SNAP-1

SNAP-1 is a British nanosatellite in low Earth orbit.It was launched on 28 June 2000 on board a Kosmos-3M rocket from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northern Russia.[4] It shared the launch with a Russian Nadezhda search and relay spacecraft and the Chinese Tsinghua-1 microsatellite.The objectives of the SNAP-1 mission were to:[2] During deployment, SNAP-1 successfully imaged the Nadezhda and Tsinghua-1 satellites that accompanied it on the launch.[5][6][7] Once in orbit, SNAP-1 achieved three axis attitude control,[8] then demonstrated its orbital maintenance capability using its butane cold gas propulsion system.
University of SurreyCOSPAR IDSATCAT no.Kosmos-3MPlesetskGeocentricLow EarthPerigee altitudeApogee altitudeInclinationPeriodlow Earth orbitSurrey Satellite Technology LtdPlesetsk CosmodromeNadezhdacommercial off-the-shelfGlobal Positioning SystemS-band← 1999Orbital launches in 20002001 →Galaxy 10RJAWSATFalconSAT-1Progress M1-1Hispasat 1CASTRO-ESTS-99Garuda 1Superbird-B2Ekspress A2INSAT-3BAsiaStarSoyuz TM-30SESAT 1Galaxy 4RProgress M1-2GOES 11USA-150STS-101Eutelsat W4Ekspress A3Fengyun 2BTDRS-8Sirius FM-1ZvezdaEchoStar VIRubin-1USA-151Progress M1-3Brazilsat B4Nilesat 102Sirius FM-2Eutelsat W1STS-106Astra 2BNOAA-16TiungSAT-1N-SAT-110HETE-2STS-92ITS Z1Progress M-43Europe*Star 1Soyuz TM-31USA-154PAS-1RSTRV 1CSTRV 1DProgress M1-4QuickBird-1Anik F1Sirius FM-3STS-97ITS P6EROS AAstra 2D