Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/satellites-orbiting-earth

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

OSCAR 3

Amateur radio satellite

OSCAR 3

Amateur radio satellite

FieldValue
nameOSCAR 3
imageOscar3linedrawing.jpg
image_captionLine drawing of OSCAR 3
mission_typeCommunications
operatorProject OSCAR
COSPAR_ID1965-016F
SATCAT1293
mission_duration16 days
launch_mass15 kg
dimensions7 x
launch_date9 March 1965, 18:29:47 UTC
launch_rocketThor SLV-2 Agena-D
launch_siteLC-75-1-2
disposal_typeDecommissioned
last_contact
orbit_epoch9 March 1965
orbit_referenceGeocentric
orbit_regimeLow Earth
orbit_periapsis884 km
orbit_apoapsis917 kmpe
orbit_eccentricity0.002
orbit_inclination70.1 degrees
orbit_period103.1 minutes
apsisgee
programmeOSCAR
previous_missionOSCAR 2
next_missionOSCAR 4

OSCAR 3 (a.k.a. OSCAR III) is the third amateur radio satellite launched by Project OSCAR into Low Earth Orbit. OSCAR 3 was launched March 9, 1965 by a Thor-DM21 Agena D launcher from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Lompoc, California. The satellite, massing 15 kg, was launched piggyback with seven United States Air Force satellites. Though the satellite's active life was limited to sixteen days due to battery failure, OSCAR 3 relayed 176 messages from 98 stations in North America and Europe during its 274 orbit life-time -- the first amateur satellite to relay signals from Earth. , it is still in orbit.

Project OSCAR

Project OSCAR Inc. was started in 1960 by members of the TRW Radio Club of Redondo Beach, California as well as persons associated with Foothill College to investigate the possibility of putting an amateur satellite in orbit. Project OSCAR was responsible for the construction of the first Amateur Radio Satellites: OSCAR 1, launched from Vandenberg AFB in California on 12 December 1961, which transmitted a “HI” greeting in Morse Code for three weeks, the similar OSCAR 2, OSCAR 3, and OSCAR 4.

Spacecraft

OSCAR 3 was a 15 kg rectangular-prism-shaped satellite, 7 x in dimension. Unlike its predecessors, which could only transmit a morse code "HI" signal through their beacons, OSCAR 3 was a true communications satellite. Equipped with a translator, when the satellite received signals broadcast to it at 144.1 MHz, its translator converted them to 30 MHz for amplification, and then reconverted them to 145.9 MHz for further amplification and retransmission. A watt of power was available for transmission; if more than one signal were received simultaneously, they shared the power in proportion to their signal strengths when received. OSCAR 3 also carried a beacon like OSCARs 1 and 2, though of lower power.

Four quarter-wave antennas (two for input/output to the translator, one for the beacon, and one for telemetry to the ground) were mounted on the sides of the lightweight magnesium-lithium alloy satellite. The hull was covered with shiny aluminum foil tape to reflect the heat of the Sun, and black stripes were painted over the shiny aluminum to radiate heat away from OSCAR 3 during the times it orbited in the shadow of the Earth. A large 18-volt battery powered the satellite, though the beacon was designed to continue functioning, supplied by power from solar cells and a rechargeable battery.

Mission and results

Launch of NRL Composite 5 carrying OSCAR 3
Launch of NRL Composite 5 carrying OSCAR 3

OSCAR 3 flew on the NRL Composite 5 mission, which lofted an unprecedented eight satellites on a single Thor Augmented Delta-Agena D rocket (including POPPY 4, an electronic signals intelligence (ELINT) surveillance package, GGSE-2, GGSE-3, Surcal 2B, SECOR 3, SOLRAD 7B, and Dodedcapole 1) on 9 March 1965 from Vandenberg Air Force Base Space Launch Complex 1, Pad 2.

Though the satellite's active life was limited to sixteen days due to battery failure, OSCAR 3 relayed 176 messages from 98 stations in North America and Europe during its 274 orbit life-time. The two beacon transmitters continued operating for several months. OSCAR 3 was thus the first amateur communications satellite to relay voice contacts in the VHF 2 meter band, the first amateur satellite to operate from solar power and relay signals from Earth, and the first satellite to use beacon transmitters separate from the main communications system.

, OSCAR 3 is still in orbit, and its position can be tracked online.

References

References

  1. (2020). "Nanosatellites: Space and Ground Technologies, Operations and Economics". John Wiley & Sons, Ltd..
  2. "OSCAR 1". NASA Space Science Data Coordinated Archive.
  3. (March 1965). "Oscar III: Ham Radio's New 2-Meter Space Station". Ziff-Davis Publishing Co..
  4. "Aeronautics and Astronautics, 1965". NASA.
  5. McDowell, Jonathan. "Launch 1965-016: NRL Composite 5". Jonathon's Space Report.
  6. McDowell, Jonathan. "Launch Log".
  7. [[William R. Corliss]]. (1967). "Scientific Satellites". Science and Technical Information Division, Office of Technology Utilization, NASA.
  8. H. C. Gabrielson. (Dec 1965). "OSCAR 3 Report -- Communications Results".
  9. (30 June 1977). "Oscar 3". NASA National Space Science Data Center.
  10. (31 December 1999). "OSCAR 3". Gunter's Space Page.
  11. (23 May 1994). "Space Satellites from the World's Garage -- The Story of AMSAT".
  12. "OSCAR 3".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about OSCAR 3 — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report