- LAGEOS
LAGEOS, or Laser Geodynamics Satellites, are a series of scientific research
satellite s designed to provide an orbiting laser ranging benchmark for geodynamical studies of the Earth.Function and operation
The spacecraft are
aluminium -coveredbrass spheres with a diameter of 60 cm and a mass of 411 kg, covered withretro-reflector s, giving them the appearance of giantgolf ball s. They have no onboard sensors or electronics, and are not attitude controlled. They orbit at an altitude of 5,900 km [http://msl.jpl.nasa.gov/QuickLooks/lageosQL.html LAGEOS 1, 2 Quicklook ] ] , well abovelow earth orbit and well belowGeostationary orbit .Measurements are made by transmitting pulsed laser beams from Earth
ground station s to the satellites. The laser beams then return to Earth after hitting the reflecting surfaces; the travel times are precisely measured, permitting ground stations in different parts of the Earth to measure their separations to better than one inch in thousands of miles.The LAGEOS satellites are able to determine positions of points on the Earth with extremely high accuracy due to the stability of their orbits.
The high mass-to-area ratio and the precise, stable (attitude-independent) geometry of the LAGEOS spacecraft, together with their extremely regular orbits, make these satellites the most precise position references available.
Mission goals
The LAGEOS mission consists of the following key goals:
* Provide an accurate measurement of the satellite's position with respect to Earth,
* Determine the planet's shape (geoid ) and,
* Determinetectonic plate movements associated withcontinental drift .Ground tracking stations are located in many countries (including the US, Mexico, France, Germany, Poland, Australia, Egypt, China, Peru, Italy, and Japan) and data from these stations is available worldwide to investigators studying crustal dynamics.
There are two LAGEOS spacecraft, LAGEOS-1 launched in 1976, and LAGEOS-2 launched in 1992. As of 2004, both LAGEOS spacecraft are still in service.
The satellite (which will re-enter the atmosphere in 8.4 million years) also contains a plaque showing the arrangement of the Earth's continents in the past, present, and future. [LageosQL]
Launch data
* LAGEOS 1, launched 4 May 1976,
NSSDC ID 1976-039A, NORAD number 8820
* LAGEOS 2, deployed 23 October 1992 fromSTS-52 , NSSDC ID 1992-070B, NORAD number 22195See also
*
geodesy
*GEOS (satellite)
*general relativity
*Pageos
*Postglacial rebound References
Carl Sagan, "Murmurs of Earth", 8-9.
External links
* http://www.earth.nasa.gov/history/lageos/lageos.html
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