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1 Launch and operations  





2 References  














SOLRAD 9






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Solrad 9

Solrad 9.

Mission type

Solar science

Operator

NASA

COSPAR ID

1968-017A[1]

SATCAT no.

3141

Mission duration

22 years, 8 months and 10 days
(final)

Spacecraft properties

Manufacturer

Naval Research Laboratory

Launch mass

198 kilograms (437 lb)

Start of mission

Launch date

5 March 1968, 18:28 (1968-03-05UTC18:28Z) UTC[2][3]

Rocket

Scout B-1 S160C

Launch site

Wallops LA-3A[3]

End of mission

Last contact

March 1974

Decay date

16 November 1990 (1990-11-17)[4]

Orbital parameters

Reference system

Geocentric

Regime

Low Earth

Eccentricity

0.01372

Perigee altitude

448 kilometers (278 mi)

Apogee altitude

638 kilometers (396 mi)

Inclination

59.4°

Period

95.5 minutes

Epoch

5 March 1968[1]

Instruments

14Photometers (UV and X-ray)

Explorers
 
Solrad
← Solrad 8
Solrad 10 →

Solrad 9, also known Explorer 37 and Explorer SE-B, was one of the SOLRAD (Solar Radiation) program that began in 1960 to provide continuous coverage of solar radiation with a set of standard photometers.

Launch and operations[edit]

Was launched on March 5, 1968 from Wallops Flight Facility, Virginia, United States, with Scout launch vehicle.[5]

Solrad 9 was a spin stabilized satellite oriented with its spin axis perpendicular to the sun-satellite line so that the 14 solar X-ray and UV photometers pointing radially outward from its equatorial belt viewed the sun with each revolution. Data were simultaneously transmitted via FM/AM telemetry and recorded in a core memory that read out its contents on command. Individual scientists and institutions were invited to receive and use the data transmitted on the 136 MHz telemetry band on the standard IRIG channels three through eight.[1][6]

In the time that elapsed between the termination of Solrad 8 operations in August 1967 and the orbiting of Solrad 9, solar activity data were obtained using photometers in satellites OSO-4 and OGO-4.

Solrad 9 was particularly important among the Solrad series satellites because thanks to the collected data were useful to predict the behavior of the sun during the period of the first crewed missions of the Apollo Program, starting from the first, Apollo 7, it is therefore useful to draw up a mission program to ensure, from this point of view, the safety of astronauts.[6] It recorded important data on one of the strongest solar storms that occurred between Apollo 9 and Apollo 10 and which would have produced potentially hazardous (to even fatal) effects to astronauts had then been in space (if the spacecraft were outside the Earth's protective magnetosphere) at the time.[7]

As of July 1971, it was decided to use the Solrad 10 memory data, put into orbit on the 8th of the same month, and so continued until June 1973, when the Solrad 10 data storage device had a bad operation and NASA began to read data from the memory of Solrad 9. The satellite remained active until February 25, 1974, when the gas reserves useful to maintain control of the facility were over. Once the stability was lost, in fact, the satellite became useless and therefore was turned off.

Unlike Solrad 8, its predecessor, Solrad 9 did not remain in orbit and returned to the atmosphere, disintegrating on November 16, 1990.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "Solrad 9". NSSDCA. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Retrieved 17 June 2018. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • ^ "Solar Observing satellites". Colorado State University. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  • ^ a b McDowell, Jonathan. "Launch Log". Joanthan's Space Page. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  • ^ "Explorer 37 (SE-B)". n2yo.com. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  • ^ Vítek, Antonín (7 December 2004). "1968-017A - Explorer 37". Space 40 (in Czech). Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  • ^ a b "United States Space Science Program: Report to COSPAR". National Academies, 1969, p. 27. National Research Council. Space Science Board, COSPAR. 1969. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  • ^ Lockwood, Mike; M. Hapgood (2007). "The Rough Guide to the Moon and Mars" (PDF). Astron. Geophys. 48 (6): 11–17. Bibcode:2007A&G....48f..11L. doi:10.1111/j.1468-4004.2007.48611.x.
  • List of Explorers Program missions

