Status Report

SPACEWARN Bulletin 578 – 3 Jan 2002

By SpaceRef Editor
January 3, 2002
Filed under ,

SPACEWARN Activities

All information in this publication was received between
1 December 2001 and 31 December 2001.

A. List of New International Designations and Launch Dates (UTC).

USSPACECOM Catalog numbers are in parentheses.

  COSPAR/WWAS USSPACECOM  SPACECRAFT              LAUNCH
    INT.ID    CAT. #      NAME                 DATE (2001)
  --------------------------------------------------------
   2001-058F    (27060)  Payload F            28 December
   2001-058E    (27059)  Payload E            28 December
   2001-058D    (27058)  Payload D            28 December
   2001-058C    (27057)  Payload C            28 December
   2001-058B    (27056)  Payload B            28 December
   2001-058A    (27055)  Payload A            28 December
   2001-057A    (27053)  Cosmos 2383          21 December
   2001-056E    (27005)  Reflector            10 December
   2001-056D    (26704)  MAROC-TUBSAT         10 December
   2001-056C    (26703)  BADR 2               10 December 
   2001-056B    (26702)  Kompass              10 December
   2001-056A    (26701)  Meteor-3M            10 December
   2001-055B    (26998)  TIMED                07 December
   2001-055A    (26997)  Jason 1              07 December
   2001-054B    (26996)  STARSHINE 2          16 December
   2001-054A    (26995)  STS 108              05 December
   2001-053C    (26989)  Cosmos 2380          01 December
   2001-053B    (26988)  Cosmos 2381          01 December
   2001-053A    (26987)  Cosmos 2382          01 December

