UniSat-6
UNISAT-6 Mission Patch | |
Mission type | Technology demonstration |
---|---|
Operator | GAUSS Srl |
COSPAR ID | 2014-033C |
SATCAT no. | 40012 |
Website | GAUSS Srl page on UniSat-6 mission |
Spacecraft properties | |
Launch mass | 26 kg (57 lb) |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 19 June 2014; 10 years ago (2014-06-19) |
Rocket | Dnepr |
Launch site | Dombarovsky site 13 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Sun Synchronous |
Eccentricity | 0.005957 |
Perigee altitude | 610 km |
Apogee altitude | 694 km |
Inclination | 97.93 ° |
UniSat-6 is an Italian micro-satellite developed by GAUSS Srl and launched in 2014. The satellite is built in a 0.4x0.4x0.4m box-shaped bus, optimized for piggy-back launch. All instruments are powered by solar cells mounted on the spacecraft body, with maximal electrical power of 11W. The satellite has no on-orbit propulsion; it makes use of an attitude stabilization system based on permanent magnets.[1]
Launch
UniSat-6 was launched from Dombarovsky (air base) site 13, Russia, on 19 June 2014 by a Dnepr rocket.
Mission
The satellite is intended primarily for technology verification in space, the main test piece being 3 deployment systems loaded with 4 CubeSat satellites, namely AeroCube 6, Lemur 1, ANTELSAT and Tigrisat,[2] with a total volume 9U. All sub-satellites were deployed 25 hours after achieving orbit, without incidents.[3]
The satellite is also equipped with an on-board camera to take pictures of the release of the cubesats and for Earth Observation.
See also
- 2014 in spaceflight
References
External links
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- Kosmos 2495
- Ekspress AM4R
- USA-251
- USA-252
- Kosmos 2496, Kosmos 2497, Kosmos 2498, Kosmos 2499
- ALOS-2, Raijin-2, UNIFORM-1, SOCRATES, SPROUT
- Eutelsat 3B
- Soyuz TMA-13M
- Kosmos 2500 / GLONASS-M 755
- AprizeSat 9, AprizeSat 10, BRITE-Montreal, BRITE-Toronto, BugSat 1, Deimos-2, Hodoyoshi 3, Hodoyoshi 4, KazEOSat 2, Perseus-M1, Perseus-M2, SaudiSat-4, TabletSat-Aurora, UniSat-6 (Lemur-1, Tigrisat), Flock-1c × 11
- SPOT 7, CanX-4, CanX-5
- OCO-2
- Gonets-M × 3
- Meteor-M No.2
- O3b × 4
- CRS Orb-2 (Flock-1b × 28, TechEdSat-4)
- Orbcomm-OG2 × 6
- Foton-M No.4
- Progress M-24M
- USA-253 / GSSAP 1, USA-254 / GSSAP 2, USA-255 / ANGELS
- Georges Lemaître ATV
- USA-256
- AsiaSat 8
- Yaogan 20 A, B, C
- WorldView-3
- Gaofen 2, Heweliusz
- Galileo FOC-1, Galileo FOC-2
- Chuangxin 1-04, Lingqiao
- AsiaSat 6
- Yaogan 21, Tiantuo 2
- MEASAT 3b, Optus 10
- USA-257
- SpaceX CRS-4
- Soyuz TMA-14M
- Olimp-K
- Shijian XI-07
- Himawari 8
- IRNSS-1C
- ARSAT-1, Intelsat 30
- Yaogan 22
- Ekspress AM6
- Chang'e 5-T1, 4M
- Shijian 11-08
- Cygnus CRS Orb-3† (Arkyd-3†, Flock-1d × 26†)
- Progress M-25M
- USA-258 / GPS IIF 8
- Meridian 7
- Sasuke, Hodoyoshi 1, Kinshachi 1, Tsukushi, TSUBAME
- Yaogan 23
- Yaogan 24
- Kuaizhou 2
- Soyuz TMA-15M
- Kosmos 2501
- Hayabusa2, PROCYON, Shinen 2, DESPATCH
- Orion EFT-1
- DirecTV-14, GSAT-16
- CBERS-4
- Yaogan 25 A, B, C
- USA-259
- Yamal-401
- O3b × 4 (FM9 to FM12)
- Kondor-E No.2
- IPM
- Kosmos 2502
- Resurs-P No.2
- Yaogan 26
- Astra 2G
- Fengyun 2-08
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
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