SciSat 1

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SCISAT-1
Type: Earth observation satellite
Country: CanadaCanada Canada
Operator: Canadian Space AgencyCSA CSA
COSPAR-ID : 2003-036A
Mission dates
Dimensions: 150 kg
Begin: August 12, 2003, 02:10 UTC
Starting place: Vandenberg AFB
Launcher: Pegasus XL
Status: active
Orbit data
Rotation time : 97.7 min
Orbit inclination : 73.9 °
Apogee height 642 km
Perigee height 655 km

SCISAT -1 is a Canadian Earth observation satellite of the Canadian Space Agency , which was launched on August 12, 2003 and is intended to observe the earth's atmosphere and explore the ozone hole over the Arctic .

SCISAT-1 is the first Canadian satellite in over 30 years.

The scientific director of the mission is Peter Bernath from the Chemistry Department at the University of Waterloo . The research satellite was developed and manufactured by the Canadian companies Bristol Aerospace , ABB , EMS Technologies , Routes AstroEngineering and COM DEV . Various companies from Canada and around the world are also involved.

The satellite was launched into orbit by a three-stage Pegasus XL . Pegasus does not start from a launch pad as other missiles , but is from a carrier aircraft type Lockheed L-1011 dropped. The start was accompanied by NASA.

The satellite should help to better understand the chemical and dynamic processes in the earth's atmosphere, especially the stratosphere and troposphere , in particular the depletion of the ozone layer in the Arctic. The satellite consumes between 80 and 100 watts.

The main tools of SciSat 1 are:

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. SCISAT-1 on Raumfahrer.net
  2. ACE: Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (English) ( Memento from July 6, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  3. NASA - Pegasus Launches SCISAT-1 (English)
  4. Bristol Aerospace (English)