Dove-OSCAR 17
a.k.a Microsat 2 | |
Mission type | Educational, Amateur radio |
---|---|
Operator | BRAMSAT |
Spacecraft properties | |
Launch mass | 12.92 kilograms (28.5 lb) |
Power | Solar panels and batteries |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 22 January 1990 |
Rocket | Ariane 4 |
Launch site | Kourou, French Guiana |
End of mission | |
Last contact | March 1998 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Sun-synchronous |
Regime | Low Earth |
Perigee | 791 km (492 mi) |
Apogee | 821 km (510 mi) |
Inclination | 98.7 degrees |
Period | 100.8 minutes |
Dove-OSCAR 17 (aka DO-17 or Microsat 2) is a Brazilian educational and amateur radio satellite launched at January 22, 1990.
Project
Dove-OSCAR 17 is one the results of the so called Microsat project by AMSAT, manufactured in the 1980s by the civil and electric engineer Junior Torres de Castro (amateur radio operator with callsign PY2BJO), who had been developing his ideas since 1957. He has built, with his own resources, the first artificial satellite for educational and humanitarian purposes: the "Dove".
The device, assembled in a garage in São Paulo, was meant to provide synthesised peace messages for educational institutions at a time when the Cold War was still determining international relations around the world. It has a Digital Orbiting Voice Encoder (D.O.V.E.), designed to emit the synthesised voice messages, and also telemetry data transmission (FM Packet AFSK 1200 AX.25 at 145.825 MHz). It is box shaped with dimensions of 213 × 230 × 230 mm, with solar panels on the faces of the cube and weights 12.92 kg.[1] The configuration and assembly was at that time designated as "Microsat".[2]
Mission
Dove-OSCAR 17 was launched at January 22, 1990 by an Ariane 4 rocket from Guiana Space Center. The payload also included the SPOT-2 and other five OSCAR satellites. According to AMSAT, "due to hardware failures that have occurred since launch, the primary mission of providing voice messages of world peace from DOVE has not been fully realized"[3]
Last stable contact with the satellite officially occurred in March 1998 when it had a battery failure. However, because of the still functional solar panels, when the device is properly aligned to the Sun, it transmits its telemetry data.
See also
References
- ↑ "DOVE (Oscar 17, DO 17)". Gunter's Space Page.
- ↑ Duncan, Courtney (26 September 1989). "A New, Small Satellite Bus Concept (AMSAT-NA)". Retrieved 10 August 2015.
- ↑ "Spotlight On: The Microsats". AMSAT. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
External links
- PY4ZBZ's page Collection of videos in Portuguese about the Dove-OSCAR 17
- N2YO's real time OSCAR 17 tracking page
- PU3XGS's page More information on PY2BJO and the DOVE satellite
- Books about the Dove-OSCAR 17