    Missions

    1958–1992

  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • S-1
  • 6 (S-2)
  • 7 (S-1A)
  • S-46A
  • 8
  • S-56
  • 9 (S-56A)
  • S-45
  • 10
  • 11 (S-15)
  • S-45A
  • S-55
  • 12 (EPE-A)
  • 13 (S-55A)
  • 14 (EPE-B)
  • 15 (EPE-C)
  • 16 (S-55B)
  • 17 (AE-A)
  • 18 (IMP-A)
  • 19 (AD-A)
  • S-66A (BE-A)
  • 20 (IE-A)
  • 21 (IMP-B)
  • 22 (BE-B)
  • 23 (S-55C)
  • 24 (AD-B)
  • 25 (Injun 4, IE-B)
  • 26 (EPE-D)
  • 27 (BE-C)
  • 28 (IMP-C)
  • 29 (GEOS-A)
  • 30 (Solrad 8)
  • 31 (DME-A)
  • 32 (AE-B)
  • 33 (IMP-D)
  • 34 (IMP-F)
  • 35 (IMP-E)
  • 36 (GEOS-B)
  • 37 (Solrad 9)
  • 38 (RAE-A)
  • 39 (AD-C)
  • 40 (Injun 5)
  • 41 (IMP-G)
  • 42 (Uhuru, SAS-A)
  • 43 (IMP-I)
  • 44 (Solrad 10)
  • 45 (SSS-A)
  • 46 (MTS)
  • 47 (IMP-H)
  • 48 (SAS-B)
  • 49 (RAE-B)
  • 50 (IMP-J)
  • 51 (AE-C)
  • 52 (Hawkeye 1)
  • 53 (SAS-C)
  • 54 (AE-D)
  • 55 (AE-E)
  • DADE-A
  • DADE-B
  • 56 (ISEE-1)
  • 57 (IUE)
  • 58 (HCMM)
  • 59 (ICE)
  • 60 (SAGE)
  • 61 (Magsat)
  • 62 (DE-1)
  • 63 (DE-2)
  • 64 (SME)
  • 65 (CCE)
  • 66 (COBE)
  • 67 (EUVE)
  • MIDEX

  • 71 (ACE)
  • 77 (FUSE)
  • 78 (IMAGE)
  • 80 (WMAP)
  • FAME
  • 84 (Swift)
  • 85–89 (THEMIS)
  • 92 (WISE)
  • 95 (TESS)
  • 96 (ICON)
  • SPHEREx
  • MUSE
  • HelioSwarm
  • UVEX
  • SMEX

  • 70 (FAST)
  • 73 (TRACE)
  • 74 (SWAS)
  • 75 (WIRE)
  • 81 (RHESSI)
  • 83 (GALEX)
  • 90 (AIM)
  • 91 (IBEX)
  • 93 (NuSTAR)
  • 94 (IRIS)
  • GEMS
  • 97 (IXPE)
  • PUNCH
  • TRACERS
  • COSI
  • UNEX/MO/I

  • 72 (SNOE)
  • 76 (TERRIERS)
  • 79 (HETE-2)
  • INTEGRAL
  • 82 (CHIPSat)
  • CINDI
  • Suzaku
  • TWINS
  • Hitomi
  • NICER
  • GOLD
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  • EZIE
  • CASE
  • Proposals

    Proposals

  • Arcus
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  • EXCEDE
  • ESCAPE
    • Green titles indicates active current missions
  • Grey titles indicates cancelled missions
  • Italics indicate missions yet to launch
  • Symbol indicates failure en route or before intended mission data returned
  • Orbital launches in 1968

