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Solar Mesosphere Explorer

 
Wikipedia: Solar Mesosphere Explorer
Solar Mesosphere Explorer / Explorer 64
Solar mesosphere explorer.gif
Organization NASA
Launch date October 6, 1981
Launch vehicle Delta rocket
Launch site Vandenberg Air Force Base
Mass 437 kilograms (963 pounds)
Power Solar panels which charged NiCad batteries
Instruments
Main instruments Ultraviolet ozone spectrometer
1.27 micrometre spectrometer
nitrogen dioxide spectrometer
four-channel infrared radiometer
solar ultraviolet monitor
solar proton alarm detector

The Solar Mesosphere Explorer (also known as Explorer 64) was an United States unmanned spacecraft to investigate the processes that create and destroy ozone in Earth's upper atmosphere. The mesosphere is a layer of the atmosphere extending from the top of the stratosphere to an altitude of about 80 kilometers (50 miles). The spacecraft carried five instruments to measure ozone, water vapor and incoming solar radiation.

Launched on October 6, 1981, on a Delta rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base, in California, the satellite returned data until April 4, 1989. The spacecraft reentered Earth's atmosphere on March 5, 1991.

Managed for NASA by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Solar Mesosphere Explorer was built by Ball Space Systems and operated by the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics of the University of Colorado where one hundred undergraduate and graduate students were involved.[1]

  • Mass: 437 kilograms (963 pounds)
  • Power: Solar panels which charged NiCad batteries
  • Configuration: Cylinder 1.25 meter (4.1 ft) diameter by 1.7 meter (5.6 ft) high
  • Science instruments: Ultraviolet ozone spectrometer, 1.27 micrometre spectrometer, nitrogen dioxide spectrometer, four-channel infrared radiometer, solar ultraviolet monitor, solar proton alarm detector

References

  1. ^ SME: Solar Mesosphere Explorer, University of Colorado at Boulder, http://lasp.colorado.edu/mission_history/missions/past/SME.htm

External links


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