Photograph
of the damaged Skylab station taken by the astronauts during their
initial flyaround. An American reconnaissance satellite took a blurrier
black and white image of Skylab that was used for planning the repair
mission. That photo has not been declassified. (credit: NASA)
by Dwayne Day
Monday, May 20, 2013
Forty years ago—in fact, possibly forty years ago today—a top secret spy satellite was pressed into emergency service to help save the crippled NASA Skylab space station. The mission was a success, and a closely guarded secret, until a retired Air Force general decided to brag.
Skylab atop its Saturn V launch vehicle in May 1973. (credit: NASA)
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Wounded bird
On May 14, 1973, NASA launched the Skylab Orbital Workshop atop its last Saturn V to fly. During liftoff the workshop’s meteoroid shield broke loose and ripped off one of its two main solar panels. The problems were immediately apparent to NASA technicians monitoring the launch. Telemetry went bad soon after the ignition of the mighty Saturn’s second stage, and ground-based radars detected multiple pieces of debris coming off of the station. Skylab entered orbit and jettisoned its large payload fairing as planned, but it was severely damaged.NASA was aware of some of the damage to their expensive space station. Even without cameras aboard Skylab, they had enough data to figure out the broad outlines of the problems. For instance, temperature sensors inside of Skylab indicated that it was very hot, a clue that the exterior insulation had been ripped off. The temperature was so high that ground controllers worried that some plastics inside the station might start to melt. The spacecraft still responded to commands from ground controllers to shift orientation and minimize solar heating, but it would have to be repaired before it could enter service—assuming that it could be repaired at all.
Artist
impression of the jettison of the Skylab payload fairing upon reaching
orbit. By this time, Skylab had been damaged when its micrometeoroid
shield had torn off, along with one of its main solar panel wings.
(credit: NASA)
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Close up image taken by the astronauts of damage to the Skylab. (credit: NASA)
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An offer of help
Major General David Bradburn, who was then the head of the Office of Special Projects, one of the NRO’s component offices and based in Los Angeles, quickly proposed that a GAMBIT-3 spacecraft, also known as the KH-8, readying for launch on May 16, be used to take a photograph of Skylab to assist NASA in planning a repair mission. The manned Skylab 2 mission, which had now become a repair mission, was scheduled to launch on May 25. That short turnaround time meant that the first phase of the GAMBIT’s photographic mission would have to be cut short in order to return the photos earlier so they could be used for planning the repair mission.According to Bradburn, who spoke about the incident during an Air Force history symposium in 1995, he made the argument that Skylab was an American project and it was in the best interests of the nation that it not fail. This justified using an intelligence satellite to help save it, even if that undermined some of the intelligence collection. Bradburn’s proposal was approved by his superiors in the NRO and, presumably, by the Director of Central Intelligence and the Secretary of Defense.
Bradburn was able to propose this mission because, for approximately six months, a group of junior Air Force officers in the Special Projects Office had been developing computer algorithms for using a GAMBIT-3 to photograph Soviet spacecraft. Their effort had been instigated by Soviet tests of an anti-satellite capability that the Soviets had declared operational in February 1973. They wanted the capability to take a photograph of a Soviet ASAT vehicle if one ever approached an American spacecraft. Because the computer programs were ready, the NRO was able to respond quickly to the Skylab problem—something that Bradburn was able to tell his superiors, and undoubtedly contributed to them approving the mission.
A GAMBIT-3 satellite on display in the National Museum of the United States Air Force. (credit: D. Day)
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By 1969 the NRO had added a second bucket to the spacecraft. This allowed it to take pictures, return them to Earth, and then go into sleep mode for awhile before waking up to take some more pictures. The primary benefit of this second bucket was to extend the lifetime of a valuable piece of equipment, although it did offer the opportunity to return pictures faster in a crisis situation without ending the entire mission early.
