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The Defense
Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) program designs, builds,
launches, and maintains several near polar orbiting, sun
synchronous satellites monitoring the meteorological,
oceanographic, and solar-terrestrial physics environments.
Each DMSP satellite
monitors the atmospheric, oceanographic and solar-geophysical
environment of the Earth. The visible and infrared sensors collect
images of global cloud distribution across a 3,000 km swath during
both daytime and nighttime conditions. The coverage of the
microwave imager and sounders are one-half the visible and
infrared sensors coverage, thus they cover the polar regions above
60 degrees on a twice daily basis but the equatorial region on a
daily basis. The space environmental sensors record along track
plasma densities, velocities, composition and drifts.
DMSP satellites
operate in a near polar orbiting, sun synchronous orbit at an
altitude of approximately 830 Km above the earth. Each satellite
crosses any point on the earth up to two times a day and has an
orbital period of about 101 minutes thus providing nearly complete
global coverage of clouds every six hours.
The DMSP is run by the
U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center (SMC).

DMSP
16
Defense
Meteorological
Satellite
Program
|
|
SPACECRAFT
|
| Int'l Designation |
|
Scheduled
|
| Owner / Sponsor |
USAF
/ Space and Missile Center (SMC)
|
| Mission |
Weather
|
| Satellite Bus |
Lockheed
Martin
|
|
| Launch Mass |
1500
kg (3300 lbm)
|
| Mission Orbit |
SSO /
850 km (458 nmi)
|
98.7°
|
| Design Life |
|
| Power (EOL) |
|
|
LAUNCH
|
| Launch Vehicle
Model |
Titan
2 |
| Launch Date / Time |
19
July 2003
|
|
|
FINANCIAL
|
| Satellite cost |
US$350
million
|
| Web Links |
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