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Soyuz U | Resurs F-1M

Russian Federal Space Agency (ROSCOSMOS) | Russia
Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russian Federation
Nov. 18, 1997, 11:14 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

The Resurs-F1M (17F43M) was one of three subseries of the Soviet Resurs-F1 film-return earth observation satellite family. They were a follow-on to the Fram (Zenit-4MKT) series.

Low Earth Orbit
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Ariane 44L | Sirius 2 & Indostar 1

Aérospatiale | France
Guiana Space Centre, French Guiana
Nov. 12, 1997, 9:48 p.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Sirius 2 and Indostar 1 are Swedish and Indonesian communications satellites.

Geostationary Orbit
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Proton-K/DM-2M | Kupon

Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center | Russia
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Republic of Kazakhstan
Nov. 12, 1997, 5 p.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Kupon (K95K) was a communication satellite originally developed by Lavochkin for the third generation GKKRS (Global Space Command and Communications System). The project was cancelled with the breakup of the Soviet Union, and instead Kupon became the first communications satellite for the Russian banking system. The satellite was owned by the Russian Federation Central Bank (and possibly Global Information Systems of Moscow) and relayed financial data for the Bankir network.

Geostationary Orbit
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Delta II | Iridium 38 to 43

United Launch Alliance | United States of America
Vandenberg SFB, CA, USA
Nov. 9, 1997, 1:34 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Iridium provides global mobile telecommunications services using a constellation of 66 low earth orbit satellites in a 86.4° inclined orbit. Although 77 satellites were originally envisioned for the system and spawned the name based on the 77th element in the periodic table, the system has been scaled back. Motorola's Satellite Communications Group designed and manufactured the Iridium satellites with Lockheed Martin providing the LM-700A spacecraft buses.

Low Earth Orbit
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Titan 401A Centaur | NROL-4

Lockheed Martin | United States of America
Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
Nov. 8, 1997, 2:05 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Trumpet signal intelligence satellites were launched by Titan-4(01)A Centaur-T into highly elliptic Molniya-type orbits. In their elliptical orbits they would move very slowly over the northern hemisphere for most of their orbital period, allowing interception of microwave line-of-sight communications beams. Since they would move slowly through the beams during their orbit, a constellation of such satellites was required to monitor Soviet communications throughout the day.

Geostationary Orbit
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Delta II | GPS IIA-19

United Launch Alliance | United States of America
Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
Nov. 6, 1997, 12:30 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

GPS-2A (Global Positioning System) or Navstar-2A (Navigation System using Timing And ranging) are improved satellites of the second generation of the GPS navigation system.

Medium Earth Orbit
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VLS-1 | SCD-2A

Department of Aerospace Science and Technology | Brazil
Alcântara Space Center, Federative Republic of Brazil
Nov. 2, 1997, 12:25 p.m.
Status: Launch Failure
Mission:

The satellites of the SCD (Satelites de Coleta de Dados) series are equipped to collect and transmit meteorological and environmental data collected by automatic platforms (PCD) installed on land or on oceanic buoys. The data is relayed to one or more ground stations.

Low Earth Orbit
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Ariane 5 G | MaqSat-H, TEAMSAT, MaqSat-B, YES

ArianeGroup | France
Guiana Space Centre, French Guiana
Oct. 30, 1997, 1:43 p.m.
Status: Launch Failure
Mission:

A launch of four satellites

Geostationary Transfer Orbit
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Atlas IIA | DSCS-3 B13

Lockheed Martin | United States of America
Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
Oct. 25, 1997, 12:46 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

DSCS-3 (Defense Satellite Communications System 3) are geostationary communications satellites, which provide a robust anti-jam, nuclear hardened capability that supports Department of Defense (DoD) worldwide requirements, White House and Diplomatic communications. They are the follow-on generation of the DSCS-2 satellites.

Geostationary Orbit
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Titan 403A | Onyx 3

Lockheed Martin | United States of America
Vandenberg SFB, CA, USA
Oct. 24, 1997, 2:32 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

The Onyx satellites are terrestrial radar imaging reconnaissance satellite operated by the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO).

Low Earth Orbit
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