Formosat-1
Formosat-1 (福爾摩沙衛星一號, formerly known as ROCSAT-1) is an Earth observation satellite operated by the National Space Program Office (NSPO, now the National Space Organization) of the Republic of China (Taiwan) to conduct observations of the ionosphere and oceans. The spacecraft and its instrumentation were developed jointly by NSPO and TRW using TRW's Lightsat bus, and was launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, US, by Lockheed Martin on January 27, 1999.
Mission type | Science |
---|---|
Operator | National Space Organization |
COSPAR ID | 1999-002A |
SATCAT no. | 25616 |
Website | Formosat-1 |
Mission duration | 5.5 years |
Spacecraft properties | |
BOL mass | 401 kg |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | Jan 27, 1999 |
Rocket | ATHENA-1/LMLV1 |
End of mission | |
Decay date | Jun 17, 2004 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Inclination | 35° |
Period | 96.7 mins |
FormoSat-1 provided 5½ years of operational service. The spacecraft ended its mission on June 17, 2004 and was decommissioned on July 16, 2004.[1]
Technical details
Spacecraft
- Weight: 401 kg
- Shape: Hexagonal
- Dimensions
- Height: 2.1 m
- Diameter: 1.1 m
- Solar arrays: Two, 1.16 x 2.46 m
- Electrical power: 450 watts
Instrumentation
- Experimental Communication Payload (ECP)
- Ionosphere Plasma Electrodynamics Instrument (IPEI)
- Ocean Color Imager (OCI)
Orbit
- Altitude: 600 km
- Type: Circular
- Inclination: 35 degrees
gollark: This isn't a deliberate technical decision of some kind. I just haven't done it.
gollark: You can't.
gollark: Hmm. So it looks like if I *do* accept the cryoapiocity and do database lookups when rendering (with some sort of batching mechanism, of course) then I can get some other nice things, like working aliases and non-awful case-insensitivity handling.
gollark: Although extra network round trips are bee.
gollark: That *might* not be a *terrible* way to do it.
See also
References
- https://directory.eoportal.org/web/eoportal/satellite-missions/f/formosat-1#foot8%29 L. Wu, S.-S. Chen, J. Ju-Chen Yaung,, “Space Program in Taiwan,” Proceedings of ASC (Asian Space Conference), Chiang Mai, Thailand, Nov. 22-26, 2004
External links
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