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MTG-S1/Sentinel-4A

European Meteorology and Earth Observation satellite From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

MTG-S1/Sentinel-4A
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MTG-S1/Sentinel-4A , officially designated Meteosat-13 upon entering operational service, is a European Meteorology and Earth Observation satellite. It is the first of two satellites in the Sentinel-4 constellation, part of the European Union's Copernicus programme on Earth observation and also one of two Meteosat Third Generation-Sounder (MTG-S) spacecraft.[5][6][7][8][9]

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Timeline

Development

  • In July 2011, ESA awarded a contract to Astrium (now part of Airbus Defence and Space) to develop and build two Sentinel-4 instruments to be carried on MTG-S satellites. At the time, the launches were expected to happen in 2019 and 2027.[10]
  • In February 2023, the Sentinel-4 instrument module, containing the UVN spectrometer, was shipped from Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the UK to OHB in Germany.[11]
  • In August 2023, the three MTG-S instruments (Sentinel 4, RMU and IRS) were installed on the MTG-S1 satellite at OHB's facilities in Germany.[12]

Launch campaign

  • In July 2024, the MTG-S1 satellite successfully passed its environmental test campaign at IABG’s facilities near Munich.[13]
  • In February 2025, the MTG-S1 satellite had completed all functional and environmental tests in Bremen and was pronounced ready for transport to the launch site.[14]
  • On 23 April 2025, the MTG-S1 satellite left Bremen on board the MN Colibri cargo ship and arrived at Cape Canaveral on 6 May.[15] It was later transported to the AstroTech facilities cleanroom.[16]
  • On 26 June 2025, ESA announced that the MTG-S1 satellite would launch no earlier than 1 July 2025, 21:03 UTC with a launch window of 2 hours.[17]
  • Falcon 9 B1085 with the MTG-S1 satellite and the Sentinel-4A instrument launched on 1 July 2025 at 21:04 UTC toward geostationary transfer orbit.[18][19][20] The satellite separated from the rocket's upper stage approximately 35 minutes after liftoff and begun its 17-day transfer period. After reaching its position in a geostationary Earth orbit, the satellite undergoes a commissioning period of 9 to 12 months.[21]

In orbit

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See also

References

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