Orbiting Geophysical Observatory

Artist's concept of OGO 1
OGO 1 components

Orbiting Geophysical Observatory (OGO) refers to the six satellites launched by the United States that were in use from September 1964 to 1972, designed to study the Earth's magnetosphere.[1] The satellites successfully studied the interactions between the Earth and the Sun, despite a number of technical problems. Each satellite had 20 to 25 instruments. OGO 1, OGO 3, and OGO 5 were in equatorial orbits; OGO 2, OGO 4, and OGO 6 were in lower polar orbits.[2]

OGO launch chronology

Notes

  1. "Scientific Satellite Set For Launching". Kentucky New Era. Hopkinsville, KY. Associated Press. September 4, 1964. p. 7. Retrieved December 6, 2010.
  2. "Orbiting Geophysical Observatory series satellites". NASA HEASARC.
  3. A. V. Balakrishnan, Advances in Communication Systems: Theory and Applications (Academic Press, 2014) p264
  4. "Giant Space Lab Orbited; Fails Tests", Chicago Tribune, September 5, 1964, p1

References


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