OSO 3

OSO 3
The third Orbiting Solar Observatory, OSO 3, showing its "Sail" (upper), carrying solar experiments pointed at the Sun, and its rotating "Wheel" (lower), carrying two sky-scanning survey instruments: the UCSD hard X-ray experiment, and the MIT gamma-ray telescope
Mission typeSolar physics
OperatorNASA
COSPAR ID1967-020A Edit this at Wikidata
SATCAT no.02703Edit this on Wikidata
Mission duration2 years, 8 months
Spacecraft properties
ManufacturerBBRC
Launch mass281 kilograms (619 lb)
Start of mission
Launch dateMarch 8, 1967, 16:19:00 (1967-03-08UTC16:19Z) UTC
RocketDelta C
Launch siteCape Canaveral LC-17A
End of mission
Last contactNovember 10, 1969 (1969-11-11)
Decay dateApril 4, 1982
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeLow Earth
Eccentricity0.002164
Perigee altitude534 kilometers (332 mi)
Apogee altitude564 kilometers (350 mi)
Inclination32.87 degrees
Period95.53 minutes
Mean motion15.07
EpochMay 8, 1967, 11:19:00 UTC[1]

OSO 3 (Orbiting Solar Observatory 3), or Third Orbiting Solar Observatory[2][3] (known as OSO E2 before launch) was launched on March 8, 1967, into a nearly circular orbit of mean altitude 550 km, inclined at 33° to the equatorial plane. Its on-board tape recorder failed on June 28, 1968, allowing only the acquisition of sparse real-time data during station passes thereafter; the last data were received on November 10, 1969. OSO 3 reentered the Earth's atmosphere and burned up on April 4, 1982.

Like all the American Orbiting Solar Observatory (OSO) series satellites, it had two major segments: one, the "Sail", was stabilized to face the Sun, and carried both solar panels and Sun-pointing experiments for solar physics. The other, "Wheel" section, rotated to provide overall gyroscopic stability and also carried sky scanning instruments that swept the sky as the wheel turned, approximately every 2 seconds.

  1. ^ "NASA - NSSDCA - Spacecraft - Trajectory Details". nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov. Retrieved May 2, 2018.
  2. ^ NASA GSFC X-ray Astronomy Satellites and Missions
  3. ^ [1] GSFC HEASARC "The Third Orbiting Solar Observatory (OSO-3)"