CALIPSO is a joint NASA (USA) and CNES (France) environmental satellite, built in the Cannes Mandelieu Space Center, which was launched atop a Delta II rocket on April 28, 2006. Its name stands for Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations. CALIPSO Launched Alongside CloudSat.
![]() CALIPSO | |
Mission type | Earth observation |
---|---|
Operator | NASA / CNES |
COSPAR ID | 2006-016A |
SATCAT no. | 29108 |
Website | www-calipso |
Mission duration | Elapsed: 16 years, 2 months, 9 days |
Spacecraft properties | |
Launch mass | 587 kilograms (1,294 lb) |
Dimensions | 1.49 m × 1.84 m × 2.31 m (4.9 ft × 6.0 ft × 7.6 ft) |
Power | 562 W |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | April 28, 2006, 10:02:16 (2006-04-28UTC10:02:16Z) UTC |
Rocket | Delta 7420-10C D314 |
Launch site | Vandenberg AFB SLC-2W |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Sun-synchronous |
Semi-major axis | 7,080.7 kilometres (4,399.7 mi) |
Eccentricity | 0.0001111 |
Perigee altitude | 701 kilometers (436 mi) |
Apogee altitude | 703 kilometers (437 mi) |
Inclination | 98.2176 degrees |
Period | 98.50 minutes |
RAAN | 285.6451 degrees |
Argument of perigee | 80.3481 degrees |
Mean anomaly | 279.7840 degrees |
Mean motion | 14.57093780 |
Revolution no. | 40530 |
Passive and active remote sensing Instruments on board the CALIPSO satellite monitor aerosols and clouds 24 hours a day. CALIPSO is part of the "A Train", flying in formation with several other satellites (Aqua, Aura and CloudSat).
Three instruments:
In February 2009, CALIPSO switched over to the redundant laser as scheduled. The primary laser achieved its mission goal of three years of successful operation, and the redundant laser has been performing beyond expectations.
The CALIPSO mission was granted extended mission status in June 2009.[1]
Orbital meteorological and remote sensing systems | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Concepts |
| ||||||||||
Current projects |
| ||||||||||
Former projects |
|
← 2005 · Orbital launches in 2006 · 2007 → | |
---|---|
New Horizons | Daichi | EchoStar X | Himawari 7 | Akari · CUTE-1.7 + APD | Arabsat-4A | Spainsat · Hot Bird 7A | ST-5 | FalconSAT-2 | Soyuz TMA-8 | JCSAT-5A | COSMIC | Astra 1KR | Progress M-56 | EROS-B | Yaogan 1 | CALIPSO · CloudSat | Kosmos 2420 | GOES 13 | Satmex 6 · Thaicom 5 | Resurs-DK No.1 | KazSat-1 | Galaxy 16 | USA-187 · USA-188 · USA-189 | Progress M-57 | Kosmos 2421 | USA-184 | STS-121 (MPLM) | INSAT-4C | Genesis I | Kosmos 2422 | BelKA · Baumanets · PicPot · SACRED · ION · Rincon 1 · ICECube-1 · KUTESat Pathfinder · SEEDS · nCube · HAUSAT-1 · MEROPE · CP-2 · AeroCube-1 · CP-1 · Mea Huaka'i · ICECube-2 | Arirang-2 | Hot Bird 8 | JCSAT-3A · Syracuse 3B | Koreasat 5 | Shijian 8 | STS-115 (ITS P3/4) | IGS-3A | Chinasat-22A | Kosmos 2423 | Soyuz TMA-9 | Hinode · HIT-SAT · SSSAT | USA-190 | DirecTV-9S · Optus D1 · LDREX | MetOp-A | Progress M-58 | Shijian 6C · Shijian 6D | STEREO | Sinosat-2 | XM-4 | USA-191 | Badr-4 | USA-192 | Fengyun 2-05 | WildBlue 1 · AMC-18 | STS-116 (ITS P5 · SpaceHab LSM · ANDE-MAA · ANDE-FACL · RAFT1 · MARScom · MEPSI-2) | MEASAT-3 | USA-193 | TacSat-2 · GeneSat | Kiku 8 | SAR-Lupe 1 | Meridian 1 | Kosmos 2424 · Kosmos 2425 · Kosmos 2426 | CoRoT | |
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. |