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Anamateur radio satellite is an artificialsatellite built and used byamateur radio operators. It forms part of the Amateur-satellite service.[1] These satellites useamateur radio frequency allocations to facilitate communication betweenamateur radio stations.
Many amateur satellites receive anOSCAR designation, which is an acronym forOrbiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio. The designation is assigned byAMSAT, an organization which promotes the development and launch of amateur radio satellites. Because of the prevalence of this designation, amateur radio satellites are often referred to as OSCARs.
These satellites can be used free of charge by licensed amateur radio operators for voice (FM,SSB) and data (AX.25,packet radio,APRS) communications. Currently, over 18 fully operational amateur radio satellites are in orbit.[2] They may be designed to act asrepeaters, aslinear transponders, and asstore and forward digital relays.
Amateur radio satellites have helped advance the science of satellite communications. Contributions include the launch of the first satellite voicetransponder (OSCAR 3) and the development of highly advanceddigital"store-and-forward" messaging transponder techniques.
The Amateur Radio Satellite community is very active in building satellites and in finding launch opportunities. Lists of functioning satellites need updating regularly, as new satellites are launched and older ones fail. Current information is published byAMSAT.AMSAT has not been actively involved in the launch and operation of most amateur satellites in the last two decades beyond allocating an OSCAR number.
The first amateur satellite, simply named OSCAR 1, was launched on December 12, 1961, barely four years after the launch of the world's first satellite,Sputnik I. The satellite had to be built in a very specific shape and weight, so it could be used in place of one of the launch vehicle ballast weights. OSCAR 1 was the first satellite to be ejected as a secondary payload (the primary payload wasDiscoverer 36) and to subsequently enter a separate orbit. It carried no on-board propulsion and its orbit decayed quickly. Despite orbiting for only 22 days, OSCAR 1 was an immediate success and led to follow-on missions. Over 570amateur radio operators in 28 countries forwarded observations to Project OSCAR.
Most of the components for OSCAR 10 were "off the shelf". Jan King led the project. Solar cells were bought in batches of 10 or 20 fromRadio Shack, and tested for efficiency by group members. The most efficient cells were kept for the project; the rest were returned to RadioShack. Once ready, OSCAR 10 was mounted aboard a private plane, and flown a couple of times to evaluate its performance and reliability. SpecialQSL cards were issued to those who participated in the airplane-based tests. Once it was found to be operative and reliable, the satellite was shipped to Kennedy Space Center, where it was mounted in the launch vehicle's third stageWhich one. OSCAR 10's dimensions were:Height: 1.35 m (53 in)Width: 2.0 m (78.75 in)Weight: 140 kg at launch; 90 kg post engine firings.[3]

Other programs besides OSCAR have included Iskra (Soviet Union) circa 1982,JAS-1 (Fuji-OSCAR 12) (Japan) in 1986, RS (Soviet Union and Russia), andCubeSats. (There is alist of major amateur satellites in Japanese Wikipedia).
Es’hail 2 / QO-100[4] Launched November 15, 2018.In geostationary orbit covering Brazil to Thailand.
Narrowband Linear transponder
2400.050 - 2400.300 MHz Uplink
10489.550 - 10489.800 MHz Downlink
Wideband digital transponder
2401.500 - 2409.500 MHz Uplink
10491.000 - 10499.000 MHz Downlink
The first amateur satellites contained telemetry beacons. Since 1965, most OSCARs carry alinear transponder for two-way communications in real time. Some satellites have a bulletin board for store-and-forward digital communications, or a digipeater for directpacket radio connections.
Amateur satellites have been launched intolow Earth orbits and intohighly elliptical orbits.
Currently, amateur satellites support many different types of operation, includingFM voice andSSB voice, as well as digital communications ofAX.25FSK (Packet radio) andPSK-31.
Uplink anddownlink designations use sets of paired letters following the structureX/Y whereX is theuplink band andY is thedownlink band. Occasionally, the downlink letter is rendered in lower case (i.e.,X/y). With a few exceptions, the letters correspond to IEEE's standard for radar frequency letter bands:[5]
Prior to the launch of OSCAR 40, operating modes were designated using single letters to indicate both uplink and downlink bands. While deprecated, these older mode designations are still widely used in casual conversation.
Due to the high orbital speed of the amateur satellites, theuplink anddownlinkfrequencies will vary during the course of asatellite pass. This phenomenon is known as theDoppler effect. While thesatellite is moving towards the ground station, the downlink frequency will appear to behigher than normal. Hence, the receiver frequency at the ground station must be adjustedhigher to continue receiving thesatellite. The satellite in turn, will be receiving the uplink signal at ahigher frequency than normal so the ground station's transmitted uplink frequency must belower to be received by the satellite. After the satellite passes overhead and begins to move away, this process is reversed. The downlink frequency will appearlower and the uplink frequency will need to be adjustedhigher. The following mathematical formulas relate the Doppler shift to thevelocity of the satellite.
| Where: | ||
|---|---|---|
| = | doppler corrected downlink frequency | |
| = | doppler corrected uplink frequency | |
| = | original frequency | |
| = | velocity of the satellite relative to ground station inm/s. Positive when moving towards, negative when moving away. | |
| = | the speed of light in a vacuum ( m/s). |
| Change in frequency | Downlink Correction | Uplink Correction |
|---|---|---|
Due to the complexity of finding therelative velocity of the satellite and the speed with which these corrections must be made, these calculations are normally accomplished using satellite trackingsoftware. Many moderntransceivers include acomputer interface that allows for automaticdoppler effect correction. Manual frequency-shift correction is possible, but it is difficult to remain precisely near the frequency.Frequency modulation is more tolerant of doppler shifts thansingle-sideband, and therefore FM is much easier to tune manually.

A number oflow Earth orbit (LEO) OSCAR satellites usefrequency modulation (FM).[6] These are also commonly referred to as "FM LEOs" or the "FM Birds". Such satellites act as FMamateur radio repeaters that can be communicated through using commonly available amateur radio equipment. Communication can be achieved withhandheld transceivers using manualdoppler correction.[7] Satellite passes are typically less than 15 minutes long.[8]
The names of the satellites below are sorted inchronological order by launch date, ascending. The status column denotes the current operational status of the satellite.Green signifies that the satellite is currently operational,orange indicates that the satellite is partially operational or failing.Red indicates that the satellite is non operational andblack indicates that the satellite has re-entered the Earth's atmosphere (or never successfully left it). Thecountry listing denotes the country that constructed the satellite and not the launching country.
| Launches (past and current) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Name | Status | Launched | Country |
| OSCAR (OSCAR 1) | Decayed | 1961-12-12 | |
| OSCAR II (OSCAR 2) | Decayed | 1962-06-02 | |
| OSCAR III (OSCAR 3, EGRS-3) | Non-Operational | 1965-03-09 | |
| OSCAR IV (OSCAR 4) | Decayed | 1965-12-21 | |
| Australis-OSCAR 5 (OSCAR 5, AO-5, AO-A) | Non-Operational | 1970-01-23 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 6 (OSCAR 6, AO-6, AO-C, P2A) | Non-Operational | 1972-10-15 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 7 (OSCAR 7, AO-7, AO-B, P2B) | Semi-Operational | 1974-11-15 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 8 (OSCAR 8, AO-8, AO-D, P2D) | Non-Operational | 1978-03-05 | |
| Radio Sputnik 1 (RadioSkaf-1, RS-1) | Non-Operational | 1978-10-26 | |
| Radio Sputnik 2 (RadioSkaf-2, RS-2) | Non-Operational | 1978-10-26 | |
| UoSat-OSCAR 9 (UOSAT 1, UO-9) | Decayed | 1981-10-06 | |
| Radio Sputniks RS3 through RS8 | Non-Operational | 1981-12-17 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 10 (Phase 3B, AO-10, P3B) | Non-Operational | 1983-06-16 | |
| UoSat-OSCAR 11 (UoSat-2, UO-11, UoSAT-B) | Semi-Operational | 1984-03-01 | |
| Fuji-OSCAR 12 (JAS 1, FO-12) | Non-Operational | 1986-08-12 | |
| Radio Sputnik 10/11 (RadioSkaf-10/11, RS-10/11, COSMOS 1861) | Non-Operational | 1987-06-23 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 13 (Phase 3C, AO-13, P3C) | Decayed | 1988-06-15 | |
| UOSAT-OSCAR 14 (UoSAT-3, UO-14 UoSAT-D) | Non-Operational | 1990-01-22 | |
| UOSAT-OSCAR 15 (UoSAT-4, UO-15, UoSAT-E) | Non-Operational | 1990-01-22 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 16 (Pacsat, AO-16, Microsat-1) | Semi-Operational | 1990-01-22 | |
| Dove-OSCAR 17 (Dove, DO-17, Microsat-2) | Non-Operational | 1990-01-22 | |
| Weber-OSCAR 18 (WeberSAT, WO-18, Microsat-3) | Non-Operational | 1990-01-22 | |
| LUSAT-OSCAR 19 (LUSAT, LO-19, Microsat-4) | Non-Operational | 1990-01-22 | |
| Fuji-OSCAR 20 (JAS 1B, FO-20, Fuji-1B) | Non-Operational | 1990-02-07 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 21 (RS-14, AO-21, Informator-1) | Non-Operational | 1991-01-29 | |
| Radio Sputnik 12/13 (RadioSkaf-12/13, RS-12/13, COSMOS 2123) | Non-Operational | 1991-02-05 | |
| UoSat-OSCAR 22 (UOSAT 5, UO-22 UoSAT-F) | Non-Operational | 1991-07-17 | |
| KitSAT-OSCAR 23 (KITSAT 1, KO-23, Uribyol-1) | Non-Operational | 1992-08-10 | |
| Arsene-OSCAR 24 (Arsene, AO-24) | Non-Operational | 1993-05-12 | |
| KitSAT-OSCAR 25 (KITSAT B, KO-25, Kitsat-2, Uribyol-2) | Non-Operational | 1993-09-26 | |
| Italy-OSCAR 26 (ITAMSAT, IO-26) | Non-Operational | 1993-09-26 | |
| AMRAD-OSCAR 27 (EYESAT-1, AO-27) | Non-Operational | 1993-09-26 | |
| POSAT-OSCAR 28 (POSAT, PO-28, Posat-1) | Non-Operational | 1993-09-26 | |
| Radio Sputnik 15 (RadioSkaf-15, RS-15, Radio-ROSTO) | Semi-Operational | 1994-12-26 | |
| Fuji-OSCAR 29 (JAS 2, FO-29, Fuji-2) | Semi-Operational | 1996-08-17 | |
| Mexico-OSCAR 30 (UNAMSAT-2, MO-30, Unamsat-B, Kosmos-2334) | Non-Operational | 1996-09-05 | |
| Sputnik 40 | Decayed | 1997-11-03 | |
| Thai-Microsatellite-OSCAR 31 (TMSAT-1, TO-31) | Non-Operational | 1998-07-10 | |
| Gurwin-OSCAR 32Archived 2012-02-29 at theWayback Machine (GO-32, Gurwin-1b, Techsat-1b) | Non-Operational | 1998-07-10 | |
| SEDSat-OSCAR 33 (SEDSat, SO-33, SEDsat-1) | Semi-Operational | 1998-10-24 | |
| Pansat-OSCAR 34 (PAN SAT, PO-34) | Non-Operational | 1998-10-29 | |
| Sputnik 41 | Decayed | 1997-11-03 | |
| Sunsat-OSCAR 35 (SUNSAT, SO-35) | Non-Operational | 1999-02-23 | |
| UoSat-OSCAR 36 (UOSAT 12, UO-36) | Non-Operational | 1999-04-21 | |
| ASU-OSCAR 37 (AO-37, ASUsat-1, ASUSAT) | Non-Operational | 2000-01-27 | |
| OPAL-OSCAR 38 (OO-38, StenSat, OPAL) | Non-Operational | 2000-01-27 | |
| Weber-OSCAR 39 (WO-39, JAWSAT) | Non-Operational | 2000-01-27 | |
| Saudi-OSCAR 41 (SO-41, Saudisat 1A) | Non-Operational | 2000-09-26 | |
| Saudi-OSCAR 42 (SO-42, Saudisat 1B) | Non-Operational | 2000-09-26 | |
| Malaysian-OSCAR 46 (MO-46,TIUNGSAT-1) | Non-Operational | 2000-09-26 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 40 (AO-40, Phase 3D, P3D) | Non-Operational | 2000-11-16 | |
| Starshine-OSCAR 43 (SO-43, Starshine 3) | Decayed | 2001-09-30 | |
| Navy-OSCAR 44 (NO-44, PCSat) | Semi-Operational | 2001-09-30 | |
| Navy-OSCAR 45 (NO-45, Sapphire) | Non-Operational | 2001-09-30 | |
| BreizhSAT-OSCAR 47 (BO-47, IDEFIX CU1) | Non-Operational | 2002-05-04 | |
| BreizhSAT-OSCAR 48 (BO-48, IDEFIX CU2) | Non-Operational | 2002-05-04 | |
| AATiS-OSCAR 49 (AO-49, Safir-M, RUBIN 2) | Non-Operational | 2002-12-20 | |
| Saudi-OSCAR 50 (SO-50, Saudisat-1C) | Operational | 2002-12-20 | |
| CubeSat-OSCAR 55Archived 2012-02-29 at theWayback Machine (Cute-1) | Operational | 2003-06-30 | |
| CubeSat-OSCAR 57 (CubeSat-XI-IV) | Operational | 2003-06-30 | |
| CanX-1 | Non-Operational | 2003-06-30 | |
| DTUSat | Decayed | 2003-06-30 | |
| AAU Cubesat | Non-Operational | 2003-06-30 | |
| RS-22Archived 2012-02-29 at theWayback Machine (Mozhayets 4) | Operational | 2003-09-27 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 51 (Echo, AO-51) | Non-Operational | 2004-06-28 | |
| VUSat-OSCAR 52 (HAMSAT, VO-52, VUSat) | Non-Operational[9] | 2005-05-05 | |
| PCSat2 (PCSAT2) | Decayed | 2005-08-03 | |
| AMSAT-OSCAR 54 (AO-54, SuitSat, Radioskaf) | Decayed | 2005-09-08 | International |
| eXpress-OSCAR 53 (XO-53, SSETI Express) | Non-Operational | 2005-10-27 | European Space Agency |
| CubeSat-OSCAR 58 (CO-58, Cubesat XI-V) | Non-Operational | 2005-10-27 | |
| UWE-1 | Non-Operational | 2005-10-27 | |
| NCube-2 | Deployment failure | 2005-10-27 | |
| CubeSat-OSCAR 56 (CO-56, Cute-1.7) | Non-Operational | 2006-02-21 | |
| K7RR-Sat | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| CP2 | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| HAUSAT 1 | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| ICE Cube 1 | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| ICE Cube 2 | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| ION | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| KUTESat | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| MEROPE | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| nCUBE 1 | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| RINCON | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| SACRED | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| SEEDS | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| Voyager (Mea Huaka'i) | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| PicPot | Launch Failure | 2006-07-26 | |
| HITSat-OSCAR 59 (HITSat, HO-59) | Decayed | 2006-09-22 | |
| GeneSat-1Archived 2011-07-16 at theWayback Machine | Decayed | 2006-12-16 | |
| Navy-OSCAR 60 (RAFT, NO-60) | Decayed | 2006-12-21 | |
| Navy-OSCAR 61 (ANDE, NO-61) | Decayed | 2006-12-21 | |
| Navy-OSCAR 62 (FCAL, NO-62) | Decayed | 2006-12-21 | |
| FalconSAT-3 | Decayed | 2007-03-09 | |
| Libertad-1 | Non-Operational | 2007-04-17 | |
| CAPE-1 | Non-Operational | 2007-04-17 | |
| CP3 | Non-Operational | 2007-04-17 | |
| CP4 | Non-Operational | 2007-04-17 | |
| Pehuensat-OSCAR 63 (PEHUENSAT-1, PO-63) | Decayed | 2007-10-01 | |
| Delfi-OSCAR 64 (Delfi-C3, DO-64) | Decayed | 2008-04-28 | |
| Cubesat-OSCAR 65 (Cute-1.7+APD II, CO-65) | Operational? | 2008-04-28 | |
| Cubesat-OSCAR 66 (SEED II, CO-66) | Operational | 2008-04-28 | |
| COMPASS-1 | Semi-Operational | 2008-04-28 | |
| RS-30Archived 2012-02-29 at theWayback Machine (Yubileiny, RS-30) | Operational | 2008-05-23 | |
| PRISMArchived 2012-10-25 at theWayback Machine (HITOMI) | Operational | 2009-01-23 | |
| KKS-1Archived 2012-02-29 at theWayback Machine (KISEKI) | Operational | 2009-01-23 | |
| STARS (KUKAI) | Unknown | 2009-01-23 | |
| Aggiesat2 | Decayed | 2009-07-30 | |
| PARADIGM (BEVO-1) | Decayed | 2009-07-30 | |
| Sumbandila-OSCAR 67 (SumbandilaSat, SO-67) | Decayed | 2009-09-17 | |
| SwissCube | Operational | 2009-09-23 | |
| ITUpSAT1 | Operational | 2009-09-23 | |
| UWE-2 | Operational | 2009-09-23 | |
| BEESAT | Operational | 2009-09-23 | |
| Hope Oscar 68Archived 2013-05-28 at theWayback Machine (XW-1, HO-68) | Beacon-Operational | 2009-12-15 | |
| AubieSat-1Archived 2012-04-18 at theWayback Machine (AO-71) | Non-Operational | 2011-10-28 | |
| Masat-1 (MO-72) | Decayed | 2012-02-13 | |
| ESTCube-1 | Non-Operational | 2013-05-07 | |
| CAPE 2 (LO-75) | Decayed | 2013-11-20 | |
| FUNcube-1 (AO-73)[1] | Operational | 2013-11-21 | |
| CubeBug-2 (LUSAT-OSCAR 74) | Operational | 2013-11-21 | |
| $50SAT | Non-Operational | 2013-11-21 | |
| DELFI-N3XT | Non-Operational? | 2013-11-21 | |
| ARTSATINVADER (CO-77) | Decayed | 2014-02-27 | |
| Lituanica SAT-1 (LO-78) | Decayed | 2014-02-27 | |
| FunCube-2 (UKube-1) | Non-Operational | 2014-07-08 | |
| QB50P1 (EO-79, FUNcube-3) | Non-Operational | 2014-07-19 | |
| QB50P2 | Semi-Operational | 2014-07-19 | |
| ARTSAT2-DESPATCH | Non-Operational | 2014-12-03 | |
| Shin’en-2 (FO-82) | Non-Operational | 2014-12-03 | |
| BRICSat-P (OSCAR 83) | Decayed | 2015-05-20 | |
| ParkinsonSAT (OSCAR 84, NO-84, PSAT) | Decayed | 2015-05-20 | |
| LilacSat-2 (CAS-3H) | Operational | 2015-09-19 | |
| XW-2 (CAS-3) | Non-Operational | 2015-09-19 | |
| Lapan-A2 (IO-86) | Operational | 2015-09-28 | |
