Olympus-1
| |
Operator | ESA |
---|---|
Major contractors |
Astrium Thales Alenia Space |
Bus | L-Sat Bus |
Mission type | Communication, experimental |
Launch date | July 12th, 1989 |
Launch vehicle | Ariane 3 V32 |
Launch site | Kourou, French Guiana |
Ceased operations | August 12th, 1993 |
Olympus-1 was a communications satellite built by Astrium (at the time of the construction of the satellite British Aerospace and Matra Marconi Space) and Thales Alenia Space (also at the time Alcatel Espace and Alenia Spazio) along with Fokker and SPAR Aerospace for the European Space Agency. At the time of its launch on 12 July 1989, it was the largest civilian telecomms satellite ever built, and sometimes known as "LargeSat" or "L-Sat". The satellite had a series of unfortunate accidents in orbit and went out of service on 11/12 August 1993. The first accident was the loss of ability to articulate the satellite's solar arrays. This was later followed by the loss of an onboard gyro during the height of the Perseid meteor shower. The satellite spun out of control and efforts to stabilize it resulted in the expenditure of the majority of its fuel. Subsequently, it was moved to a GEO disposal orbit and was put out of commission.[1] The Olympus bus was reincarnated as Alphabus, made by the same manufacturers, this time for Inmarsat (Inmarsat-4A F4).
References
- ↑ "Shooting Stars Can Shoot Down Satellites". Spectrum.ieee.org. Retrieved 2012-02-07.
External links
- "The sad story of Olympus 1"
- "The Olympus failure", ESA press release, 26 August 1993
- "OLYMPUS", NASA Satellite Communications Systems and Technology, July 1993