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- May 1st, 2015 Posted in Uncategorised

FORMOSAT-7 constellation spacecraft1 May 2015 – Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL) has delivered the first spacecraft for the FORMOSAT-7/COSMIC-2 weather forecasting constellation to the National Space Organization (NSPO) in Taiwan, where it has successfully passed a series of systems checks.

The FORMOSAT-7 spacecraft has been designed by SSTL using heritage avionics and it has been assembled at the Company’s cleanroom facilities in the United Kingdom, where SSTL is currently building the remaining FORMOSAT-7 platforms for the constellation.  The payloads for the spacecraft are being supplied by NSPO’s mission partner, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in the United States, and they will be integrated to the platforms in Taiwan where a full set of spacecraft system tests will be performed.

Luis Gomes, Director of Earth Observation at SSTL, commented “The delivery of the first of the FORMOSAT-7 spacecraft to our customer is an important milestone in the programme, and we were very pleased to hear that it has arrived safely and in full working order.  SSTL is continuing to work on the assembly of an additional five platforms for the constellation at our cleanrooms here in the UK and at the NSPO site in Taiwan, where our engineers are involved in the next phase of payload integration and testing, so it’s an extremely busy phase in the mission for the collaborative team.”

The FORMOSAT-7 constellation is a joint civil mission between the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States (TECRO) and the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT). NSPO and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in the United States are the designated representatives of TECRO and AIT respectively.  The new constellation will collect atmospheric data at low and mid latitudes and improve both regional and global weather forecasting for over 5000 registered users of the data across the globe.  It will also provide scientific data in support of climate studies and ionospheric science. Launch is targeted from 2016.