NOVEMBER 23, 1959 Live voice transmission is accomplished from Bell Telephone Laboratories in Holmdel, New Jersey, via the moon to Jet Propulsion Laboratories in Goldstone, California. This is the first of 17 tests in Project Moonbounce, all using the moon as a reflector.


JULY 8, 1960 The Bell System proposes to the Federal Communications Commission a detailed plan for a world-wide communications system using active repeater satellites to provide telephone circuits and facilities for transmitting television to various parts of the world.


AUGUST 12, 1960 Echo I is launched into orbit by NASA. Project Echo carries on a large number of communications experiments and, most important, proves that it is practical to use a man-made satellite to reflect two-way telephone conversations across the United States. Echo also dramatizes the possibilities of satellites for communications. Since it is a 100-foot inflated balloon made from aluminum-coated Mylar, it is large enough to be seen by the naked eye. People throughout the world see Echo I sail on schedule across the sky in its 1000-mile-high circular orbit. Three years later, although it is now wrinkled and deflated, the balloon is still in orbit.

Project Echo provided valuable data for future work in satellite communications. It demonstrated that a passive satellite—that is, one that simply reflects the microwave signals it receives from an earth station back to another point—would work. Two-way conversations of good quality were sent between the Bell Laboratories Holmdel station and Jet Propulsion Laboratories in Goldstone, and successful transmission was made to other points in the United States and Europe. A scaled-up horn-reflector antenna proved itself. A method of receiving microwave signals that had been little used until then, known as frequency modulation with feedback (FMFB), performed very well. New types of low-noise amplifiers using solid-state masers gave excellent results. And tracking of the satellite by electronic computers, by radar, and by telescope proved to be extremely reliable.