B. Text of Launch Announcements.

2001-058F, 2001-058E,
  2001-058D, 2001-058C
  2001-058B, 2001-058A
Payload A, B, C, D, E, and F
are tentative names for the six
satellites that were launched by a Tsiklon 3 rocket from Plesetsk
at 04:09 UT on 28 December. The identification of names of these
Russian satellites with the IDs by the USSPACECOM may be delayed
for weeks. In the meantime, we have ascertained that three of them
are Cosmos spacecraft (Cosmos 2384, Cosmos 2385, and Cosmos 2386)
and the other three are Gonets-D1 spacecraft. There have been
six Gonets-D1s (Gonets-D1 1, -D1 2, -D1-3, -D1 4, -D1 5, and -D1 6)
in orbit, so the latest are likely to carry -D1 7, -D1 8, and
-D1 9. All three Cosmos’ are Russian military communications
spacecraft; the Gonets’ are civilian reconnaissance/communications
spacecraft to locate and report natural and man-made environmental
disasters around the world, and to relay messages from/to mobile
telephones, like the earlier six Gonets are doing. The next issue of
the Spacewarn Bulletin, SPX.579 may carry the matched names and IDs.
The initial orbital parameters of the circular orbits of all six
were closely similar: period 114 min, apogee 1,447 km, perigee 1,415
km, and inclination 82.5 deg.
2001-057A Cosmos 2383
is a Russian military spacecraft that was launched
by a Tsiklon 2 rocket from Baikonur at 04:00 UT on 21 December 2001.
The initial orbital parameters of the circular orbit were period
92.8 min, altitude 410 km, and inclination 65 deg.
2001-056E Reflector
is an American microsatellite that was launched by a
Zenit rocket from Baikonur at 17:19 UT on 10 December 2001. No
additional information is available at this time. The initial
orbital parameters were period 105 min, apogee 1,014 km, perigee
985 km, and inclination 99.7 deg.
2001-056D MAROC-TUBSAT
is a Moroccan microsatellite that was launched by
a Zenit rocket from Baikonur at 17:19 UT on 10 December 2001. It is
to test a three-dimensional attitude control system that will be
incorporated in a future remote sensing mission. The initial
orbital parameters were period 105 min, apogee 1,014 km, perigee
986 km, and inclination 99.7 deg.
2001-056C BADR 2
is a Pakistani microsatellite that was launched by a
Zenit rocket from Baikonur at 17:19 UT on 10 December 2001. The 68
kg satellite is intended to ascertain and update the status of
ground based receiving/commanding stations, and to test remote
sensing CCD instruments. The initial orbital parameters were period
105 min, apogee 1,014 km, perigee 986 km, and inclination 99.7 deg.
2001-056B Kompass
is a Russian microsatellite that was launch by a Zenit
rocket from Baikonur at 17:19 UT on 10 December 2001. It is to explore
Earthquake prediction capabilities. The initial orbital parameters
were period 105 min, apogee 1,014 km, perigee 987 km, and inclination
99.7 deg.
2001-056A Meteor-3M
is a Russian environment/atmosphere monitoring
meteorological satellite that was launched by a Zenit rocket from
Baikonur at 17:19 UT on 10 December 2001. The initial orbital
parameters were period 105 min, apogee 1016 km, perigee 996 km, and
inclination 99.7 deg.
2001-055B TIMED
(Thermosphere, Ionosphere, Mesosphere Energetics and
Dynamics) is an American (NASA) ionospheric research satellite that
was launched by a Delta 2 rocket from Vandenberg AFB at 15:07 UT
on 7 December 2001. The 587 kg, 400 W, 1.6 m wide, and 1.2 m deep
spacecraft carries four instruments: GUVI (Global UltraViolet
Imager), SABER (Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission
Radiometry), SEE (Solar Extreme ultraviolet Experiment) and TIDI,
(TImed Doppler Interferometer). The GUVI will monitor auroral and
airglow lines with a spatial scanning spectrometer to assess the
atomic/molecular composition and temperature profile in the upper
atmosphere. The SABER is a 10-channel infrared radiometer to monitor
the heat emitted by the upper atmosphere in the 1.27 – 17 micron
wavelength band. The SEE will monitor the solar irradiance in the
UV and soft X-ray bands. The TIDI will extract the Doppler shift in
atomic and molecular lines at four perpendicular directions to
infer the prevailing wind speed. More details are available in
http://www.timed.jhuapl.edu/. The spacecraft has a data storage
capacity of 5 Gbits and will downlink the data mainly over the APL
at a rate of 4 Mbits/sec. The initial orbital parameters were period
97.3 min, apogee 628 min, perigee 627 km, and inclination 74.1 deg.
2001-055A Jason 1
is an American-French (NASA-CNES) oceanographic satellite
that was launched by a Delta 2 rocket from Vandenberg AFB 15:07 UT
on 7 December 2001. It is intended to supplement and extend the
TOPEX/Poseidon mission results by monitoring the sea surface level
and wave heights. The 500 kg, 1.0 kW, triaxially-stabilized
spacecraft carries five instruments. There are two radar altimeters:
the CNES Poseidon-2 Altimeter at 13.65 GHz and a NASA TOPEX
Altimeter at 13.6 and 5.3 GHz, both measuring the sea surface with
an accuracy of 4.2 cm. The NASA Jason Microwave Radiometer (JMR)
enables water vapor measurement along the altimeter path so as to
correct the echo time. The CNES DORIS Doppler tracking antenna
receives ground signals for precise determination of the satellite
altitude after correction for ionospheric delays. The NASA BlackJack
GPS receiver provides accurate location of the satellite. Finally,
the NASA laser retroreflector array works with ground stations to
track the satellite and calibrate/verify the altimeter measurements.
The data from Jason 1 will be made available through NASA/JPL and
CNES. Data dumps will be made over Poker Flats, Alaska, and Wallops
Island, Virginia. For more details see
http://sealevel.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/jason-1.html.
The initial orbital parameters were period 112
min, apogee 1,340 km, perigee 1,328 km, and inclination 66 deg.
2001-054B STARSHINE 2
is an American, high school educational microsatellite
that was launched from STS 108 on 16 December 2001. It was built
with the participation of 25,000 students in 26 countries. No
further details are available, but it is expected to be very similar
to the STARSHINE 3 (2001-043A) that was launched in September 2001.
The initial orbital parameters were period 92.1 min, apogee 389 km,
perigee 361 km, and inclination 51.6 deg.
2001-054A STS 108
is an American shuttle spacecraft that was launched from
Cape Canaveral at 22:19 UT on 5 December 2001. It carried a crew
of seven astronauts (one Russian and six American) and three tonnes
of food and equipment to the International Space Station (ISS),
and docked with it at 19:59 UT on 7 December 2001. It is the twelfth
shuttle mission to the ISS, and carried an Italian cargo module
that was attached to the Unity module of the ISS. Later the cargo
was transferred to the Destiny laboratory. The crew did a
spacewalk to install a thermal blanket over the Beta Gimbal
Assemblies (BGAs) at the base of the solar panels that are intended
to direct the panels sunward at an optimal angle. It carried also a
STARSHINE 2 microsatellite for release. In addition, the shuttle
carried four GAS (Get Away Special) containers, one with seven
experiments from Utah State University students, the second
with three experiments from Penn State University students, the
third with Swedish Space Corp. experiments, and the fourth with NASA/Ames
experiments. An animal enclosure module carried a few mice and
a bird module some quail eggs. The STS landed back in Cape Canaveral
at 17:55 UT on 17 December 2001, with the crew that included three
astronauts (two Russian and one American) that had spent 129 days
on the ISS. The initial orbital parameters were period 92 min,
apogee 377 km, perigee 353 km, and inclination 51.6 deg.
2001-053C, 2001-053B,
  2001-053A
Cosmos 2380, 2381, and 2382
are the latest trio to join the
current Russian fleet of Glonass satellites. They were launched
by a Proton-K rocket from Baikonur at 18:00 UT on 1 December 2001.
These Cosmos series spacecraft have another model name also: two of
them are called Uragan class and the third an enhanced Uragan-M
class. According to some reports, the nominally complete fleet of 24
have now only nine fully functional spacecraft. (See Section C-3
for an outline of the Glonass fleet.) The latest trio has been
placed in Plane-1. The initial orbital parameters of all three were
similar. Period 675 min, apogee 19,100 km, perigee 19,100 km, and
inclination 64.8 deg

