Formosat-2

Formosat-2 (Chinese: 福爾摩沙衛星二號, formerly known as ROCSAT-2) is a decommissioned Earth observation satellite formerly operated by the National Space Organization (NSPO) of Taiwan. It was a high-resolution photographic surveillance satellite with a daily revisit capability.[3] Images are commercially available from Astrium (formerly Spot Image).

Formosat-2
The model of Formosat-2
NamesROCSAT-2
Mission typeEarth observation
OperatorNSPO
COSPAR ID2004-018A
SATCAT no.28254
Mission duration12 years
Spacecraft properties
ManufacturerNSPO
Launch mass750 kg (1,650 lb)[1]
Start of mission
Launch date19 May 2004 17:47 UTC[1]
RocketTaurus XL
Launch siteVandenberg Air Force Base
End of mission
Deactivated19 August 2016[2]
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeSun-synchronous
 

Launch

Formosat-2 was launched on 19 May 2004, 17:47 UTC from Vandenberg Air Force Base aboard a Taurus XL rocket.[1] It had been delivered to the United States in December 2003, and had a scheduled launch date on 17 January 2004.[4] The launch was continually delayed until May 2004.[5][6] Formosat-2 was decommissioned in August 2016.[2]

gollark: I mean, ignoring the current pandemic situation.
gollark: It seems like things are generally getting better, not worse, honestly.
gollark: Yes, I am sure everyone will spontaneously decide they support the same specific political/economic/social system and self-organize into that?
gollark: If your system cannot be deployed without immediately switching everything over to it, then honestly it's pretty bad and I don't want it.
gollark: It will probably have to interact with markets, but be like Haskell™ and just limit the scope of such IO.

See also

References

  1. "Rocsat 2 - NSSDC ID: 2004-018A". NASA.
  2. Chen, Wei-han (22 August 2016). "Aged Formosat-2 decommissioned". Taipei Times. Retrieved 22 August 2016.
  3. "Formosat-2 images". Spot Image. Archived from the original on 2012-08-06.
  4. Chiu, Yu-Tzu (2 December 2003). "Taiwan's new satellite on its way". Taipei Times. Retrieved 4 July 2016.
  5. Chiu, Yu-Tzu (26 February 2004). "Postponing ROCSAT-2 launch not an election issue: NSC". Taipei Times. Retrieved 4 July 2016.
  6. Chiu, Yu-Tzu (22 May 2004). "ROCSAT-2 gets off the ground". Taipei Times. Retrieved 4 July 2016.


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