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Ariane 42L | Telstar 402R

Aérospatiale | France
Guiana Space Centre, French Guiana
Sept. 24, 1995, 12:06 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

The Telstar 4 series was the successor to AT&T's Telstar 3 series. The spacecraft were built on Lockheed Martin's AS-7000 bus and featured 24 C-band and 16 Ku-band transponders.

Geostationary Orbit
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Space Shuttle Endeavour / OV-105 | STS-69

National Aeronautics and Space Administration | United States of America
Kennedy Space Center, FL, USA
Sept. 7, 1995, 3:09 p.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

STS-69 was a Space Shuttle Endeavour mission, and the second flight of the Wake Shield Facility (WSF). The mission launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida on 7 September 1995. It was the 100th successful manned NASA spaceflight, not including X-15 flights.

Low Earth Orbit
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Soyuz-U2 | Soyuz TM-22

Soviet Space Program | Russia
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Republic of Kazakhstan
Sept. 3, 1995, 9 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Soyuz TM-22 was the 23rd mission and the 20th long-duration expedition to Mir space station. It was also a part of the US/Russian Shuttle-Mir Program. The mission began on September 3, 1995, 09:00:23 UTC, launching Commander Yuri Gidzenko, Flight Engineer Sergei Avdeyev and Research Cosmonaut Thomas Reiter into orbit. They docked with Mir two days later. During their stay there, cosmonauts performed several EVAs and various scientific experiments. Station crew was visited by several Progress resupply spacecrafts, STS-74, and welcomed aboard Soyuz TM-23 with the next expedition crew. The mission concluded with a safe landing back on Earth on February 29, 1996, 10:42:08 UTC.

Low Earth Orbit
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Tsiklon-3 | Okean-O1 8

Yuzhnoye Design Bureau | Ukraine
Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russian Federation
Aug. 31, 1995, 6:49 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Ocean observation satellite

Low Earth Orbit
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Proton | Potok 9

Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center | Russia
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Republic of Kazakhstan
Aug. 30, 1995, 7:33 p.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Geostationary military relay satellite

Geostationary Orbit
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Ariane 44P | N-STAR a

Aérospatiale | France
Guiana Space Centre, French Guiana
Aug. 29, 1995, 6:41 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Two Space Systems/Loral (SS/L) satellites with the highest capacity of any commercial payloads in space were delivered on orbit in 1995 and 1996 and are now providing a variety of fixed and mobile domestic communications services to customers throughout Japan. These satellites, N-STAR-a and -b, replace the service of the SS/L CS satellites, which have now exceeded their expected lifetimes, and will also provide significant new services, which range from providing alternate routes for telephony, to emergency communications, to marine and terrestrial mobile services, and ISDN.

Geostationary Orbit
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Atlas IIAS | JCSAT 3

Lockheed Martin | United States of America
Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
Aug. 29, 1995, 12:53 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Foreseeing the growth of the communications business, Japan Satellite Systems, Inc., (JSAT) of Tokyo signed a contract in October 1993 for a Hughes HS-601 satellite from Hughes Space and Communications International, Inc. The satellite, JCSAT-3, was designed to relay voice, data, and television signals via Ku-band to eastern Asia, Australia, New Zealand, and India; and via C-band to eastern and southern Asia and Hawaii.

Geostationary Orbit
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Athena I | Gemstar DSS-1

Lockheed Martin | United States of America
Vandenberg SFB, CA, USA
Aug. 15, 1995, 10:30 p.m.
Status: Launch Failure
Mission:

The CTA GEMStar 1 (VITASAT 1) satellite partially sponsored by Volunteers In Technical Assistance (VITA) of Arlington Virginia, was launched at 2230 UTC from Vandenberg AFB on the 15-Aug-95, but a second stage failure destroyed the first flight of the Lockheed LLV-1 launch vehicle (later dubbed Athena-1).

Low Earth Orbit
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Molniya-M | Molniya-3 59L

Russian Space Forces | Russia
Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russian Federation
Aug. 9, 1995, 2:21 a.m.
Status: Launch Successful
Mission:

Molniya communication satellites operating from a highly elliptical orbit

Elliptical Orbit
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Delta II | Mugunghwa 1

United Launch Alliance | United States of America
Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
Aug. 5, 1995, 11:10 a.m.
Status: Launch Failure
Mission:

Koreasat 1 and 2, also known as Mugunghwa 1 and 2, were South Korean communications satellite launched by Delta-7925 rockets from Cape Canaveral. They were based on the Lockheed AS-3000 bus and carried 15 Ku-band transponders to provide TV coverage for South Korea and other Asian countries.

Geostationary Orbit
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