Explorer 52

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Explorer 52 / Hawkeye 1
Names <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Neutral Point Explorer
  • Injun-F
  • 07325
Mission type Space Physics
Operator NASA - Office of Space Science Applications
Langley Research Center
COSPAR ID 1974-040A
Website NASA NSSDC Master Catalog
Mission duration 1,425 days
Orbits completed 667
Spacecraft properties
BOL mass 22.7 kilograms (50 lb)
Start of mission
Launch date 23:09:11, June 3, 1974 (1974-06-03T23:09:11)
Rocket Scout-E1[1]
Launch site Vandenberg AFB, California
Contractor Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa
End of mission
Disposal Deorbited
Decay date April 28, 1978 (1978-04-28)
Orbital parameters
Reference system Fixed
Regime Polar orbit
Eccentricity 0.90127
Perigee 469 kilometres (291 mi)
Apogee 125.570 kilometres (78.026 mi)
Inclination 89.8°
Period 3,032.4 minutes
Earth orbiter
Orbits 667
Orbit parameters
Inclination 89.81° to 81.85°
Payload
Triaxial Fluxgate Magnetometer
Low-Energy Protons and Electrons
ELF/VLF Receivers
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Explorers Program
← Explorer 49 Small Astronomy Satellite 3


Explorer 52 was a US satellite launched on June 3, 1974 from Vandenberg Air Force Base on a Scout booster.[2]

This satellite was also known as:

  • Hawkeye 1
  • IE D
  • Injun 6
  • Injun F
  • Neutral Point Explorer
  • 07325

Mission

The primary mission objective of Hawkeye 1 (Explorer 52) was to conduct particles and fields investigations of the polar magnetosphere of the earth out to 21 earth radii. Secondary objectives were to make magnetic field and plasma distribution measurements in the solar wind, and to study Type-3 radio emissions caused by solar electron streams in the interplanetary medium. To accomplish these objectives, the spacecraft was instrumented with following instruments:

  • a plasma wave receiver,[3]
  • a fluxgate magnetometer,[4] and
  • a low energy proton-electron differential energy analyzer.[5]

The spacecraft was spin stabilized with a nominal rotational period of 11 s. In celestial coordinates, the positive spin axis coordinates were right ascension 299.4 deg (plus or minus 1.1 deg) and declination 8.6 deg (plus or minus 1.5 deg). There was no onboard orientation or spin rate control, but the orientation of the spin axis was stable. An optical aspect system operated from launch until September 3, 1974. After this period, aspect had to be determined from magnetometer measurements. The complete spacecraft with instruments had a mass of 22.65 kilograms (49.9 lb). Power of 22 to 36 W, depending on solar aspect, was obtained from solar cells. Hawkeye 1 participated in the International Magnetospheric Study (IMS) and during the first half of 1977 data acquisition was confined to IMS special intervals. Data were obtained in real time only, at frequencies of 136 and 400 MHz at 100 bit/s (or 200 bit/s with convolutional coding) plus wideband VLF data.

Specifics

It was designed, built, and tracked by personnel at the Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa whose sports teams are the Hawkeyes. The spacecraft was launched on June 3, 1974 into a polar orbit with initial apogee over the North Pole and re-entered on April 28, 1978 after 667 orbits or nearly four years of continuous operation. The spacecraft apogee was between 20.28 and 20.92 Earth radii with less than a 1.7 Earth radii perigee. The orbital period was 51.3 hours. During its lifetime, the inclination of the plane of the spacecraft's orbit to the Earth's equator decreased monotonically from 89.81 to 81.85 degrees. The spacecraft's axis of rotation at launch was inertially fixed in its orbital plane, directed towards a constant right ascension and declination, and nearly parallel to the Earth's equatorial plane.

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/experimentDisplay.do?id=1974-040A-03 ELF/VLF Receivers
  4. http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/experimentDisplay.do?id=1974-040A-01 Triaxial Fluxgate Magnetometer
  5. http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/experimentDisplay.do?id=1974-040A-02 Low-Energy Protons and Electrons

External links

Template:Explorer program