C. Spacecraft Particularly Suited for International Participation

  1. Spacecraft with essentially continuous radio beacons on frequencies
    less than 150 MHz, or higher frequencies if especially suited for ionospheric
    or geodetic studies. (NNSS denotes U.S. Navy Navigational
    Satellite System. Updates or corrections to the list are possible only with
    information from the user community.)

    Note:
    The full list appeared in SPX 545.
    The list will not be repeated in future issues until significantly revised again.

  2. Global Positioning System satellites useful for navigational
    purposes and geodetic studies.

    High precision (<20 cm) GPS constellation tracking data obtained from
    the network of about 80 dedicated global stations that are of interest to
    geodetic study may be obtained through the following services provided
    by the International Association of Geodesy (IGS)

         FTP:    igscb.jpl.nasa.gov  [directory /igscb]
         WWW:    http://igscb.jpl.nasa.gov/
         E-mail: igscb@cobra.jpl.nasa.gov
    

    The standard format of the GPS situation appeared in SPX-518. It will not
    be repeated since an excellent source of trajectory- and science-related GPS information is at
    http://www.utexas.edu/depts/grg/gcraft/notes/gps/gps.html#DODSystem
    It provides many links to GPS related databases.

  3. Russian Global Navigational (Positioning) Spacecraft, GLONASS
    constellation. (SPACEWARN requests updates/additions from readers to this list.)

