space: A Brief Spaceflight History

A look at simian astronauts over the years


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iranian monkey is space

Iranian space officials announced Monday (Jan. 28, 2013) that they have successfully launched a live monkey into space. Image: Iran State TV/Powered by NewsLook

If Iran has indeed launched a monkey to space, the nation is following a path similar to that taken by the United States in the early days of its space program.

Iran announced today (Jan. 28) that it had successfully launched a live monkey on a spaceflight and recovered the animal alive after landing. The move is a prelude to sending humans into space, which the Islamic Republic hopes to do by 2020, Iranian Space Agency officials said.

Iran and the United States don't see eye-to-eye on many issues, but both have viewed monkeys as good astronaut test subjects over the years. The U.S. was the first country ever to launch a primate, sending a rhesus monkey named Albert to a sub-space altitude of 39 miles (63 kilometers) aboard a V2 rocket in June 1948.

 

Very little was known about the physiological effects of spaceflight back in those days, with some scientists postulating that astronauts' cardiovascular systems would fail in the microgravity environment, causing near-instant death. So researchers wanted to blast some relatively large animals into space to see how they fared. [Photos: Pioneering Animals in Space]

Albert died of suffocation during his flight, and a number of his simian brethren also sacrificed their lives to the cause in the ensuing years.

Another rhesus monkey named Albert II, for example, became the first primate to reach space, achieving an altitude of 83 miles (134 km) aboard another V2 in June 1949. He survived the launch but died after a parachute failure caused his capsule to slam hard into the ground.

Alberts III and IV died during their missions in late 1949, and Albert V was victimized by another parachute failure in 1951. Albert VI, also known as Yorick, survived his 1951 flight, though it topped out at an altitude of just 45 miles (72 km) — significantly below the generally accepted 62-mile (100 km) boundary demarcating outer space.

Yorick died several hours after landing, possibly from heat stress suffered as he sat inside his cramped capsule in the New Mexico sun, waiting for the recovery crew.

The United States recorded a milestone in May 1959, finally recovering two primates alive after a spaceflight. A rhesus monkey named Able and a squirrel monkey named Baker reached an altitude of 300 miles (483 km) aboard a Jupiter rocket and were retrieved unharmed. (Sadly, Able died several days later during an operation to remove an electrode from under her skin.)

As the American human spaceflight program began to build momentum, the nation started experimenting with chimpanzees, which are larger and more closely related to humans than are rhesus, squirrel or other monkeys.

The U.S. launched a chimp named Ham on a suborbital spaceflight on Jan. 31, 1961. Ham reached an altitude of 157 miles (253 km) during a 16.5-minute flight and was recovered unharmed, though a bit dehydrated. With this success in hand, Alan Shepard successfully blasted off on his suborbital flight on May 5, 1961, becoming the first American — and second human, after the Soviet Union's Yuri Gagarin — ever to reach space.


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  1. 1. American Muse 05:11 PM 1/31/13

    At least the Iranians brought their monkey safely back to Earth. Can't say the same about the Americans!

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  2. 2. JABenn318 01:05 AM 2/1/13

    you should have read the last line of the article.
    "Iran's recent launch was not its first attempt to send a monkey into space. A previous orbital effort in 2011 failed."
    America wanted the monkeys back alive, but spaceflight was, and still is, a very dangerous business. Nasa did plan on bringing them back at least. The Soviet Union launched Laika on a suicide mission, since the Sputnick capsule lacked any provision for re-entry.

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  3. 3. bucketofsquid in reply to American Muse 03:33 PM 2/7/13

    I haven't been able to find anything showing the Iranian monkey launch returning to earth so how do you know it returned alive?

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
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