Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Himawari 9
Japanese weather satellite From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Himawari 9 is a Japanese weather satellite, the 9th of the Himawari geostationary weather satellite operated by the Japan Meteorological Agency. The spacecraft was constructed by Mitsubishi Electric, and is the second of two similar satellites to be based on the DS-2000 bus.[2]
Remove ads
Launch
Himawari 9 was launched on 2 November 2016, 06:20:00 UTC, atop a H-IIA rocket flying from the Yoshinobu Launch Complex Pad 1 at the Tanegashima Space Center, and by 11 November 2016 it reached to the geostationary point at 140.7 degrees East.[3] After initial function tests, it was put on standby until 05:00 UTC by 13 December 2022, when it succeeded Himawari 8.[4][5]
The launch was scheduled initially on 1 November 2016, but postponed for one day due to forecasted inclement weather.
At launch, the mass of the satellite is about 3,500 kilograms (7,700 lb). It has a design life of 15 years with 8 years of operational life. Power is supplied by a single gallium arsenide solar panel, which provides up to 2.6 kilowatts of power. The main instrument aboard Himawari 9 is a 16 channel multispectral imager to capture visible light and infrared images of the Asian-Pacific region.[6]
As part of an outreach project organized by the Young Astronauts Club Japan the launch also carried manga artwork drawn by Chūya Koyama, author of the Space Brothers manga.[7]
Remove ads
Gallery
- The first true-color image from Himawari 9
- The first full disk true-color image from Himawari 9 since being operational
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads