The SACI-2 was a Brazilian experimental satellite, designed and built by the Brazilian Institute for Space Research (INPE). It was launched on 11 December 1999 from the INPE base in Alcântara, Maranhão, by the Brazilian VLS-1 V02 rocket. Due to failure of its second stage, the rocket veered off course and had to be destroyed 3 minutes and 20 seconds after launch.
Mission type | Earth orbiter |
---|---|
Operator | INPE |
COSPAR ID | 1999-F05 |
Mission duration | Launch failure |
Spacecraft properties | |
Manufacturer | INPE |
Launch mass | 80 kilograms (180 lb) |
Power | 150 watts |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | November 11, 1999 (1999-11-11), 19:40:00 UTC |
Rocket | VLS-1 V2 |
Launch site | Alcântara VLS Pad |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Sun-synchronous |
Eccentricity | 0.00084 |
Perigee altitude | 733 kilometres (455 mi) |
Apogee altitude | 745 kilometres (463 mi) |
Inclination | 98.6° |
Period | 99.6 minutes |
Epoch | Planned |
The name was officially an acronym of Satélite de Aplicações CIentíficas ("Scientific Applications Satellite"), but was obviously taken from the Saci character of Brazilian folklore.
The satellite weighted approximately 80 kg. It was a box approximately 60 cm long and 40 cm square, with a circular base plate and surrounded by a metal ring, both about 80 cm in diameter. Besides being a technology testbed, it carried four scientific payloads (PLASMEX, MAGNEX, OCRAS and PHOTO), with a total weight of 10 kg, to investigate plasma bubbles in the geomagnetic field, air glow, and anomalous cosmic radiation fluxes. It was meant to circle the Earth on a circular orbit at 750 km altitude, inclined 17.5 ° from the Equator.
The spin-stabilized spacecraft carried two S-band communication links (a 2W, 256 kb/ s downlink and 19.2 kbit/s uplink), and a 48 MB solid state data recorder. It is variously reported to have cost between US$ 800,000[1] and US$1.7 million.[2]
← 1998 · Orbital launches in 1999 · 2000 → | |
---|---|
January | |
February | |
March |
|
April |
|
May |
|
June | |
July |
|
August |
|
September |
|
October | |
November |
|
December |
|
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ). Cubesats are smaller. Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses). |
![]() | This article about one or more spacecraft of Brazil is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |