- JERS-1
- Mission
- JERS-1 Overview
JERS-1 Overview
Mission Background
After mission completion of JERS-1, NASDA (National Space Development Agency of Japan) was disbanded when it became part of JAXA - the Japanese space agency – who manage the legacy data.
Satellite Design
The JERS-1 spacecraft, built by Mitsubishi Electric Co. as prime contractor, consists of a net rectangular bus with a single 2 kW solar array (3.5 m x 7.0 m) and an eight-segmented SAR antenna. The spacecraft is three-axis stabilised with zero momentum bias system using reaction wheels and magnetotorquers.
The attitude is sensed by an Earth sensor, an inertial reference unit and two sun sensors (0.3° attitude knowledge). A hydrazine propulsion system is used for orbit maintenance.
The spacecraft carried two closely-matched Earth observation sensors: the active Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) instrument and the passive Optical Sensor (OPS) multispectral imager.
Mass | 1400 kg |
Dimensions | 0.9 m x 1.8 m x 3.2 m |
Design Lifetime | 2 years |
Mission Operations
JERS-1 maintained a Sun-synchronous polar orbit with an altitude of 568 km and a period of 96 minutes. It crossed the equator north to south between 10:30 and 11:00 local time.
NASDA's EOC (Earth Observation Centre) was responsible for data acquisition, processing, distribution and archiving. There were 10 licensed receiving stations inside and outside Japan.
Related Links
Learn more about JERS-1 from these websites:
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