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DODGE

Satellite

DODGE

Satellite

FieldValue
nameDODGE
imageDodge satellite.jpg
image_captionThe DODGE satellite
mission_typeTechnology
operatorNASAUSAF
COSPAR_ID1967-066F
SATCAT2867
mission_duration3 years
manufacturerJohns Hopkins University
Applied Physics Laboratory
launch_mass430 lb
dimensions7.9 by
power
launch_dateUTC
launch_rocketTitan IIIC
launch_siteCape Canaveral LC-41
deactivated
orbit_referenceGeocentric
orbit_regimeMEO
orbit_semimajor39841.6 km
orbit_periapsis33278.8 km
orbit_apoapsis33662.5 km
orbit_inclination11.7 degrees
apsisgee
Note

the satellite

Applied Physics Laboratory

DODGE (Department of Defense Gravity Experiment) was a satellite whose primary purpose was to conduct experiments in gravity-gradient stabilization at near-geosynchronous altitudes. Its secondary objectives included measuring the Earth's magnetic field, and taking pictures of the entire Earth's disk in both black-and-white and color. It was launched atop a Titan IIIC rocket on July 1, 1967, and operated for over three years. DODGE carried ten knobbed booms oriented along three different axes, that could be independently extended and retracted by ground command.

DODGE first achieved successful stabilization 12 days after launch. It took in 1967 color-filtered black-and-white images, which put together produced the very first color image of the full-disk Earth (ATS-3 often also cited, produced the first non-black-and-white filtered "true-color" image).

The first color image of the entire Earth, taken by the DODGE satellite in August, 1967

References

References

  1. [http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/dodge.htm Gunter's Space Page: DODGE]
  2. (Oct 1, 2016). "A Sight for Sore Eyes: The Return of True Color to Geostationary Satellites". American Meteorological Society.
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