JAWSAT
American Military Satellite
COSPAR ID | 2000-004A |
---|---|
SATCAT no. | 26061 |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | January 27, 2000 |
Launch site | Vandenberg Air Force Base (VAFB) |
The Joint Air Force-Weber State University Satellite (JAWSAT) is an American military mini-satellite launched aboard a Minotaur rocket on January 27, 2000 from Vandenberg Air Force Base (VAFB) in California.[1] After its own launch, JAWSAT deployed four microsatellites: FalconSAT-1, OCSE, OPAL, and ASUSat.[2] JAWSAT also carried NASA's Plasma Experiment Satellite Test (PEST).
See also
- Weber-OSCAR 18
- 2000 in spaceflight
References
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← 1999
Orbital launches in 20002001 →
- USA-148
- Galaxy 10R
- Feng Huo 1
- JAWSAT, FalconSAT-1, ASUSat-1, OCSE, OPAL (STENSAT, MEMS 1A, MEMS 1B, MASAT, Thelma, Louise)
- Progress M1-1
- Kosmos 2369
- Hispasat 1C
- Globalstar 60, Globalstar 62, Globlastar 63, Globalstar 64
- Gruzovoy Maket, IRDT-1
- ASTRO-E
- STS-99
- Garuda 1
- Superbird-B2
- Ekspress A2
- MTI
- ICO F1
- Dumsat
- INSAT-3B, AsiaStar
- IMAGE
- GOES 11
- Kosmos 2370
- USA-149
- USA-150
- SimSat 1, SimSat 2
- STS-101
- Eutelsat W4
- Gorizont No.45L
- TSX-5
- Ekspress A3
- Fengyun 2B, Nadezhda 6, Tsinghua 1, SNAP-1
- TDRS-8
- Sirius FM-1
- Kosmos 2371
- Zvezda
- EchoStar VI
- CHAMP, MITA, Rubin-1
- USA-151
- Samba, Salsa
- Sindri (MEMS 2A, MEMS 2B)
- PAS-9
- Progress M1-3
- Rumba, Tango
- Brazilsat B4, Nilesat 102
- USA-152
- DM-F3
- Globus No.16L
- Zi Yuan 2
- Sirius FM-2
- Eutelsat W1
- STS-106
- Astra 2B
- GE-7
- NOAA-16
- Kosmos 2372
- Megsat 1, Unisat 1, Saudisat 1A, Saudisat 1B, TiungSAT-1
- Kosmos 2373
- GE-1A
- N-SAT-110
- HETE-2
- STS-92 (ITS Z1, PMA-3)
- Kosmos 2374, Kosmos 2375, Kosmos 2376
- Progress M-43
- USA-153
- Thuraya 1
- GE-6
- Europe*Star 1
- Beidou 1A
- Soyuz TM-31
- USA-154
- PAS-1R, AMSAT-P3D, STRV 1C, STRV 1D
- Progress M1-4
- QuickBird-1
- EO-1, SAC-C, Munin
- Anik F1
- Sirius FM-3
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
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