USA-130
A DSP Satellite similar to USA-130 | |
Mission type | Military |
---|---|
Operator | Defense Support Program |
COSPAR ID | 1997-008A[1] |
SATCAT no. | 24737 |
Spacecraft properties | |
Manufacturer | Northrop Grumman[2] |
Dry mass | 2,380 kg (5,250 lb)[2] |
Power | Solar panels[2] |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | February 24, 1997, 20:20 (1997-02-24UTC20:20) UTC[1] |
Rocket | Titan 4B |
Launch site | Cape Canaveral |
Orbital parameters | |
Semi-major axis | 42,165 km (26,200 mi)[3] |
Perigee altitude | 35,778.5 km (22,231.7 mi)[3] |
Apogee altitude | 35,810.0 km (22,251.3 mi)[3] |
Inclination | 13.1°[3] |
Period | 1436.1 minutes[3] |
USA-130 is an American reconnaissance satellite that was launched in 1997. It was a DSP-I block 5 missile detection satellite run by the Defense Support Program. It is currently out of service.
References
- ^ a b "NASA - NSSDCA - Spacecraft - Details". nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov.
- ^ a b c Krebs, Gunter D. "DSP 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 (Phase 3)". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved February 24, 2023.
- ^ a b c d e "Technical details for satellite USA 130". N2YO.com - Real Time Satellite Tracking and Predictions.
- v
- t
- e
← 1996
Orbital launches in 19971998 →
- STS-81
- GPS IIR-1
- GE 2
- Nahuel 1A
- Soyuz TM-25
- STS-82
- Haruka
- Kosmos 2337
- Kosmos 2338
- Kosmos 2339
- Gonets-D1 #4
- Gonets-D1 #5
- Gonets-D1 #6
- JCSAT-R
- USA-130
- Intelsat 801
- Mozhayets 2
- Tempo-2
- STS-83
- USA-131
- Progress M-34
- Kosmos 2340
- Thaicom 3
- BSAT-1a
- Kosmos 2341
- Minisat 01
- Founders
- GOES 10
- Iridium 4
- Iridium 5
- Iridium 6
- Iridium 7
- Iridium 8
- Chinasat 6A
- Kosmos 2342
- STS-84
- Kosmos 2343
- Tselina-2
- Thor 2
- Telstar 5
- Inmarsat-3 F4
- INSAT-2D
- Kosmos 2344
- Fengyun 2A
- Iridium 9
- Iridium 10
- Iridium 11
- Iridium 12
- Iridium 13
- Iridium 14
- Iridium 16
- Intelsat 802
- STS-94
- Progress M-35
- Iridium 15
- Iridium 17
- Iridium 18
- Iridium 20
- Iridium 21
- USA-132
- Superbird-C
- OrbView-2
- Soyuz TM-26
- STS-85 (CRISTA-SPAS)
- PAS-6
- Kosmos 2345
- Agila 2
- Iridium 22
- Iridium 23
- Iridium 24
- Iridium 25
- Iridium 26
- Lewis
- ACE
- PAS-5
- FORTE
- Iridium MFS-1
- Iridium MFS-2
- Hot Bird 3
- Meteosat 7
- GE-3
- Iridium 27
- Iridium 28
- Iridium 29
- Iridium 30
- Iridium 31
- Iridium 32
- Iridium 33
- Kosmos 2346
- FAISAT-2V
- Intelsat 803
- Molniya-1T #98
- STS-86
- Iridium 19
- Iridium 34
- Iridium 35
- Iridium 36
- Iridium 37
- IRS-1D
- Progress M-36 (Sputnik 40, X-Mir)
- EchoStar III
- Foton #11
- Cassini (Huygens)
- Apstar 2R
- USA-133
- STEP-4
- USA-135
- FalconGOLD
- Maqsat-B
- Maqsat-H
- YES
- VLS-1 V01 (SCD-2A)
- USA-134
- USA-136
- Iridium 38
- Iridium 39
- Iridium 40
- Iridium 41
- Iridium 43
- Kupon
- Sirius 2
- IndoStar-1
- Resurs-F1M #1
- STS-87 (SPARTAN-201)
- TRMM
- Orihime
- Hikoboshi
- JCSAT-1B
- Equator-S
- Astra 1G
- Iridium 42
- Iridium 44
- Galaxy 8i
- Kosmos 2347
- Kosmos 2348
- Progress M-37
- Iridium 45
- Iridium 46
- Iridium 47
- Iridium 48
- Iridium 49
- Intelsat 804
- Orbcomm FM5
- Orbcomm FM6
- Orbcomm FM7
- Orbcomm FM8
- Orbcomm FM9
- Orbcomm FM10
- Orbcomm FM11
- Orbcomm FM12
- Early Bird 1
- AsiaSat 3
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).
This article about one or more spacecraft of the United States is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e