
The Apollo 2 rocket (S-IVB tank and instrument unit included) launched into a 188-kilometer circular orbit. The instrument unit was responsible for controlling the rocket during launching in the absence of the command service module. The flight led the scientists to conclude that the S-IVB can restart and the liquid hydrogen behaved as the engineers predicted it would. During its entire duration of orbiting, scientists observed the condition of the tank under extreme pressures. They found out that it has the ability to withstand so much stress and even surpassed its structural capacity. They were able to measure the amount of stress the tank was able to handle before it finally broke into pieces in space. Some of its fragments found their way back into the earth’s atmosphere and supposedly hit a German fishing vessel.
Liftoff of Saturn Mission 203, the second in the uprated Saturn 1 development mission series, was accomplished from the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Launch Complex 37 at 10:53 a.m., July 5, 1966.
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