Gurwin-Techsat

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gurwin-Techsat
Type: Research and amateur radio satellite
Country: IsraelIsrael Israel
Operator: Technion
COSPAR-ID : 1998-043D
Mission dates
Dimensions: 70 kg
Begin: July 10, 1998, 06:30 UTC
Starting place: Baikonur 45/1
Launcher: Zenith 2
Status: Out of service
Orbit data
Rotation time : 101.2 min
Orbit inclination : 98.4 °
Apogee height 821 km
Perigee height 821 km

Gurwin-Techsat (also Techsat 1B or OSCAR 32 ) is a former Israeli research and amateur radio satellite .

The satellite was developed by students of the Asher Space Research Institute at the Technion and launched on July 10, 1998 with a Zenit rocket in Baikonur , together with the Thai satellite TMSAT- OSCAR 31.

It is named after the sponsors Joseph and Rosalind Gurwin. The satellite was in operation until April 2010.

literature

  • Moshe Guelman, Fred Ortenberg, Alexander Shiryaev, Roni Waler: The Gurwin-Techsat microsatellite: Six years successful operation in space. In: B. Warmbein (Ed.): Proceedings of the 4S Symposium: Small Satellites, Systems and Services (ESA SP-571). La Rochelle 2004.
  • Moshe Guelman, Fred Ortenberg, Alexander Shiryaev, Roni Waler: Gurwin-Techsat: Still alive and operational after nine years in orbit. In: Acta Astronautica, Volume 65, Issues 1–2, July – August 2009, pp. 157–164.
  • Brian Harvey, Henk HF Smid, Théo Pirard: Emerging space powers: The new space programs of Asia, the Middle East and South-America. Springer, Berlin 2011, p. 404 ff.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Technisat 1B. In: n2yo.com. N2YO, October 17, 2013, accessed October 18, 2013 .
  2. ^ Steve Ford: New Thai and Israeli microsats in orbit. In: QST, October 1998, p. 100.
  3. Joseph Gurwin, textile manufacturer and philanthropist, this at 89
  4. O (R) bituary ( Memento from September 29, 2013 in the Internet Archive )