Contact finally made with 'missing' Angolan satellite
Russian
scientists have restored communications with a satellite days after they lost
contact with it.
Launched on
26 December, Angosat-1 will boost mobile and net communications in Angola as
well as broadcast radio and TV shows.
Soon after
launch, Russian ground control staff said they were no longer receiving data
from the spacecraft.
It comes
soon after Russia revealed "programming errors" led to the loss of
another multi-million pound satellite.
The launch
of Angosat-1 was the culmination of a project started in 2009 and was the first
communications satellite built for Angola. The development and launch of the
satellite cost more than 286m euros (£253m).
The
development and launch of the satellite was a source of national pride for
Angola which said it would also use it to aid telemedicine and other
development projects. The satellite is expected to have a working life of about
15 years.
A statement
released by the Russian Energia rocket and space corporation said it started
receiving telemetry data from Angosat-1 early on 29 December. It gave no
information about why communication with the satellite was interrupted for two
days during the critical time it settled into its final orbital position and
deployed solar panels.
"All
parameters of the spacecraft systems are normal," it said in its
statement.
The near
loss of the satellite is another embarrassment for the Russian space industry
and comes just days after it admitted "human error" was behind the
loss of a weather satellite.
The Meteor-M
2-1 satellite was launched in November and was designed to monitor weather
patterns, the ozone layer, ocean surface temperatures and other meteorological
influences.
It was
launched from the Vostochny space portal on 28 November. However, the satellite
was lost because it was programmed to lift-off from the Baikonur launch pad.
The weather
satellite and 18 others travelling on the same rocket were also lost.
Russia said
it had begun an investigation into the loss of Meteor and the problems
contacting Angosat-1.
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