Engineering:UoSAT-3

From HandWiki
Revision as of 21:17, 3 February 2024 by Dennis Ross (talk | contribs) (fixing)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Short description: Defunct British Low Earth Orbit Satellite
UoSAT-3
Mission typeOSCAR
OperatorUniversity of Surrey
COSPAR ID1990-005B[1]
SATCAT no.20437
Spacecraft properties
ManufacturerSSTL
Start of mission
Launch date22 January 1990, 01:35:27 (1990-01-22UTC01:35:27Z) UTC
RocketAriane 40[2]
Launch siteKourou ELA-2
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeSun-synchronous
Perigee altitude776 km (482 mi)
Apogee altitude792 km (492 mi)
Inclination98.7491 degrees
Period100.5 minutes
Epoch15 April 2019, 21:11 UTC[3]
OSCAR
← OSCAR 13
 

UoSAT-3, also known as UO-14 and OSCAR-14, is a British satellite in Low Earth Orbit. It was built by a spin-off company of the University of Surrey, Surrey Satellite Technology (SSTL) and launched in January 1990 from French Guiana.[1] The satellite functioned as one of a series of OSCAR satellite in orbit around the Earth, as well as observing Earth and performing scientific experiments.[2]

UoSAT-3 was launched on the same rocket as its sister satellite, UoSAT-4.[2]

Current status

UoSAT-3 exceeded its expected operational life by 3 years and ceased active service in 1999.[4] However, amateur radio enthusiasts managed to track the satellite for a certain amount of time afterwards via the satellite's FM voice transponder.[4]

The satellite, which is now non-operational, forms a part of the growing amounts of space debris orbiting around the Earth. The payload will decay in the Earth's atmosphere some time in the future.

References