Sputnik 99 (Russian: Спутник 99, also Radio Sputnik 19 or RS-19) launched on April 2, 1999 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome onboard a Soyuz-U-PVB launch vehicle. The nano-satellite was created in a joint-venture by Rosaviakosmos, Aéro-Club de France, and the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT) as a marketing effort financially backed by The Swatch Group. Sputnik 99 was deployed from the Mir space station on April 16, 1999, even though its primary mission package, an amateur radio broadcast system (AR), had been purposely disabled, immediately rendering the satellite a piece of space flotsam.
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| - Sputnik 99 (de)
- Sputnik 99 (en)
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| - Sputnik 99 (russisch Спутник 99, französisch Spoutnik 99), auch Sputnik Jr 3, Radio Sputnik 19 und RS-19 war ein französisch-russischer Amateurfunksatellit. Der Satellit bestand aus einem Modell des Sputnik 1 im Maßstab 1:3, hatte eine Masse von ca. 3,5 kg und wurde von der AMSAT-France gebaut. (de)
- Sputnik 99 (Russian: Спутник 99, also Radio Sputnik 19 or RS-19) launched on April 2, 1999 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome onboard a Soyuz-U-PVB launch vehicle. The nano-satellite was created in a joint-venture by Rosaviakosmos, Aéro-Club de France, and the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT) as a marketing effort financially backed by The Swatch Group. Sputnik 99 was deployed from the Mir space station on April 16, 1999, even though its primary mission package, an amateur radio broadcast system (AR), had been purposely disabled, immediately rendering the satellite a piece of space flotsam. (en)
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| - Sputnik 99 (russisch Спутник 99, französisch Spoutnik 99), auch Sputnik Jr 3, Radio Sputnik 19 und RS-19 war ein französisch-russischer Amateurfunksatellit. Der Satellit bestand aus einem Modell des Sputnik 1 im Maßstab 1:3, hatte eine Masse von ca. 3,5 kg und wurde von der AMSAT-France gebaut. (de)
- Sputnik 99 (Russian: Спутник 99, also Radio Sputnik 19 or RS-19) launched on April 2, 1999 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome onboard a Soyuz-U-PVB launch vehicle. The nano-satellite was created in a joint-venture by Rosaviakosmos, Aéro-Club de France, and the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT) as a marketing effort financially backed by The Swatch Group. Sputnik 99 was deployed from the Mir space station on April 16, 1999, even though its primary mission package, an amateur radio broadcast system (AR), had been purposely disabled, immediately rendering the satellite a piece of space flotsam. (en)
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