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Cluster factsheet
 
Studying how the solar wind affects the Earth
 
Name Cluster refers to the fact that four identical spacecraft are used in the mission in a cluster pattern.  
 
Description Cluster is a collection of four spacecraft flying in formation around Earth, relaying the most detailed ever information about how the solar wind affects our planet in three dimensions. The solar wind (the perpetual stream of subatomic particles given out by the Sun) can damage communications satellites and power stations on Earth. The operation lifetime of the Cluster mission runs from February 2001 to December 2009. In October 2009, the mission was extended until end 2012.
 
 
Launch 16 July and 19 August 2000 (two launches of two Cluster satellites each) (Two Russian Soyuz rockets at Baikonur, Kazakhstan).
 
 
Status Launched 2000.
 
 
Journey At each launch two Cluster satellites were placed in an elliptical orbit whose height varied from 200 to 18 000 kilometres above the Earth. The two satellites of each launch were then released, one after the other and used their own on-board propulsion systems to reach the final operational orbit (between 19 000 and 119 000 kilometres from the planet).
 
 
Notes The first four Cluster spacecraft were destroyed when the Ariane-5 rocket exploded during its maiden launch on 4 June 1996. Three new Cluster spacecraft had to be built while the fourth was constructed out of spare parts. The new spacecraft were launched four years later.

Having four identical spacecraft, Cluster was the first space project ever to have to build a series of craft in true series production.

Using identical instruments simultaneously, three-dimensional and time-varying phenomena can be studied.

600 kilograms (half of the launch weight) of each Cluster spacecraft was taken up by fuel required for the complicated manoeuvres employed to position the spacecraft into the correct orbit.

Early in 2000, the European Space Agency held a public competition 'Name the Cluster Quartet'. The winner named the spacecraft Salsa, Samba, Tango and Rumba after Latin American ballroom dances.
 
 
Last update: 7 October 2009

 
 
More about...
Cluster overview
Other solar missions
Double Star factsheetSOHO factsheetSolar Orbiter in a nutshellUlysses factsheet
Other missions in Earth orbit
COROT factsheetCos-B factsheetDouble Star factsheetExosat factsheetHipparcos factsheetHubble factsheetHyper factsheetIntegral factsheetISO factsheetIUE factsheetXEUS factsheetXMM-Newton factsheet
Other missions launched for ESA by Russian Soyuz
COROT factsheetEddington factsheetGaia factsheetMars Express factsheetSolar Orbiter in a nutshellVenus Express factsheet
 
 
 
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