Bradburn was not supposed to talk about any of this in 1995. He was not overly specific about the details, never mentioning the name of the still-classified GAMBIT program, for example. But the intelligence community did not acknowledge that it used satellites to take pictures of other satellites, even though the NRO first developed that capability with an earlier satellite program known as CORONA in the mid-1960s, and an offshoot of the Program 437 ASAT had also developed satellite imaging equipment. Bradburn’s remarks in 1995 were not repeated in the official proceedings of the conference (although I was there at the public session, and later wrote about what he had said).
GAMBIT-3 reconnaissance satellite atop its Titan III-Agena D rocket prior to launch. (credit: NRO)
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Launch of the black bird
GAMBIT-3 number 38 launched as planned atop a Titan III-Agena D rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on May 16, 1973. It quickly reached orbit and began operating its camera, probably taking photographs of targets inside the Soviet Union prior to reaching proper position to take a photo of Skylab.According to independent satellite observer Ted Molczan, records from that era show that the closest approaches of the GAMBIT-3 and Skylab took place on May 18 and 19. The GAMBIT’s first satellite reentry vehicle de-orbited and was recovered over the ocean on May 21, so probably the last possible imaging day was on May 20. Normally, a GAMBIT-3 would have operated its powerful camera taking photos of targets in the Soviet Union for up to a week or more before returning its first reentry vehicle and then going into a sleep mode for several weeks.
Comparison of single and dual-bucket GAMBIT-3 reconnaissance satellites. (credit: NRO)
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Jim Oberg, who used to support NASA space missions, and is an expert on orbital rendezvous, notes that the Skylab rescue mission would have been in advanced planning stage by the time the GAMBIT-3 imagery was returned to Earth. “There don’t seem to be any indicators that major changes were made to these plans after obtaining the imagery,” Oberg wrote in an email. “The key feature that such imagery might have been able to contribute deals with the existing Skylab rescue plan.”
Cutaway
of the GAMBIT-3 reconnaissance satellite with its powerful internal
camera. This illustration depicts a later version than the one used for
the Skylab imaging. (credit: NRO)
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Considering that the GAMBIT strip camera had been designed to photograph a moving ground target, matching the film speed to a moving spacecraft in an entirely different orbit must have been challenging. But the mission contributed to the rescue of a billion dollar space project—and it also demonstrated that not even Soviet satellites could hide from the prying eyes of American spysats.
Image
of Skylab taking by the an Air Force telescope atop the Haleakala
volcano in Maui after the repair mission. This is a view from below the
station, with the deployed solar panel visible at upper right. (source)
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RSEN
Later, an Air Force telescope took a blurry image of the operational Skylab. But after this event, the United States further developed so-called satellite-to-satellite (or “sat-squared”) imaging capability. According to one person familiar with the subject, a later GAMBIT-3 mission took an incredibly detailed photograph of Kosmos 1267, an unmanned spacecraft that rendezvoused and docked with the Salyut-6 space station in spring 1981. The last GAMBIT-3 was launched in 1984. But by late 1976 the NRO began operating a new series of satellites known as the KH-11 KENNEN, which did not require film and could transmit their imagery to a ground station. According to some reports, the KH-11 was used to image early space shuttle missions to make sure that they had not lost thermal protection tiles. The intelligence community remains very tight-lipped about this.Satellite-to-satellite imagery was placed in a special security classification compartment known as “RUFF SENSITIVE,” or “RSEN” for short. In addition to sat-squared imagery, RSEN included other unusual and exotic capabilities demonstrated by American reconnaissance satellite cameras. Today, some non-American satellites have demonstrated the ability to photograph or image with radar other satellites, so the technology has clearly proliferated. For example, in 1998, the French Spot-4 satellite photographed the European Space Agency’s ERS-1 satellite. And the United States has developed powerful ground-based imaging telescopes that can produce incredibly detailed images of orbiting satellites, foreign and domestic.
Image taken of the ERS-1 satellite by the Spot-4 satellite in 1998. (source)
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But Skylab went on to great success, and perhaps some people within the intelligence community are today honoring their predecessors who helped it along four decades ago.
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