Mission Demonstration Satellite 1 (MDS-1) or Tsubasa (COSPAR 2002-003A, SATCAT 27367) was a Japanese technology test mission. It was launched by the second H-2A on February 4, 2002 from the Tanegashima Space Center. After the launch, MDS-1 was renamed Tsubasa, meaning wings in Japanese. Tsubasa was placed in a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO). It ended its operational phase on 26 February 2003. A similar mission, MDS-2, was cancelled.
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| - MDS-1 (en)
- つばさ (人工衛星) (ja)
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| - つばさは日本の民生部品・コンポーネント実証衛星(Mission Demonstration test Satellite-1、略称:MDS-1)である。2002年2月4日にH-IIAロケットで打ち上げられ、予定されていた1年のミッション期間を超える1年7ヶ月間ミッションを行い、2003年9月27日にミッションを終了した。2020年頃に大気圏に再突入すると推定されている。 (ja)
- Mission Demonstration Satellite 1 (MDS-1) or Tsubasa (COSPAR 2002-003A, SATCAT 27367) was a Japanese technology test mission. It was launched by the second H-2A on February 4, 2002 from the Tanegashima Space Center. After the launch, MDS-1 was renamed Tsubasa, meaning wings in Japanese. Tsubasa was placed in a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO). It ended its operational phase on 26 February 2003. A similar mission, MDS-2, was cancelled. (en)
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| - Mission Demonstration Satellite 1 (MDS-1) or Tsubasa (COSPAR 2002-003A, SATCAT 27367) was a Japanese technology test mission. It was launched by the second H-2A on February 4, 2002 from the Tanegashima Space Center. After the launch, MDS-1 was renamed Tsubasa, meaning wings in Japanese. Tsubasa was placed in a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO). It ended its operational phase on 26 February 2003. A similar mission, MDS-2, was cancelled. The purpose of the mission was to test the performance of commercial off-the-shelf components, including solar batteries, semiconductors and computers. MDS-1 also carried instrumentation to observe how changes in the environment as the satellite passed through the Van Allen radiation belts affected the performance of each component. Among these instruments were a dosimeter using radiation-sensitive field effect transistors, a magnetometer, and a device for tracking heavy ions. During the mission, MDS-1 tracked the occurrence of single event upsets (SEU), finding the majority occurred while passing the inner belt during solar maximum and were likely caused by high energy protons. The whole weight of the satellite was 480 kg. (en)
- つばさは日本の民生部品・コンポーネント実証衛星(Mission Demonstration test Satellite-1、略称:MDS-1)である。2002年2月4日にH-IIAロケットで打ち上げられ、予定されていた1年のミッション期間を超える1年7ヶ月間ミッションを行い、2003年9月27日にミッションを終了した。2020年頃に大気圏に再突入すると推定されている。 (ja)
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