Lapan- TUBSat is Indonesia’s first remote sensing satellite, made by the experts from National Institute of Aeronautics and Space (Lembaga Penerbangan dan Antariksa Nasional, Lapan) and Technical University Berlin (TUB) Germany. The uses of the satellite are for Indonesian natural resources observation and weather forecast for the Indonesian area. Lapan-TUB Sat was launched on a PSLV launcher on 1 January 2007 from the Indian space centre in Sriharikota and still functioning well after the fifth birthday.[1]
![]() | This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (February 2012) |
Lapan-TUBSat is a micro satellite, weight of 56 Kilograms, and orbit at 630 kilometers above Indonesia. This satellite passes the polar orbital (from one polar to another) and across the archipelago for two or three times each day. Image of Lapan- TUBsat, now can only be received by Lapan ground station in Rumpin, West Java, called remote sensing image for West Indonesia. Afterward, ground station in Pare Pare, South Celebes and Biak Island, Papua, will be built to receive image from remote sensing satellite for Middle and East Indonesia.
Before this discovery, image input and satellite data for the observation need, are received from other countries’ natural resources satellites, such as Landsat and NOAA (United States), SPOT (France), Radarsat (Canada), JRS (Japan), and also Feng Yun (China). Lapan as the institute that is made to fulfill this need could not fix the satellites’ orbital tracks, its coverage area, and time limit of the satellites rotation above Indonesia.
Now, the Lapan-TUBsat can relay topography images from several regions in Indonesia. At the test phase, the satellite was aimed to Strait of Madura, North Java, Bangka Maritime and Strait of Malaya. Those areas classified as catastrophes areas of accident and flood. This point is consistent with the Lapan-TUBsat mission, giving attention to potentially dangerous areas in Indonesia.
← 2006 · Orbital launches in 2007 · 2008 → | |
---|---|
Cartosat-2 · SRE-1 · Lapan-TUBsat · Pehuensat-1 | Progress M-59 | NSS-8 | Beidou-1D | THEMIS A · THEMIS B · THEMIS C · THEMIS D · THEMIS E | IGS Radar 2 · IGS Optical 3V | ASTRO · NEXTSat · MidSTAR-1 · FalconSAT-3 · STPSat-1 · CFESat | Skynet 5A · INSAT-4B | DemoFlight 2 | Soyuz TMA-10 | Anik F3 | Hai Yang 1B | Compass-M1 | EgyptSat 1 · Saudisat-3 · SaudiComsat-3 · SaudiComsat-4 · SaudiComsat-5 · SaudiComsat-6 · SaudiComsat-7 · CP-3 · CP-4 · CAPE-1 · Libertad 1 · AeroCube 2 · CSTB-1 · MAST | AGILE · AAM | NFIRE | AIM | Astra 1L · Galaxy 17 | Progress M-60 | NigComSat-1 | Yaogan 2 · Zheda PiXing 1 | Globalstar 65 · Globalstar 69 · Globalstar 71 · Globalstar 72 | Sinosat-3 | Kosmos 2427 | COSMO-1 | STS-117 (ITS S3/4) | Ofek-7 | TerraSAR-X | USA-194 | Genesis II | Kosmos 2428 | SAR-Lupe 2 | zhongxing 6B | DirecTV-10 | Progress M-61 | Phoenix | STS-118 (ITS S5 · SpaceHab LSM) | Spaceway-3 · BSAT-3a | INSAT-4CR | JCSAT-11 | Kosmos 2429 | Kaguya (Okina · Ouna) | Foton-M No.3 · YES2 | WorldView-1 | CBERS-2B | Dawn | Intelsat 11 · Optus D2 | Soyuz TMA-11 | USA-195 | USA-196 | Globalstar 66 · Globalstar 67 · Globalstar 78 · Globalstar 70 | Kosmos 2430 | STS-120 (Harmony) | Chang'e 1 | Kosmos 2431 · Kosmos 2432 · Kosmos 2433 | SAR-Lupe 3 · Rubin-7 | USA-197 | Yaogan 3 | Skynet 5B · Star One C1 | Sirius 4 | Globus-1M No.11L | COSMO-2 | USA-198 | Radarsat-2 | USA-199 | Horizons-2 · Rascom-QAF 1 | Progress M-62 | Kosmos 2434 · Kosmos 2435 · Kosmos 2436 | |
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. |