QuikSCAT
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QuikSCAT |
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Organization | JPL, NASA |
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Mission Type | Earth observation |
Contractor | Ball Aerospace |
Satellite of | Earth |
Launch | June 19, 1999 on a Titan II |
Launch site | Vandenberg Air Force Base |
Mission duration | 2–3 years |
Mass | 971 kg (launch) |
Webpage | winds.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/quikscat/ |
Orbital elements | |
Semimajor Axis | 7180.8 km |
Eccentricity | 0.00014 |
Inclination | 98.6 degrees |
Orbital Period | 100.93 minutes |
Right ascension of the ascending node | 178.47 degrees |
Argument of perigee | 47.4 degrees |
Instruments | |
SeaWinds | microwave radar that measures near-surface wind speed and direction |
The QuikSCAT (Quick Scatterometer) is an earth-observing satellite that provides wind speed and direction information over oceans to NOAA.It is a "quick recovery" mission to fill the gap created by the loss of data from the NASA Scatterometer (NSCAT) that was lost in June 1997. It is in a sun-synchronous low-earth orbit.
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (website) | |
Current missions | ACRIMSAT – AIRS – ASTER – Cassini-Huygens – GALEX – GRACE – Jason 1 – Keck Interferometer
Mars Odyssey – MER – MGS – MISR – MLS – MRO – QuikSCAT – Rosetta – Spitzer – TES TOPEX/Poseidon – Ulysses – Voyager – WFPC |
Past missions | Deep Impact – Deep Space 1 – Deep Space 2 – Explorer – Galileo – Genesis – IRAS – Magellan
Mariner – Mars Climate Orbiter – Mars Observer – Mars Pathfinder – Mars Polar Lander – NSCAT Pioneer – Ranger – Seasat – SIR – SME – SRTM – Stardust – Surveyor – SVLBI – Viking – WIRE |
Future missions | Dawn – Herschel Space Observatory – Kepler – LBT – Phoenix – MSL – AFL |
Related organizations | Caltech – NASA – Deep Space Network – Goldstone Complex |