| Organization | AMSAT-India, William Leijenaar |
|---|---|
| Mission Type | Communications |
| Satellite of | Earth |
| Launch | May 5, 2005 onPSLV-C6 |
| Launch site | Sriharikota |
| Mission duration | Achieved: 9 Years and 2 Months |
| Mass | 42.5 kg (launch) |
| Orbital elements | |
| Semi-major axis | 7004.27 km |
| Eccentricity | 0.0027 |
| Inclination | 97.89 degrees |
| Orbital Period | 97.23 minutes |
| Right ascension of theascending node | 65.14 degrees |
| Argument of perigee | 222.72 degrees |
HAMSAT, also known asHAMSAT INDIA,VU2SAT andVO-52, is amicrosatellite weighing 42.5 kilograms (93.7 lb), providingamateur radio satellite communications services for Indian and internationalamateur radio operators. This satellite carries the in-orbit designation of VO-52, and is anOSCAR series satellite.
It was launched byPSLV-C6 on May 5, 2005. The main payload was anIndian Remote Sensing satellite,CARTOSAT-1 weighing 1,560 kilograms (3,440 lb). HAMSAT was placed into a polarSun-synchronous orbit.
It carries twotransponders, one built by William Leijenaar (Call Sign: PE1RAH), a Dutch Radio Amateur and graduate engineering student from theHigher Technical Institute atVenlo and the other by Ham enthusiasts with help from theISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation).[1] Each transponder is recognized by its beacon. The Indian transponder has an unmodulated carrier on 145.940 MHz. The Dutch transponder is modulated with telemetry information on 145.860 MHz. Both are linear transponders offering the CW, SSB and FM modes of amateur radio communication. They operate Mode-B for U-V operation with UHF uplink and VHF downlink.[2]
The satellite joins many previous satellites in amateur radio service; mostly launched byAMSAT.
HAMSAT VO-52 failed in space on 11 July 2014, while on its 49,675th orbit, due to the failure of onboard lithium-ion batteries that have met their end of life. Although the satellite's systems and sub-systems are working normally as per the latest telemetry received, the onboard computer recurring to "Reset" mode due to the failure of batteries is hindering operation. Hence, it was decided not to expect any more meaningful and reliable services from HAMSAT VO-52. On 21 July 2014, ISRO decommissioned ‘HAMSAT-VO52′ officially.[3][4]
HAMSAT VO-52 was designed for one-year mission life, but lasted for almost 10 years. The satellite was designed to be maintenance-free, and autonomous. It was a test bed for many new concepts such as a Bus Management Unit (BMU), lithium-ion-based power system, automatic spin rate control and spin axis orientation control (SAOC) for maintaining the satellite attitude without ground commanding. HAMSAT was known as “OSCAR-52” among Amateur HAM operators, and was popular internationally because of its high-sensitivity receiver and strong transmitter.[3][4]