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USA 229

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Mission type
  
SIGINT

COSPAR ID
  
2011-014A

Rocket
  
Atlas V 411 AV-027

Inclination
  
63.45°

Perigee
  
1.017 million m

Regime
  
Low Earth orbit

Operator
  
US NRO

SATCAT no.
  
37386

Launch site
  
Vandenberg SLC-3E

Apogee
  
1.204 million m

Launch date
  
15 April 2011

Bus
  
Naval Ocean Surveillance System

Similar
  
USA‑224, USA‑225, PSSC‑2, Explorer‑1 [Prime], AubieSat‑1

USA-229, known before launch as NRO Launch 34 (NROL-34), is a pair of American signals intelligence satellites which were launched in 2011. They are operated by the United States National Reconnaissance Office.

Both satellites were deployed by a United Launch Alliance Atlas V 411 carrier rocket, which launched from Space Launch Complex 3E at the Vandenberg Air Force Base. The launch occurred at 04:24 UTC on 15 April 2011. The rocket placed the satellites into a low Earth orbit. By 04:29 UTC, official updates on the status of the spacecraft had been discontinued.

Whilst details of the satellites and their missions are officially classified, amateur observers have identified that the Atlas V deployed two satellites, one of which has officially been catalogued as debris. The two spacecraft have been identified as being a pair of third or fourth generation Naval Ocean Surveillance System satellites. Amateur observations have located the spacecraft in an orbit with a perigee of 1,025 kilometres (637 mi) and an apogee of 1,207 kilometres (750 mi), inclined at 64.4 degrees to the plane of the equator. Current generation NOSS satellites are always launched and operated in pairs, and are used to locate and track ships from the radio transmissions that they emit.

References

USA-229 Wikipedia