USA-151

American navigation satellite used for GPS

DBpedia resource is: http://dbpedia.org/resource/USA-151

Abstract is: USA-151, also known as GPS IIR-5, GPS SVN-44, and Navstar-48 is an American navigation satellite which forms part of the Global Positioning System. It was the fifth Block IIR GPS satellite to be launched, out of thirteen in the original configuration, and twenty one overall. It was built by Lockheed Martin, using the satellite bus. USA-151 was launched at 09:17:00 UTC on 16 July 2000, atop a Delta II carrier rocket, flight number D279, flying in the 7925-9.5 configuration. The launch took place from Space Launch Complex 17A at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, and placed USA-151 into a transfer orbit. The satellite raised itself into medium Earth orbit using a Star-37FM apogee motor. By 27 July 2000, USA-151 was in an orbit with a perigee of 20,184 kilometres (12,542 mi), an apogee of 20,426 kilometres (12,692 mi), a period of 722.98 minutes, and 55 degrees of inclination to the equator. It is used to broadcast the PRN 28 signal, and operates in slot 3 of plane B of the GPS constellation, having originally been operated in slot 5. The satellite has a mass of 2,032 kilograms (4,480 lb), and a design life of 10 years. It was retired on 23 June 2021.

USA-151 is …
instance of (P31):
GPS satelliteQ1069313

External links are
P247COSPAR ID2000-040A
P646Freebase ID/m/0k8whlh
P377SCN26407
P4839Wolfram Language entity codeEntity["Satellite", "26407"]

P17countryUnited States of AmericaQ30
P176manufacturerLockheed MartinQ7240
P137operatorUnited States Air ForceQ11223
P793significant eventrocket launchQ797476
P375space launch vehicleDelta IIQ49538
P1427start pointCape Canaveral Space Launch Complex 17Q1034324
P619UTC date of spacecraft launch2000-07-16

Reverse relations

Q121831559GPS Block IIRhas part(s)P527

The articles in Wikimedia projects and languages

      USA-151wikipedia

Search more.