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Mercury (satellite)

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Mercury
Country of originUnited States United States
OperatorNational Reconnaissance Office
United States Air Force
ApplicationsEspionage
Specifications
Launch mass4,000–5,000 kilograms (8,800–11,000 lb)
RegimeGeostationary
Production
Built3
Launched3
Failed1
Maiden launch27 August 1994, 8:56:58 UTC
Last launch12 August 1998, 11:30:01 UTC

Mercury, also known as Advanced Vortex, was a series of three United States spy satellites launched in the 1990s. These satellites were launched and operated by the National Reconnaissance Office with the participation of the United States Air Force. Two of the three launches from Cape Canaveral were successful, with the third failing to achieve orbit. The satellites collect SIGINT from near-geosynchronous orbits. Their precise mission and capabilities are highly classified, but they are widely believed to be successors to the Vortex/Chalet satellites.

The last launch attempt, on 12 August 1998 failed, with the US$700–800 million satellite and the $344 million Titan IV(401)A launch vehicle exploding over the Atlantic Ocean. The failure was caused by a short circuit in the guidance system, which lost power and reset, causing the vehicle to pitch over. This in turn led to premature separation of one of the SRBs, which automatically self-destructed. The resulting explosion also destroyed the core vehicle, and the second SRB then initiated its own self-destruction.[1] Roughly 4 seconds later the Range Safety Officer also issued a self-destruct signal to the rocket.[2] Observers estimate each spacecraft has a mass of 4,000–5,000 kg.[3]

Launches

[edit]
Name COSPAR ID
SATCAT No.
Launch date
(UTC)
Launch vehicle Launch site Launch designation Longitude Remarks
USA-105 1994-054A
23223
27 August 1994
08:56:58
Titan IV(401)A CCAFS LC-41 N/A
USA-118 1996-026A
23855
24 April 1996
23:37:01
Titan IV(401)A CCAFS LC-41 N/A
Unnamed N/A 12 August 1998
11:30:01
Titan IV(401)A CCAFS LC-41 NROL-7 N/A Failed to orbit

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Titan IVA-20 Accident Investigation Board Summary".
  2. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-05-04. Retrieved 2009-05-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ Craig Covault and Joseph C. Anselmo (1998-08-17). "Titan explosion destroys secret 'Mercury' sigint". Aviation Week and Space Technology. 149.
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