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PANSAT

PANSAT (Petite Amateur Navy Satellite, also known as OSCAR 34) was an amateur radio satellite. It was launched by Space Shuttle Discovery during the STS-95 mission as part of the third International Extreme Ultraviolet Hitchhiker (IEH-3) mission, on 30 October 1998 from Kennedy Space Center, Florida.[2][3]

PANSAT
Mission typeAmateur radio satellite
OperatorUSAF
COSPAR ID1998-064B
SATCAT no.25520
Spacecraft properties
Launch mass57 kg (126 lb)
Dimensions50 cm (20 in)
Start of mission
Launch date30 October 1998, 17:20 UTC
RocketSpace Shuttle Discovery STS-95
Launch siteKennedy LC-39B
ContractorNASA
End of mission
Last contact2003
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeLow Earth
Eccentricity0.00072
Perigee altitude551 km (342 mi)
Apogee altitude561 km (349 mi)
Inclination28.5°
Period95.8 minutes
Epoch30 October 1998[1]
OSCAR 35 →
 
PANSAT satellite deployment from STS-95 Discovery's payload bay

The satellite was built by students from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. It offered the possibility of packet radio transmission in BPSK or Direct-Sequence Spread Spectrum in the 70 cm band. The satellite was configured in a sphere-like shape, featuring 26 sides used for solar cell and antenna placement.[4] The spacecraft supplied direct-sequence, spread-spectrum modulation with an operating center frequency of 436.5 MHz, a bit rate of 9600 bit/s and 9 MB of message storage.

References Edit

  1. ^ NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. "PANSAT". NSSDCA MAster Catalog. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  2. ^ EOPortal.org. "PANSAT". Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  3. ^ Dirk Krebs, Gunter. "PANSAT (S97-D, PO 34, PANSAT-OSCAR 34)". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 13 Feb 2020.
  4. ^ Martin, Donald H. (2000). Communication Satellites. AIAA. ISBN 978-1-884989-09-4.

pansat, petite, amateur, navy, satellite, also, known, oscar, amateur, radio, satellite, launched, space, shuttle, discovery, during, mission, part, third, international, extreme, ultraviolet, hitchhiker, mission, october, 1998, from, kennedy, space, center, f. PANSAT Petite Amateur Navy Satellite also known as OSCAR 34 was an amateur radio satellite It was launched by Space Shuttle Discovery during the STS 95 mission as part of the third International Extreme Ultraviolet Hitchhiker IEH 3 mission on 30 October 1998 from Kennedy Space Center Florida 2 3 PANSATMission typeAmateur radio satelliteOperatorUSAFCOSPAR ID1998 064BSATCAT no 25520Spacecraft propertiesLaunch mass57 kg 126 lb Dimensions50 cm 20 in Start of missionLaunch date30 October 1998 17 20 UTCRocketSpace Shuttle Discovery STS 95Launch siteKennedy LC 39BContractorNASAEnd of missionLast contact2003Orbital parametersReference systemGeocentricRegimeLow EarthEccentricity0 00072Perigee altitude551 km 342 mi Apogee altitude561 km 349 mi Inclination28 5 Period95 8 minutesEpoch30 October 1998 1 OSCAR OSCAR 33OSCAR 35 PANSAT satellite deployment from STS 95 Discovery s payload bayThe satellite was built by students from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey California It offered the possibility of packet radio transmission in BPSK or Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum in the 70 cm band The satellite was configured in a sphere like shape featuring 26 sides used for solar cell and antenna placement 4 The spacecraft supplied direct sequence spread spectrum modulation with an operating center frequency of 436 5 MHz a bit rate of 9600 bit s and 9 MB of message storage References Edit NASA Goddard Space Flight Center PANSAT NSSDCA MAster Catalog Retrieved 11 February 2020 EOPortal org PANSAT Retrieved 11 February 2020 Dirk Krebs Gunter PANSAT S97 D PO 34 PANSAT OSCAR 34 Gunter s Space Page Retrieved 13 Feb 2020 Martin Donald H 2000 Communication Satellites AIAA ISBN 978 1 884989 09 4 Spaceflight portal This spacecraft or satellite related article is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title PANSAT amp oldid 1156038323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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