MOSCOW
(Interfax) - A Dnepr civilian rocket converted from the Russian RS-20 Voyevoda
intercontinental ballistic missile (known as SS-18 or Satan in the West) orbited
two Japanese OICETS and INDEX satellites, at 5:25 p.m. EDT (2125 GMT) on
Tuesday, the Space Forces press service told Interfax.
The Dnepr
was launched from the Baikonur space center in Kazakhstan 15 minutes before.
The Dnepr
can be used to put spacecraft with a payload of up to 3.5 tonnes in high
elliptical orbits or on moon-bound trajectories.
It was
first tested on April 21, 1999, when it orbited a British UoSAT satellite.
The Dnepr,
which is manufactured by the Pivdenmash plant in Ukraine, is to make one more
flight for a foreign customer in 2005.
The RS-20
has been part of Russia's strategic arsenal for more than 20 years.
The
Japanese side took over control of the two satellites after their separation
from the rocket.
The OICETS "is
a satellite used to verify key technological elements of 'optical
inter-satellite communication' that plays an important role in large volume
inter-satellite communication meant for future space activities". It will
carry out "verification experiments of acquisition, tracking, and pointing
technologies with ARTEMIS, the advanced data relay engineering satellite of the
European Space Agency," the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)
says on its website.
The 70-kilogram
INDEX has the tasks of studying polar lights and demonstrating new satellite
technologies.
Neither
satellite has any military tasks. Both are planned to be in use for a year.