RazakSAT is a
Malaysian
Earth observation satellite carrying a high-resolution camera. It was launched into
low Earth orbit on 14 July 2009. It was placed into a near-equatorial orbit that presents many imaging opportunities for the equatorial region. It weighs over three times as much as
TiungSAT-1 TiungSAT-1 is the first Malaysian microsatellite. The satellite is developed through the technology transfer and training programme between Astronautic Technology Sdn Bhd (ATSB) Malaysia and Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd., United Kingdom. TiungSA ...
and carries a high resolution Earth observation camera. Developed in conjunction with Satrec Initiative, the satellite's low inclination orbit (9 degrees) brought it over Malaysia a dozen or more times per day. This was intended to provide greatly increased coverage of Malaysia, compared to most other Earth observation satellites.
An audit report released in October 2011 revealed that the satellite had failed after only 1 year of operation.
RazakSAT was the first and only operational satellite to be put in orbit by SpaceX's
Falcon 1.
Background
This satellite is Malaysia's second
remote sensing satellite after
TiungSAT-1 TiungSAT-1 is the first Malaysian microsatellite. The satellite is developed through the technology transfer and training programme between Astronautic Technology Sdn Bhd (ATSB) Malaysia and Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd., United Kingdom. TiungSA ...
.
Originally called MACSAT, RazakSAT's payload is mainly
electro-optical, carrying a Medium-sized Aperture Camera (MAC) which is a
pushbroom camera
A push broom scanner, also known as an along-track scanner, is a device for obtaining images with spectroscopic sensors. The scanners are regularly used for passive remote sensing from space, and in spectral analysis on production lines, for exampl ...
with five linear detectors (one
panchromatic
Panchromatic emulsion is a type of black-and-white photographic emulsion that is sensitive to all wavelengths of visible light.
Description
A panchromatic emulsion renders a realistic reproduction of a scene as it appears to the human eye, altho ...
, four
multi-spectral) weighing approximately 50 kg. The entire satellite weighs at about 180 kg.
[
]
Launch
SpaceX
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) is an American spacecraft manufacturer, launcher, and a satellite communications corporation headquartered in Hawthorne, California. It was founded in 2002 by Elon Musk with the stated goal of ...
launched RazakSAT at 03:35 UTC on 14 July 2009 using a
Falcon 1 rocket. This was the fifth flight of a Falcon 1, and like the previous flights lift-off was from
Omelek Island in the Kwajalein Atoll. At 05:25 UTC
Elon Musk, founder and CEO of SpaceX, told a reporter the launch had been a success. "We nailed the orbit to well within target parameters...pretty much a bullseye." Musk said.
Operations
RazakSAT's mission plan was carried out by engineers from
Astronautic Technology Sdn Bhd (ATSB)
Astronautic Technology Sdn Bhd or better known as ATSB was established on 1 May 1995 and is wholly owned by the Minister of Finance Inc under the supervision of the Malaysian Ministry of Energy, Science, Technology, Environment and Climate Chang ...
.
This was especially important because Malaysia is usually covered by the equatorial cloud bands. Normal sun-synchronous optical satellites, which may re-visit an area only once every 7 days, will almost never be able to see the ground during their pass. As a result, much optical satellite imagery of Malaysia have more than 50% cloud cover within the image's footprint.
Razaksat, on the other hand, revisited some parts of Malaysian territory every 90 minutes, potentially maximising its ability to exploit gaps in the clouds.
RazakSAT, equipped with a high resolution Medium-Sized Aperture Camera (MAC), achieved the intended Near-Equatorial Low Earth Orbit (NEqO) at 685 km altitude and a 9 degree inclination. It was expected to provide high resolution images of Malaysia that can be applied to land management, resource development and forestry.
Be that as it may, the NEqO orbit does have 3 distinct disadvantages. Analysis through the commercially available
Satellite Tool Kit (STK) software had shown that the orbit revisit over Malaysia was found to have a maximum peak of 2-4 overpasses per day during daylight hours (from 8 am to 6:30 pm) to a period of 6 consecutive days without any usable daylight overpasses. The second disadvantage is that most imagery acquired through the NEqO orbit are not usable through a remote sensing perspective as the NEqO orbit is not a
sun-synchronous orbit, a vital criterion for monitoring and analysis work. Thirdly, it was found that the NEqO orbit exposes the satellite to the
South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA) phenomenon on every orbit it takes around the earth unlike the
polar orbit, near-polar or
sun-synchronous orbits, thereby further increasing the risk of radiation damage to the satellite.
Although it was originally intended as a Research & Development (R&D) project but it was later announced for commercial purposes in 2009,
the aim of the RazakSAT project was asserted as a Research & Development (R&D) Project in 2010.
During its operations after its launch in 2009, it was discovered that the RazakSAT satellite could not achieve its targeted pointing accuracy of within 1 km of its intended target. The Malaysian English newspaper The Star, quoting from the Malaysian Government Auditor-General's Report 2010, reported that the images that were acquired by the RazakSAT satellite was found to be 37 km off their intended target.
As a result of the pointing error, all of the over 1,328 images acquired by the satellite were rendered unusable. Despite a promise of delivering MAC images by 2010, as of the end of 2011, the operators have not released any images. Efforts to fix the problems with the satellite were terminated in December 2010.
Specifications
The major specification of RazakSAT, as provided by the satellites' builder and operator (ATSB) in February 2010, are:
Satellite bus
The
satellite bus used for RazakSAT was jointly developed by ATSB and
Satrec Initiative, a commercial satellite manufacturer in Korea. Satrec Initiative markets the bus system as the "
SI-200
The SI-200 satellite bus was a model of satellite, based on the Malaysian RazakSAT, produced by the South Korean Satrec Initiative. The bus was suitable for small satellites where the accommodation of Earth observation or other scientific payloads ...
".
See also
*
DubaiSat-1
DubaiSat-1 ( ar, دبي سات-1) is a remote sensing Earth observation satellite built by the '' Emirates Institution for Advanced Science and Technology (EIAST)'' under an agreement with Satrec Initiative, a satellite manufacturing company in ...
References
External links
*
*
* https://web.archive.org/web/20090504213727/http://www.mosti.gov.my/mosti/
RazakSAT first images. ''Click'' MOSTI Gallery > Year 2009 > Galeri Gambar Pelancaran RazakSAT*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Razaksat
Earth imaging satellites
Spacecraft launched in 2009
SpaceX commercial payloads
Satellites of Malaysia