| Fox-1A (OSCAR 85, AO-85) | Non-Operational | 2015-10-08 | |
| HORYU-IV | Non-Operational | 2016-02-17 | |
| CHUBUSAT-3 | Non-Operational | 2016-02-17 | |
| ÑuSat-1 (LUSEX OSCAR 87, LO-87) | Decayed | 2016-05-30 | |
| Nayif-1 (EO-88) | Decayed | 2017-02-15 | |
| ITF 2 | Decayed | 2016-12-09 | |
| LilacSat-1 (QB50, LO-90) | Decayed | 2017-04-18 | |
| ZHUHAI-1 01/02 (CAS 4A/B) | Non-Operational | 2017-06-15 | |
| Fox-1B (OSCAR 91, AO-91, RadFxSat) | Semi-Operational | 2017-11-18 | |
| Fox-1D (OSCAR 92, AO-92) | Decayed[10] | 2018-01-12 | |
| K2SAT | Non-Operational | 2018-03-12 | |
| DSLWP-A (OSCAR 93, LO-93) | Non-Operational | 2018-05-20 | |
| DSLWP-B (OSCAR 94, LO-94) | Operational | 2018-05-20 | |
| Diwata-2 (Philippines-OSCAR 101, PO-101) | Operational | 2018-10-29 | |
| Es'hail 2 (Qatar-OSCAR 100, QO-100, P4A) | Operational | 2018-11-15 | |
| Fox-1Cliff (OSCAR 95, AO-95) | Semi-Operational | 2018-12-03 | |
| ExseedSat-1 (VUsat-OSCAR 96, VO-96) | Operational | 2018-12-03 | |
| JY1Sat (Jordan-OSCAR 97, JO-97) | Operational | 2018-12-03 | |
| D-Star ONE Sparrow | Operational | 2018-12-27 | |
| D-Star ONE iSat | Operational | 2018-12-27 | |
| OrigamiSat (Fuji-OSCAR 98, FO-98) | Decayed | 2019-01-18 | |
| NEXUS (Fuji-OSCAR 99, FO-99) | Decayed | 2019-01-18 | |
| AISAT-1 (ExseedSat-2) | Decayed | 2019-04-01 | |
| AztechSat 1 | Non-Operational | 2019-05-12 | |
| CAS-7B (BIT Progress-OSCAR 102, BO-102) | Decayed | 2019-07-25 | |
| BricSat-2 (Navy-OSCAR 103, NO-103) | Decayed | 2019-06-25 | |
| PSAT-2 (Navy-OSCAR 104, NO-104) | Decayed | 2019-06-25 | |
| HuskySat-1 (HO-107) | Decayed | 2019-11-02 | |
| SMOG-P (Magyar-OSCAR 105, MO-105) | Decayed | 2019-12-06 | |
| ATL-1 (Magyar-OSCAR 106, MO-106) | Decayed | 2019-12-06 | |
| Taurus-1 (Jinniuzuo-1) | Decayed | 2019-12-09 | |
| Tianqin-1 (CAS-6, TO-108) | Operational | 2019-12-20 | |
| DOSAAF-85 (RS-44) | Operational | 2019-12-26 | |
| BY70-2 | Decayed | 2020-07-03 | |
| International Space Station (ISS) | Operational | 2020-09-02 | |
| RadFxSat-2 (AmSat Fox-1, AO-109) | Decayed | 2024-01-17 | |
| UVSQ-Sat | Rarely | 2021-01-24 | |
| SDSAT (Satish Dhawan Sat) | Decayed | 2021-02-28 | |
| SMOG-1 (Magyar-OSCAR 110, MO-110) | Decayed | 2021-03-22 | |
| DIY-1 (DIY-OSCAR 111, DO-111) | Decayed | 2021-03-22 | |
| GRBAlpha | Operational | 2021-03-22 | |
| MIR-Sat 1 (MIRSAT-OSCAR 112, MO-112) | Decayed | 2021-06-03 | |
| LEDSAT | Operational | 2021-08-17 | |
| CAMSAT XW-3 (HO-OSCAR 113, HO-113, CAS-9) | Operational | 2021-12-26 | |
| BDSat-2 | Operational | 2022-01-03 | |
| EASAT-2 (Spain-OSCAR 114, SO-114) | Operational | 2022-01-13 | |
| HADES (Spain-OSCAR 115, SO-115) | Operational | 2022-01-13 | |
| SanoSat-1 (Nepal-OSCAR 116, NO-116) | Decayed | 2022-01-13 | |
| Tevel 1-8 | Decayed | 2022-01-13 | |
| Planetum-1 | Operational | 2022-05-25 | |
| ForeSail 1 | Failure | 2022-05-25 | |
| GreenCube (Italy-OSCAR 117, IO-117) | Operational | 2022-07-13 | |
| Fengtai Shaonian 2 (CAS-5A, Fengtai-OSCAR 118, FO-118) | Operational | 2022-12-09 | |
