Iran launched its first
satellite into orbit Monday using a modified homemade long-range missile,
thrusting the Islamic republic into an elite club of space-faring nations,
state media reported.
The small Omid
communications satellite was launched Monday evening aboard a Safir 2 rocket,
the Fars news agency reported.
Two objects from the
launch, likely the Omid satellite and part of its booster, are circling Earth
in oval-shaped orbits.
The orbits range in
altitude from low points of 153 miles to high points of 235 miles and 273
miles. The orbital inclination is 55.5 degrees, according to U.S. military
tracking data.
Iran joins a small group of
countries with the ability to build and launch
their own satellites into orbit.
The former Soviet Union
launched the world's
first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1, in October 1957. The United States
followed with the successful launch of Explorer 1 in January 1958.
France, Japan, China, the
United Kingdom, India and Israel later developed and successfully flew their
own space launchers.
Iran is the first new
space-faring nation since Israel joined the club in 1988.
The launch was timed to
occur during a 10-day celebration of the 30th anniversary of Iran's
Islamic revolution, according to the Fars news agency.
Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad ordered Monday's launch and said the satellite was a "step
toward justice and peace," according to state television reports.
Iran constructed Omid and
planned the launch under strict U.N. economic sanctions due to international
suspicions of Iran's nuclear ambitions.
The sanctions affect the
international trade of goods that could be used on military projects, including
programs related to satellite and rocket development.
Iran orbited its first
satellite in 2005 on a Russian rocket, but Monday's launch was the country's
first to use a homemade
rocket launched from Iranian territory.
Omid, which means hope in
Persian, carries experimental control systems, communications equipment, and a
small remote sensing payload, Iranian news reports said.
Previous versions of the
Safir rocket have completed several suborbital tests, including a mysterious
flight last August that some believe may have been a failed satellite launch
attempt.
Iranian news reports in
August reported the Safir had successfully reached orbit, but Western
intelligence officials said the rocket suffered a dramatic failure during the
launch.
Iran plans several more
satellites over the next few years to bolster disaster management programs and
strengthen communications networks inside the country.
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