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・ Us Two (film)
・ US Tébessa
・ US Témara
・ US Uncut
・ US Vision
・ US Weather Bureau Station (Block Island)
・ Us Weekly
・ US West
・ US Wings
・ Us with Salvini
・ US Yatenga
・ US Youth Soccer National Championships
・ Us, Val-d'Oise
・ US-1 Trucks
・ US-101
US-A
・ US-Arab Business Roundtable
・ US-Arab Chamber of Commerce
・ US-ASEAN Business Council
・ US-Asia Institute
・ US-Bangla Airlines
・ US-China Education Trust
・ US-China University Presidents Roundtable
・ US-Cuba Democracy PAC
・ US-International Women in Science Dialogue
・ US-K
・ Us-kab-wan-ka River
・ US-KMO
・ US-KS
・ US-KS (disambiguation)


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US-A : ウィキペディア英語版
US-A

Upravlyaemy Sputnik Aktivnyj ((ロシア語:''Управляемый Спутник Активный'')), or US-A, also known in the west as Radar Ocean Reconnaissance Satellite or RORSAT, was a series of Soviet reconnaissance satellites. Launched between 1967 and 1988 to monitor NATO and merchant vessels using active radar, the satellites were powered by nuclear reactors.
Because a return signal from an ordinary target illuminated by a radar transmitter diminishes as the inverse of the fourth power of the distance, for the surveillance radar to work effectively, US-A satellites had to be placed in low Earth orbit. Had they used large solar panels for power, the orbit would have rapidly decayed due to drag through the upper atmosphere. Further, the satellite would have been useless in the shadow of Earth. Hence the majority of the satellites carried type BES-5 nuclear reactors fuelled by uranium-235. Normally the nuclear reactor cores were ejected into high orbit (a so-called "disposal orbit") at the end of the mission, but there were several failure incidents, some of which resulted in radioactive material re-entering the Earth's atmosphere.
The US-A programme was responsible for orbiting a total of 33 nuclear reactors, 31 of them BES-5 types with a capacity of providing about two kilowatts of power for the radar unit. In addition, in 1987 the Soviets launched two larger TOPAZ nuclear reactors (six kilowatts) in Kosmos satellites (Kosmos 1818 and Kosmos 1867) which were each capable of 6 months of operation.〔(Summary of space-based nuclear power systems )〕 The higher-orbiting TOPAZ-containing satellites were the major source of orbital contamination for satellites that sensed gamma-rays for astronomical and security purposes, as radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTGs) do not generate significant gamma radiation as compared with unshielded satellite fission reactors, and all of the BES-5-containing spacecraft orbited too low to cause positron-pollution in the magnetosphere.〔(positron pollution from TOPAZ )〕
The last US-A satellite was launched 14 March 1988.
==Incidents==

* Launch failure, 25 April 1973. Launch failed and the reactor fell into the Pacific Ocean north of Japan. Radiation was detected by US air sampling airplanes.
* Kosmos 367 (04564 / 1970-079A), 3 October 1970, failed 110 hours after launch, moved to higher orbit.
* Kosmos 954. The satellite failed to boost into a nuclear-safe storage orbit as planned. Nuclear materials re-entered the Earth's atmosphere on 24 January 1978 and left a trail of radioactive pollution over an estimated 124,000 square kilometres of Canada's Northwest Territories.
* Kosmos 1402. Failed to boost into storage orbit in late 1982. The reactor core was separated from the remainder of the spacecraft and was the last piece of the satellite to return to Earth, landing in the South Atlantic Ocean on 7 February 1983.
* Kosmos 1900. The primary system failed to eject the reactor core into storage orbit, but the backup managed to push it into an orbit below its intended altitude.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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