The SAMOS satellite system was part of the WS-117L initial military satellite program. (I acknowledge the extensive help of Dwayne Day in figuring out the SAMOS program).
The US Air Force's Western Development Division retained control over the part of WS-117L that became SAMOS. Originally part of USAF Ballistic Missile Division (under Air Research and Development Command, ARDC), overall control was given to ARPA in 1958 but returned to USAF ARDC in summer 1959 [226]. In Aug 1960 the SAMOS project was reorganized and reported directly to the Undersecretary of the USAF. Management of the E-6 part of SAMOS was by 1960 located in the Los Angeles suburb of Inglewood [216].
SAMOS tested visual surveillance (real
time radio readout of scanned photographs), film recovery, and ferret
electronic intelligence. The original SAMOS, Program (or Project) 101,
consisted of an Agena A and carried the E-1 0.15-m focal
length strip camera and an F-1 ferret
payload. E-1 was a component test payload.
Some documents indicate that the F-1 was a separate payload,
possibly a subsatellite, but it seems more likely that it remained
attached to the Agena. Three Program 101 satellites were built and two
were launched. A follow-on version, Program 101A, carried a longer focal
length (0.9m)
E-2 camera and F-1 ferret system on a more powerful Agena B stage. Two
were built and one was launched; it did not reach orbit. The only successful
flight in the 101 and 101A programs was SAMOS 2, and its photos were not
of high quality. 101A was cancelled in 1961 and
the idea of real-time surveillance by radio transmission readout of exposed film
was abandoned, although the concept was revived for the Film Read Out
GAMBIT
(FROG) proposal of the late 1960s which never flew.
It would not be until 1976 when a digital CCD based system
would provide effective near-real-time surveillance from space.
An E-4 mapping payload, for the USAF Aeronautical Chart and Information Center,
was cancelled early in its development (replaced by ARGON),
although five payloads were built and placed in storage; E-3 was apparently
a higher resolution system for target identification, possibly replaced
by E-6.
After the limitations of the readout system became apparent,
the focus shifted to recovery techniques, already pioneered by
CORONA. In May 1960 USAF undersecretary Charyk ordered SAMOS to be
reoriented to recovery techniques since it had become apparent that
readout was in trouble. Program 101B carried the E-5 payload, involving
a long focal length (1.7m) panoramic camera and a recoverable capsule, while Program 201 (later
698BJ) carried the E-6 payload, with an alternate design of recoverable
capsule and a 0.9-meter focal length camera (possibly related to the E-2
camera). Finally, Program 102 (or 698BK) was a dedicated Ferret
satellite, probably the F-2 payload.
In a US Intelligence Board briefing viewgraph dated 1960 Jul 6
[227]
| Planned SAMOS capability (Jul 1960) | ||||||
| System | Retrieval method | Focal length | Resolution | Duration | Swath width (km) | Launches |
| E-1 | Readout | 0.15m (6") | 30m (100 ft) | 10d | 161 | 3 (actual 2) |
| E-2 | Readout | 0.9m (36") | 6m (20 ft) | 4 months | 27 | 3 (actual 1) |
| E-5 | Recovery | 1.7m (66") | 1.5m (5 ft) | 15-30d | 98 | 7 (actual 4) |
| E-6 | Recovery | 0.9m (36") (two) | 2.4m (8 ft) | 5 d | 370 | 7 (actual 5) |
The SAMOS missions (except for Program 102) were launched by Atlas Agena from the Point Arguello Naval Missile Facility. Complex 65-1 was initially developed for Atlas IOC (Initial Operational Capability) ballistic missile tests, but in 1959 it was decided to transfer it to SAMOS. The complex was renamed Launch Complex 1.
The SAMOS 101 and 101B satellites separated from the Agena final stage, according to data in the NORAD Satellite Catalog, where the objects called 'nose cap' and 'debris' by the RAE are identified as Agena rocket bodies.
| Summary of SAMOS launches | |||||
| Program | Agena | SAMOS | Launch Date | Payloads | Result |
| 101 | Agena A 2101 | SAMOS 1 | 1960 Oct 11 | E-1, F-1 | Failed to orbit |
| 101 | Agena A 2102 | SAMOS 2 | 1961 Jan 31 | E-1, F-1 | Successful orbit |
| 101 | Agena A 2103 | - | - | E-1, F-1 | Not flown |
| 101A | Agena B 2120 | SAMOS 3 | 1961 Sep 9 | E-2, F-2 | Failed to orbit |
| 101A | Agena B 2121 | - | - | E-2, F-2 | Not flown |
| 101B | Agena B 2201 | - | - | E-5 | Ground test vehicle |
| 101B | Agena B 2202 | SAMOS 4 | 1961 Nov 22 | E-5 | Failed to orbit |
| 101B | Agena B 2203 | SAMOS 5 | 1961 Dec 22 | E-5 | Recovery failed? |
| 101B | Agena B 2204 | SAMOS 6 | 1962 Mar 7 | E-5 | Recovery failed? |
| 101B | Agena B 2205 | - | - | E-5 | Cancelled |
| 101B | Agena B 2206 | - | - | E-5 | Cancelled |
| 101B | Agena B 2207 | - | - | E-5 | Cancelled |
| 101B | Agena B 2208 | - | - | E-5 | Cancelled |
| 101B | Agena B 2209 | - | - | E-5 | Cancelled |
| 101B | Agena B 2210 | - | - | E-5 | Cancelled |
| 201 | Agena B 2401 | PVP 851 | 1962 Apr 26 | E-6 | Recovered successfully |
| 201 (BJ) | Agena B 2402 | PVP 852 | 1962 Jun 17 | E-6 | Recovery attempted? |
| 201 (BJ) | Agena B 2403 | PVP 853 | 1962 Jul 18 | E-6 | Capsule failed to deorbit |
| 201 (BJ) | Agena B 2404 | PVP 854 | 1962 Aug 5 | E-6 | Payload failed on orbit |
| 201 (BJ) | Agena B 2405 | PVP 855 | 1962 Nov 11 | E-6 | Recovered successfully |
| 201 (BJ) | Agena B 2406 | - | - | E-6 | Cancelled |
| 201 (BJ) | Agena B 2407 | - | - | E-6 | Cancelled |
| 201 (BJ) | Agena B 2408 | - | - | E-6 | Cancelled |
| 201 (BJ) | Agena B 2409 | - | - | E-6 | Cancelled |
| 102 (BK) | Agena B 2301 | (FERRET) | 1962 Feb 21 | F-2 | Second burn failed |
| 102 (BK) | Agena B 2312 | (FERRET) | 1962 Jun 18 | F-2 | Successful orbit |
| 102 (BK) | Agena B 2313 | (FERRET) | 1963 Jan 16 | F-2 | Successful orbit |
| 102 (BK) | Agena B 2314 | (FERRET) | 1963 Jun 29 | F-2 | Successful orbit |
Shortly before the first SAMOS launch, the USAF set up the Office of Missile and Satellite Systems (SAFMS, Secretary of the Air Force, Missiles and Satellites) to manage the satellite program, and a Director of the SAMOS project at AFBMD reporting to the Secretary of the Air Force. Brig.-Gen Robert E. Greer was appointed SAMOS project director at AFBMD.

The E-5 satellite.

The E-6 satellite.