    All GLONASS spacecraft are in the general COSMOS series. The COSMOS numbers
    (nnnn) invoked by USSPACECOM have often differed from the numbers (NNNN)
    associated in Russia; when different, the USSPACECOM COSMOS numbers are shown
    in parentheses. The corresponding GLONASS numbers are Russian numbers, followed
    by the numbers in parentheses that are sometimes attributed to them outside
    Russia.

    The operating frequencies in MHz are computed from the channel number K.
    Frequencies (MHz) = 1602.0 + 0.5625K and L2 = 1246.0 + 0.4375K.

    The standard format of the GLONASS situation appeared in SPX-545. It
    will not be repeated in view of the excellent updated source at:
    http://www.rssi.ru/SFCSIC/english.html
    maintained by the Coordinational
    Scientific Information Center (CSIC),Russian Space Forces.

    The latest addition to the GLONASS fleet are Cosmos 2380, Cosmos 2381, and
    Cosmos 2382.

  4. Visually bright objects.

    A comprehensive list of visually bright
    objects with their two-line orbital elements is available from USSPACECOM, via a
    NASA site, http://oig1.gsfc.nasa.gov/files/visible.tle. The list, however,
    does not include visual magnitudes, but are expected to be brighter than
    magnitude 5.

  5. Actual decays/landings of payload spacecraft and rocket bodies (R/B)
    only. No further information is available.

    Designations         Common Name                  Decay Date (2001)
    
    2000-049E (26501) R/B (Aux) Proton-K                        30 Dec
    1970-109B (04802) R/B Diamant B                             21 Dec 
    1982-083E (13446) R/B(2) that launched MOLNIYA 3-19         21 Dec
    2001-054A (26995) STS 108                        landed on  17 Dec
    1989-043A (20052) MOLNIYA 3-35                              14 Dec
    1992-007A (21867) JERS 1                                    03 Dec
    2001-053D (26990) R/B(1) Proton-K                           02 Dec
    
  6. 60-day Decay Predictions.

    The USSPACECOM forecasts and maintains a
    list of decays of orbiting objects expected in the next 60 days , with fair
    accuracy. The list may be accessed through a NASA site,
    http://oig1.gsfc.nasa.gov/scripts/foxweb.exe/app01?.
    as follows:

    1. Select “OIG Main Page”.
    2. Select “Send Message to System administrator”, who will provide a login account.
    3. After getting an ID and a Password, click on “Registered User Login”.
      (Step (2) is not needed after obtaining an account.)
    4. Select “Continue”.
    5. Select “General information”.
    6. Select “Reports”.
    7. Select “Sixty Day Decay…”.

    Note: The login requirement is enforced due to the events on 11 September 2001.

  7. Miscellaneous Items. (This section contains information/data that
    are entered on occasion and may not be repeated in each issue of the
    SPACEWARN Bulletin.)

  8. Related NSSDC resources.

    NSSDC/WDC for Satellite Information is an archival center for science
    data from many spacecraft. Many space physics datasets are on-line for
    electronic access through:
    http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/space/

    For off-line data, please contact the Request Office, NSSDC, Code 633,
    NASA GSFC, Greenbelt, Maryland 20771, U.S.A., for specific information
    (request@nssdca.gsfc.nasa.gov).
    Information on the current status of the instruments on board from the
    investigators will be most welcomed. Precomputed trajectory files
    and orbital parameters of many magnetospheric and heliospheric science-payload
    spacecraft may be obtained from:
    ftp://nssdcftp.gsfc.nasa.gov/miscellaneous/orbits/

    Other files interest for Earth-centered spacecraft can be generated through the URL,
    http://sscweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/

    Programs related to the heliospheric spacecraft trajectories can be executed
    through the URL,
    http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/space/helios/heli.html

    Magnetospheric, Planetary, and Astronomical science data from many spacecraft
    may be accessed through links from the URL:
    http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/sc-query.html

SpaceRef staff editor.