A planned Iranian-built satellite would circle the earth at an altitude of more than 22,000 miles, far higher than orbiters previously deployed by the Middle Eastern nation, the Iranian Students' News Agency reported on Monday (see GSN, July 13).
Students at Iran's Sharif University of Technology would build the craft, "the last student satellite series which is to be fired into space," university president Reza Rosta-Azad told the news agency.
The lower orbits of Iran's previously launched satellites have limited the amount of time they could remain in space, he said (Iranian Students' News Agency, Aug. 9). Tehran last month indicated it had deployed its Rasad 1 satellite at an orbit of roughly 160 miles, the Xinhua News Agency reported (Xinhua News Agency, Aug. 9).
"Satellites should be sent into space when the launch power is raised, so that they would remain in space for a long time to work more effectively," Rosta-Azad told ISNA. "The first Iranian satellite launched into space managed to remain for two months (see GSN, Feb. 3, 2009). The second one which is able to take photos was placed at a higher altitude and has a more lifespan."
Iran would formally announce the new orbiter at a later date, he said (Iranian Students' News Agency).
The United States and other countries closely monitor Iranian space developments, as the same ballistic missile technology that is used to launch satellites can also be used to fire warheads, according to Xinhua. Iran's continuing nuclear development is suspected by Washington and other governments of being secretly aimed at attaining a weapons capability, a charge Tehran strongly denies (Xinhua News Agency)
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