Sich 1 & FASat Alfa

Launch Success

Liftoff Time (GMT)

06:49:59

Thursday August 31, 1995

Mission Details

Sich 1

Wiki

Okean is a Soviet Earth observation satellite program for the operational monitoring of ocean surfaces (sea surface temperatures, wind speed, sea color, status of ice coverage, cloud coverage and precipitation). In particular, the Okean-O1 spacecraft with their polar orbits provide valuable complementary data on the ice status in the Arctic and Antarctic regions (support of navigation information for ships in the northern latitudes), which are not visible from geostationary meteorological satellites. The Okean program was initiated in 1976 by the former Soviet Union. In particular, the Yuzhnoye State Design Office of the Ukraine was instrumental in this effort. Launches started in 1979 within the experimental Okean series. Mission objective: a major interest was in the operation of active and passive microwave sensors. Both MW (microwave) sensor types provide an all-weather observation capability. The simultaneous spectral measurements in several wavelengths provide a means of evaluating the hydro-physical parameters of the sea surface, the meteorological parameters of the atmosphere as well as of the sea surface. The parameters are: sea surface temperature, wind speed at the sea surface boundary, liquid vapor content in clouds, integrated water vapor, etc...

Low Earth Orbit

1 Payload

1,950 kilograms

FASat Alfa

Wiki

FASat (Fuerza Aéra de Chile Satellite)-Alfa was to become the first Chilean satellite, and has been constructed under a Technology Transfer Program between the Chilean Air Force (FACH) and Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL) of the United Kingdom. The primary goal of the Program is to obtain for Chile the basic scientific and technological experience required to continue with more advanced steps. The purposes of the FASat-Alfa mission are to create a group of engineers with aerospace experience, to have the first Chilean satellite in orbit, and to install and operate the Mission Control Station (ECM-Santiago) in Chile.

Low Earth Orbit

1 Payload

55 kilograms

Rocket

Retired
Tsyklon-3

Active 1977 to 2009

Yuzhmash logo

Manufacturer

Yuzhmash

Rocket

Height: 39.27m

Payload to Orbit

LEO: 4,100 kg

GTO: 0 kg

Liftoff Thrust

3,032 Kilonewtons

Fairing

Diameter: 2.7m

Height: 9.54m

Stages

3

Launch Site

Site 32/2

Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russia

Fastest Turnaround

3 days 7 hours

Stats

Tsyklon-3


114th

Mission

1st

Mission of 1995

1995


51st

Orbital launch attempt