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Australis (Oscar 5) [Amsat] |
Oscar (Orbiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio) 5 was a 43 x 30 x 15 cm rectangular prism with reflective stripping applied for temperature control. Four monopole antennae extended from the sides. The satellite carried two tracking beacon transmitters. It carried horizon sensors for determination of spin rate, and had a magnetic attitude stabilization control system. A command system was used to activate the satellite 10 m (29.450 MHz) beacon only on weekends (Friday AM to Monday AM). The seven-channel telemetry reported, by modulation of the beacon signals, the battery conditions, spacecraft temperatures, and horizon sensor responses. Several thousand transmissions were logged and formal telemetry reports received from more than 200 observers in over 25 countries.
Australis-OSCAR 5 was launched piggyback with Tiros M. It
was the first amateur satellite to be remotely controlled. Built by students at The
University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Battery powered, Australis-OSCAR
5 transmitted telemetry on both 2 meter (144.050 MHz at 50 mW) and 10 meter (29.450 MHz at
250 mW) bands that operated for 23 and 46 days respectively. Passive magnetic attitude
stabilization was performed by carrying two bar magnets to align with the Earth's magnetic
field in order to provide a favorable antenna footprint. The University of Melbourne
compiled tracking reports from hundreds of stations in 27 countries.
| Nation: | Australia |
|---|---|
| Type / Application: | Amateur communication |
| Operator: | |
| Contractors: | University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
| Equipment: | |
| Configuration: | |
| Propulsion: | none |
| Lifetime: | |
| Mass: | 17.7 kg |
| Orbit: | 1431 km x 1475 km, 101.4° |
| Satellite | Date | LS | Launcher | Remarks: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australis (Oscar 5, AO 5, A-O-A) | 23.01.1970 | Va SLC-2W | Delta-N6 | with Tiros M |
Last update: 27.09.2009
Contact: gunter.krebs@skyrocket.de
© Gunter Dirk Krebs