Girish Mahajan (Editor)

PAGEOS

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Names
  
PAGEOS-A

SATCAT no.
  
02253

Inclination
  
87.14°

Launch mass
  
56.7 kg

Launch date
  
24 June 1966

COSPAR ID
  
1966-056A

Inclination
  
87.14°

Period
  
3 hours

Launch mass
  
56.7 kg

Launch site
  
Vandenberg Air Force Base

PAGEOS spaceflight101comreentrywpcontentuploadssit

Operator
  
NASA Office of Space Applications

Dimensions
  
30.48 m (100.0 ft) diameter

Rocket
  
Thrust augmented Thor-Agena D

PAGEOS (PAssive Geodetic Earth Orbiting Satellite) was a balloon satellite which was launched by NASA in June 1966.

Contents

Design

Pageos had a diameter of exactly 100 feet (30.48 m), consisted of a 0.5 mils (12.7 µm) thick mylar plastic film coated with vapour deposited aluminium enclosing a volume of 524,000 cubic feet (14,800 m3) and was used for the Weltnetz der Satellitentriangulation (Worldwide Satellite Triangulation Network) – a global cooperation organized by Hellmut Schmid (Switzerland & USA) 1969-1973.

Finished in 1974, the network connected 46 stations (3000–5000 km distance) of all continents with an accuracy of 3–5 m (approx. 20 times better than terrestrial triangulations at that time).

Orbit

The PAGEOS spacecraft was placed into a polar orbit (inclination 85–86°) with a height of approx. 4000 km, which had gradually lowered during its 9 years of operation. The satellite partly disintegrated in July 1975, which was followed by a second break-up that occurred in January 1976 resulting in the release of a large number of fragments. Most of these re-entered during the following decade, but at least one piece remains in orbit. PAGEOS data has been tracked 11 times.

PAGEOS' predecessors in satellite triangulation were the balloons Echo 1 (1960, 30 m) and Echo 2 (1964, 40 m) which were also used for passive telecommunication. Their apparent magnitude (brightness) was 1 mag, that of Pageos 2 mag (like Polaris) due to its higher orbit. Pageos could therefore be observed simultaneously e.g. from the ground in places such as Europe and North America. PAGEOS appeared as a slow-moving star (at first glance it would appear to be stationary). Its orbital period was approximately three hours. Because of its high orbit and polar inclination it would avoid the Earth's shadow and be observed any time of the night (low-orbit satellites are only observable shortly after sunset and before sunrise). In the early 1970s PAGEOS varied from 2nd apparent magnitude to beyond visibility over a period of a few minutes.

In 2016, one of the largest fragments of PAGEOS has de-orbited.

References

PAGEOS Wikipedia