Mercury-Atlas 9
0 sources
Mercury-Atlas 9
Summary
Mercury-Atlas 9 is a crewed spacecraft[1]. It draws 584 Wikipedia views per month (crewed_spacecraft category, ranking #5 of 19).[2]
Key Facts
- Mercury-Atlas 9's image is recorded as S63-07856.jpg[3].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's image is recorded as Gordon Cooper Jr. - cropped.jpg[4].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's instance of is recorded as crewed spacecraft[5].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's instance of is recorded as human spaceflight[6].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's coat of arms image is recorded as Mercury 9 - Patch.png[7].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's operator is recorded as National Aeronautics and Space Administration[8].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's logo image is recorded as Faith 7 insignia.jpg[9].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's follows is recorded as Mercury-Atlas 8[10].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's manufacturer is recorded as McDonnell Aircraft Corporation[11].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's COSPAR ID is recorded as 1963-015A[12].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's part of is recorded as Project Mercury[13].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's Commons category is recorded as Mercury-Atlas 9[14].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's space launch vehicle is recorded as SM-65D Atlas[15].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's SCN is recorded as 00576[16].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's type of orbit is recorded as low Earth orbit[17].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's UTC date of spacecraft launch is recorded as +1963-05-15T00:00:00Z[18].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's UTC date of spacecraft landing is recorded as +1963-05-16T00:00:00Z[19].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/01f7g2[20].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's significant event is recorded as splashdown[21].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's significant event is recorded as rocket launch[22].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's crew members is recorded as Gordon Cooper[23].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's described by source is recorded as Retro Space HD[24].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as topic/Faith-7[25].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's orbits completed is recorded as {'amount': '+22'}[26].
- Mercury-Atlas 9's start point is recorded as Cape Canaveral Space Launch Complex 14[27].
Why It Matters
Mercury-Atlas 9 draws 584 Wikipedia views per month (crewed_spacecraft category, ranking #5 of 19).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 15 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]