AMPTE-Charge Composition Explorer, also called as AMPTE-CCE or Explorer 65, was a NASA satellite designed and tasked to study the magnetosphere of Earth, being launched as part of the Explorer program. The AMPTE (Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers) mission was designed to study the access of solar wind ions to the magnetosphere, the convective-diffusive transport and energization of magnetospheric particles, and the interactions of plasmas in space.[3]
![]() AMPTE-CCE (Explorer 65) satellite | |
Names | Explorer 65 AMPTE-Charge Composition Explorer |
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Mission type | Magnetosphere research |
Operator | NASA |
COSPAR ID | 1984-088A ![]() |
SATCAT no. | 15199 |
Mission duration | 5 years (achieved) |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | Explorer LXV |
Spacecraft type | Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers (AMPTE) |
Bus | AMPTE-CEE |
Launch mass | 242 kg (534 lb) |
Power | 140 watts |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 16 August 1984, 14:48 UTC[1] |
Rocket | Delta 3924 (Delta 175) |
Launch site | Cape Canaveral, LC-17A |
Contractor | Douglas Aircraft Company |
Entered service | 16 August 1984 |
End of mission | |
Last contact | 12 July 1989 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric orbit[2] |
Regime | Highly elliptical orbit |
Perigee altitude | 0.17 RE |
Apogee altitude | 8.79 RE |
Inclination | 4.8° |
Period | 16 hours |
Instruments | |
CCE Magnetometer (MAG) Charge-Energy-Mass Spectrometer (CHEM) Hot Plasma Composition Experiment (HPCE) Medium Energy Particle Analyzer (MEPA) Plasma Wave Experiment (PWE) | |
Explorer program |
The AMPTE-CCE is one of the three components of the international space mission AMPTE, which also included AMPTE-IRM (Ion Release Module), designed by Germany, and AMPTE-UKS (United Kingsom Subsatellite), provided by the United Kingdom.[3]
The mission consisted of three spacecraft: AMPTE-CCE; AMPTE-IRM, which provided multiple ion releases in the solar wind, the magnetosheath, and the magnetotail, with in situ diagnostics of each; and AMPTE-UKS, which uses thrusters to keep station near the AMPTE-IRM to provide two-point local measurements. The AMPTE-CCE (Charge Composition Explorer) spacecraft was instrumented to detect those lithium and barium tracer ions from the AMPTE-IRM releases that were transported into the magnetosphere within the AMPTE-CCE orbit. The spacecraft was spin-stabilized at 10 rpm, with its spin axis in the equatorial plane, and offset from the Earth-Sun line by about 20°. It could adjust attitude control with both magnetic torquing and cold gas thrusters. The AMPTE-CCE used a 2.E8-bit tape recorder and redundant 2.5-watts S-band transponders. The spacecraft battery was charged by a 140-watts solar array.[3]
AMPTE-CCE was launched with the two other satellites of the AMPTE program on 16 August 1984, at 16:48 UTC, from a Cape Canaveral launch pad by a Delta 3924 launch vehicle.[1] It was placed in an equatorial orbit of 1,100 × 50,000 km (680 × 31,070 mi) with an inclination of 4.8°.[2]
Charge Composition Explorer was instrumented to detect those lithium and barium tracer ions from the IRM released that were transported into the magnetosphere within the CCE orbit. The spacecraft was spin-stabilized at 10 rpm, with its spin axis in the equatorial plane, and offset from the Earth-Sun line by about 20°. It could adjust attitude with both magnetic torqueing and cold gas thrusters.[3]
The satellite carries 5 scientific instruments that are used to measure the composition of the particles in the magnetosphere throughout their energy spectrum and the changes that affect them with the objective of determining the main processes governing their excitation, their displacement and their disappearance. CCE must also detect the lithium and barium ions released by the MRI satellite and transported in the magnetosphere:[4]
The instrument was a triaxial fluxgate magnetometer mounted on a 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in) boom. It had seven automatically switchable ranges (from ± 16 nT to ± 65,536 nT) with resolution commensurate with a 13-bit analog-to-digital converter, and was read out at 8.6 vector samples/second. The signals from two sensors (one parallel to the spin axis and one orthogonal) were also fed into 5-50 Hz bandpass channels that were read out every 5 seconds.[5][6]
The instrument consisted of an entrance collimator and electrostatic analyzer section followed by a time-of-flight and total-energy-measurement section floating at a 30 kV acceleration potential. The energy range covered was from 1 to 300 keV/Q, with a geometric factor of 2.E-3 cm2-sr and 32-sector angular resolution. Energy resolution was 5 to 18%, and all charge states and isotopes of Hydrogen (H) and Helium (He), the charge states of Lithium (Li), and the major elements and charge states up to and including Iron (Fe) were resolved.[7][8]
