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Mission type | Astronomy |
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Operator | ESA |
COSPAR ID | 1983-051A |
SATCAT no. | 14095 |
Website | www |
Mission duration | 3 years |
Spacecraft properties | |
Manufacturer | MBB |
Launch mass | 510.0 kg (1,124.4 lb) |
Power | 165.0 watts |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 26 May 1983, 15:18:00 | UTC
Rocket | Delta 3914 D169 |
Launch site | Vandenberg SLC-2W |
End of mission | |
Decay date | 5 May 1986 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Low Earth |
Eccentricity | 0.93428 |
Perigee altitude | 347 km (216 mi) |
Apogee altitude | 191,709 km (119,122 mi) |
Inclination | 72.5 degrees |
Period | 5,435.4 minutes |
Epoch | 26 May 1983, 11:18:00 UTC[1] |
Legacy ESA insignia for the EXOSAT mission |
The European X-ray Observatory Satellite (EXOSAT), originally named HELOS, was an X-ray telescope operational from May 1983 until April 1986 and in that time made 1780 observations in the X-ray band of most classes of astronomical object including active galactic nuclei, stellar coronae, cataclysmic variables, white dwarfs, X-ray binaries, clusters of galaxies, and supernova remnants.
This European Space Agency (ESA) satellite for direct-pointing and lunar-occultation observation of X-ray sources beyond the Solar System was launched into a highly eccentric orbit (apogee 200,000 km, perigee 500 km) almost perpendicular to that of the Moon on 26 May 1983. The instrumentation includes two low-energy imaging telescopes (LEIT) with Wolter I X-ray optics (for the 0.04–2 keV energy range), a medium-energy experiment using Ar/CO2 and Xe/CO2 detectors (for 1.5–50 keV), a Xe/He gas scintillation spectrometer (GSPC) (covering 2–80 keV), and a reprogrammable onboard data-processing computer. Exosat was capable of observing an object (in the direct-pointing mode) for up to 80 hours and of locating sources to within at least 10 arcsec with the LEIT and about 2 arcsec with GSPC.[2]