| XiWang-4 (Hope-OSCAR 119, HO-119, XW-4, CAS-10) | Operational | 2022-11-12 | |
| EOS–07 (APRSDP-BTN) | Operational | 2023-02-10 | |
| INSPIRE-Sat 7 | Decayed | 2023-04-15 | |
| RoseyCubesat-1 | Operational | 2023-04-15 | |
| IRIS-C | Operational | 2023-04-15 | |
| MAYA-6 | Decayed | 2023-07-19 | |
| Veronika | Operational | 2023-11-11 | |
| HADES-D (SO-121) | Operational | 2023-11-11 | |
| SONATE-2 | Operational | 2024-03-04 | |
| Kashiwa (柏) | Decayed | 2024-03-23 | |
| MESAT 1 (MO-122) | Operational | 2024-07-04 | |
| KUBE/QUBE | Operational | 2024-08-16 | |
| SAKURA | Future | 2024-08-29 | |
Currently, 30 countries have constructed a launched OSCAR satellite. These countries, in chronological order by date of launch, include:
SuitSat, an obsolete Russian space suit with a transmitter aboard, was officially known as "AMSAT-OSCAR 54". Coincidentally, "Oscar" was the name given to an obsolete space suit by its young owner in the 1958 novelHave Space Suit—Will Travel, byRobert A. Heinlein. This book was first published a year after the launch ofSputnik 1, the world's first artificial satellite.
This sectionmay need to be cleaned up. It has beenmerged fromAmateur-satellite service. |




Amateur-satellite service (also:amateur-satellite radiocommunication service) is – according toArticle 1.57 of theInternational Telecommunication Union's (ITU)Radio Regulations (RR)[12] – defined as «A radiocommunication service usingspace stations on earthsatellites for the same purposes as those of theamateur service.»
Thisradiocommunication service is classified in accordance withITU Radio Regulations (article 1) as follows:
Radiocommunication service (article 1.19)
The allocation of radio frequencies is provided according toArticle 5 of the ITU Radio Regulations (edition 2012).[13]
In order to improve harmonisation in spectrum utilisation, the majority of service-allocations stipulated in this document were incorporated in national Tables of Frequency Allocations and Utilisations which is within the responsibility of the appropriate national administration. The allocation might be primary, secondary, exclusive, and shared.
| Allocation to services | ||
| Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 |
135.7–137.8kHz
| 135.7–137.8
| 135.7–137.8
|
7 000–7 100 AMATEUR
| ||
14 000–14 250 AMATEUR
| ||
18 068–18 168 AMATEUR
| ||
21 000–21 450 AMATEUR
| ||
24 890–24 990 AMATEUR
| ||
28–29.7MHz AMATEUR
| ||
144–146 AMATEUR
| ||
5 830–5 850
| 5 830–5 850
| |
10.5–10.6GHz AMATEUR
| ||
24–24.05 AMATEUR
| ||
47–47.2 AMATEUR
| ||
76–77.5 RADIO ASTRONOMY
| ||
77.5–78 AMATEUR
| ||
78–79 RADIOLOCATION
| ||
79–81 RADIOLOCATION
| ||
134–136 AMATEUR
| ||
136–141 RADIO ASTRONOMY
| ||
241–248 RADIO ASTRONOMY
| ||
248–250 AMATEUR
| ||
In addition to the formal allocations in the main table such as above, there is also a key ITU-R footnote RR 5.282 that provides for additional allocations:-
Of these, the 435-438 MHz band is particularly popular for amateur/educational small satellites such as Cubesats.
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