This instrument consisted of an entrance collimator and retarding potential analyzer, a curved-plate electrostatic energy analyzer, and a combined electrostatic-magnetic mass analyzer in series. The energy range covered was approximately 0 to 17 keV/Q, with a geometric factor ranging from 0.01 to 0.05 cm2-sr, an energy resolution from 6 to 60%, and an M/Q resolution of 10%. This instrument cleanly separated Li+ and Ba+ tracer ions from the background. It was nearly identical to one flown on Dynamics Explorer 1 by the same group of investigators. An additional set of eight spectrometers containing permanent bending magnets and channeltrons measured electrons in eight channels from 50 eV to 25 keV.[9][10]
The instrument consisted of a collimator and an electron sweeping magnet followed by a 10 cm (3.9 in) time of flight (TOF) telescope with thin foils at the front and midpoint and a solid-state detector at the rear. Incident ion TOF was measured from the front foil to the back detector and from the center foil to the back detector, and energy was measured in the back detector. The dual TOF measurement and very fast energy channel processing gave high immunity to accidental events, and allowed the instrument to measure the composition and spectra of both common species and tracer ions over a species-dependent energy range of >10 keV/nucleon to 6 MeV/nucleon, with a geometric factor of 1.E-2 cm2-sr and 32-sector angular resolution.[11][12]
The instrument consisted of a balanced electric dipole with an effective length of 70 cm (28 in) and six bandpass channels covering the range from 5 Hz to 178 kHz. The highest five channels were sampled every 0.6 seconds and the lowest (5–50 Hz) channel was sampled every 20 seconds. The instrument was the flight spare of the Pioneer Venus Electric Field Detector, with two additional filters added.[13][14]
The AMPTE-CCE encountered command module/power supply problems since the beginning of 1989, and failed as of 12 July 1989.[3]
Explorers Program | |||
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List of Explorers Program missions | |||
Missions | ![]() | ||
Proposals |
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← 1983 · Orbital launches in 1984 · 1985 → | |
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Kosmos 1522 · Kosmos 1523 · Kosmos 1524 · Kosmos 1525 · Kosmos 1526 · Kosmos 1527 · Kosmos 1528 · Kosmos 1529 | Kosmos 1530 | Kosmos 1531 | Kosmos 1532 | Yuri 2a | Kosmos 1533 | Kosmos 1534 | Shiyan Tongbu Tongxing Weixing 1 | OPS 0441 | Kosmos 1535 | STS-41-B (Westar 6 · Palapa B2 · IRT · SPAS-1A) | OPS 8737 · OPS 8737 SSU-1 · OPS 8737 SSU-2 · OPS 8737 SSU-3 | Kosmos 1536 | Soyuz T-10 | Ōzora | Gran' No.25L | Kosmos 1537 | Progress 19 | Kosmos 1538 | Kosmos 1539 | Landsat 5 · UoSAT-2 | Kosmos 1540 | Intelsat V F-8 | Kosmos 1541 | Kosmos 1542 | Kosmos 1543 | Kosmos 1544 | Ekran No.26L | Molniya-1 No.51 | Kosmos 1545 | Kosmos 1546 | Soyuz T-11 | Kosmos 1547 | STS-41-C (LDEF) | Shiyan Tongbu Tongxing Weixing 2 | Kosmos 1548 | OPS 7641 | Progress 20 | OPS 8424 | Kosmos 1549 | Gorizont No.19L | Progress 21 | Kosmos 1550 | Kosmos 1551 | Kosmos 1552 | Kosmos 1553 | Kosmos 1554 · Kosmos 1555 · Kosmos 1556 | Kosmos 1557 | Spacenet 1 | Kosmos 1558 | Progress 22 | Kosmos 1559 · Kosmos 1560 · Kosmos 1561 · Kosmos 1562 · Kosmos 1563 · Kosmos 1564 · Kosmos 1565 · Kosmos 1566 | Kosmos 1567 | Kosmos 1568 | Kosmos 1569 | Kosmos 1570 | Intelsat V F-9 | Kosmos 1571 | USA-1 | Kosmos 1572 | Kosmos 1573 | Kosmos 1574 | Gran' No.27L | Kosmos 1575 | USA-2 · USA-3 | Kosmos 1576 | Kosmos 1577 | Kosmos 1578 | Kosmos 1579 | Kosmos 1580 | Kosmos 1581 | Meteor-2 No.16 | Soyuz T-12 | Kosmos 1582 | Kosmos 1583 | Kosmos 1584 | Kosmos 1585 | Gorizont No.20L | Kosmos 1586 | Himawari 3 | ECS-2 · Telecom 1A | Kosmos 1587 | Kosmos 1588 | Kosmos 1589 | Molniya-1 No.53 | Progress 23 | Kosmos 1590 | CCE · IRM · UKS · SCE | Molniya-1 No.54 | Ekran No.27L | USA-4 | Kosmos 1591 | STS-41-D (SBS-4 · Leasat 2 · Telstar 3C) | Kosmos 1592 | Kosmos 1593 · Kosmos 1594 · Kosmos 1595 | Kosmos 1596 | USA-5 | Fanhui Shi Weixing 7 | Kosmos 1597 | Kosmos 1598 | Galaxy 3 | Kosmos 1599 | Kosmos 1600 | Kosmos 1601 | Kosmos 1602 | Kosmos 1603 | Kosmos 1604 | STS-41-G (ERBS · OSTA-3) | Kosmos 1605 | Nova 3 | Kosmos 1606 | Kosmos 1607 | STS-51-A (Anik D2 · Leasat 1) | Spacenet 2 · MARECS-2 | NATO 3D | Kosmos 1608 | Kosmos 1609 | Kosmos 1610 | Kosmos 1611 | Kosmos 1612 | Kosmos 1613 | USA-6 | NOAA-9 | Molniya-1 No.55 | Vega 1 | Kosmos 1614 | Kosmos 1615 | Vega 2 | USA-7 | |
Payloads are separated by bullets ( · ), launches by pipes ( | ). Crewed flights are indicated in underline. Uncatalogued launch failures are listed in italics. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are denoted in (brackets). |