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USA 165

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Mission type
  
Technology

COSPAR ID
  
2005-011A

Rocket
  
Minotaur I

Launch date
  
11 April 2005

Launch mass
  
100 kg

Apogee
  
875,000 m

Operator
  
AFRL

Manufacturer
  
Lockheed Martin

Launch site
  
Vandenberg SLC-8

Period
  
1.7 hours

Launch mass
  
100 kg

USA-165 httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons55

Contractor
  
Orbital Sciences Corporation

Similar
  
XSS 10, DART, TacSat‑2, TacSat‑3, MightySat‑1

USA-165 or XSS-11 (Experimental Satellite System-11) is a small, washing-machine-sized, low-cost spacecraft developed by the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory’s Space Vehicles Directorate to test technology for proximity operations. In particular, the satellite was designed to demonstrate "autonomous rendezvous and proximity maneuvers." In other words, it would approach, investigate, and photograph other spacecraft in Earth orbit. It would help test the feasibility of in-space inspection and repair. The spacecraft was also designed to test systems that would allow the spacecraft to maneuver autonomously.

USA-165 was built by Lockheed Martin and weighed 125 kg with an excess of 600 m/s delta-v. USA-165 was launched into Low Earth Orbit on April 11, 2005 on a Minotaur rocket and remained in its primary orbit for over eighteen months, but then in December 2006 it was maneuvered into a disposal orbit and lost to satellite spotters. USA-165 was later rediscovered by amateur satellite watcher Kevin Fetter.

The NASA GRAIL spacecraft design was based on XSS-11 design.

References

USA-165 Wikipedia


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