    1969 →

  • Explorer 36
  • Kosmos 199
  • OPS 1965
  • OPS 5028
  • Kosmos 200
  • Apollo 5
  • OPS 2243
  • OPS 6236
  • Kosmos 201
  • E-6LS No.112
  • Kosmos 202
  • Kosmos 203
  • OPS 7034
  • Zond 4
  • OGO-5
  • Kosmos 204
  • Kosmos 205
  • Explorer 37
  • DS-U1-Ya No.1
  • OPS 5057
  • Kosmos 206
  • OPS 4849
  • OPS 7076
  • Kosmos 207
  • Kosmos 208
  • Kosmos 209
  • Kosmos 210
  • Apollo 6
  • OV1-13
  • OV1-14
  • Luna 14
  • Kosmos 211
  • Kosmos 212
  • Kosmos 213
  • OPS 5165
  • Kosmos 214
  • Kosmos 215
  • Kosmos 216
  • Molniya-1 No.10
  • 7K-L1 No.7L
  • Kosmos 217
  • Kosmos 218
  • Kosmos 219
  • OPS 1419
  • Kosmos 220
  • ESRO-2B
  • Nimbus B
  • SECOR 10
  • OPS 7869
  • Kosmos 221
  • Kosmos 222
  • Kosmos 223
  • Kosmos 224
  • Sfera No.12L
  • OPS 5138
  • Kosmos 225
  • Kosmos 226
  • IDCSP 20
  • IDCSP 21
  • IDCSP 22
  • IDCSP 23
  • IDCSP 24
  • IDCSP 25
  • IDCSP 26
  • IDCSP 27
  • Strela-2 No.3
  • Kosmos 227
  • OPS 5343
  • OPS 5259
  • Kosmos 228
  • Kosmos 229
  • Explorer 38
  • Kosmos 230
  • Molniya-1 No.13
  • Kosmos 231
  • OV1-15
  • OV1-16
  • Kosmos 232
  • Kosmos 233
  • Kosmos 234
  • OPS 2222
  • OPS 5187
  • OPS 5955
  • Explorer 39
  • Explorer 40
  • Kosmos 235
  • ATS-4
  • ESSA-7
  • Orbiscal 1
  • OV5-8
  • Gridsphere 1
  • Gridsphere 2
  • Gridsphere B
  • Gridsphere R
  • LCS-3
  • LIDOS
  • SECOR 11
  • SECOR 12
  • Radcat
  • P68-1
  • Kosmos 236
  • Kosmos 237
  • Kosmos 238
  • Kosmos 239
  • OPS 5247
  • Kosmos 240
  • Zond 5
  • Kosmos 241
  • OPS 0165
  • OPS 8595
  • Intelsat III F-1
  • Kosmos 242
  • Kosmos 243
  • LES-6
  • OV2-5
  • ERS-21
  • ERS-28
  • Kosmos 244
  • Kosmos 245
  • ESRO-1A
  • Molniya-1 No.14
  • OPS 0964
  • Kosmos 246
  • Kosmos 247
  • Apollo 7
  • Kosmos 248
  • Kosmos 249
  • OPS 4078
  • Soyuz 2
  • Soyuz 3
  • Kosmos 250
  • Kosmos 251
  • Kosmos 252
  • OPS 1315
  • OPS 5296
  • Pioneer 9
  • ERS-31
  • Zond 6
  • Kosmos 253
  • Proton 4
  • Kosmos 254
  • Kosmos 255
  • STV-1
  • Kosmos 256
  • Kosmos 257
  • OPS 6518
  • HEOS-1
  • OAO-2
  • Kosmos 258
  • OPS 4740
  • OPS 7684
  • Kosmos 259
  • ESSA-8
  • Kosmos 260
  • Intelsat III F-2
  • Kosmos 261
  • Apollo 8
  • Kosmos 262
  • Payloads are separated by bullets ( · ), launches by pipes ( | ). Crewed flights are indicated in underline. Uncatalogued launch failures are listed in italics. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are denoted in (brackets).


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=SOLRAD_9&oldid=1173884271"

    Categories: 
    1968 in spaceflight
    Spacecraft launched in 1968
    Explorers Program
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