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,t 63 191376-s/;
N EWS R ELEASE
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
400 MARYLAND AVENUE, SW, WASHINGTON 25, D.C.
TELEPHONES. WORTH 2-4155-WORTH 3.6925
FOR RELEASE: Friday
July 19, 1963
RELEASE NO: 63-152
SECOND SYNCOM SCHEDULED FOR LAUNCH
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration
will attempt to launch another Syncom active repeater
communications satellite into near synchronous orbit
no earlier than July 23 from Cape Canaveral. If
successful it will be the first satellite to operate
in the 24-hour orbit 22,300 miles above the earth.
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Syncom I, launched February 14, 1963, achieved a
near synchronous orbit according to visual observations.
However, radio contact w.ith the spacecraft has not been
possible sinc- L.ne apogee motor was fired to insert it into
circular trbit at synchronous altitude.
Syncom will be boosted to the orbital altitude by a
Delta launch vehicle. Should this launch be successful its
v.ill be the 19th straight success for the Delta. Upon
:.eaching apogee the satellite will be injected into the
synchronous orbit by a solid rocket motor attached to the
pDaeecraft. Ones in the synchronous orbit and at the desired
location Syncom will stay at approximately the samve longitude
over the Atlantic Ocean while moving in latitude in an
elongated figure 8 pattern approximtately 30 degrees north
and couth of the equator.
The Government of the Federation of Nigeria is making
an Important contrir)ution to the project by permitting the
stationing of' the USNS Kingsport in Lagos Harbor and making
other facilities available.
Communications tests will be conducted between a
transpo'table ground station at Lakehurst, N.J., and a
station aboard the Kingsport. The satellite will be capable
of transmitting one two-way telephot..o calls teletype messages
or photo facsimile. The number of teletype messages will
depend on she type of equipment employed by the ground stations.
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Oblectives of_2.com
1. Develop capability of launching satellites into the
24-hour orbit using exf.sting launch vehicles plus additional
solid fuel "apogee-kick" rockets.
2. Fligit test a new approach to satellite attitude
and period control.
3. Provide experience in using communications satel-
lites in a 24-hour orbit.
Syncom, if successful, will usher in a new approach to
spacecraft attitude and velocity control. It will be the
first space communications link to Africa.
Syncom is a NASA project supported by the Department of
Defense which is providing ground stations ard will conduct
communications experiments to meet NASA requirements. NASA
provides the spacecraft, the Delta launch vehicle, telemetry
and command ground stations. NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center manages the project under the overall supervision of
NASA Headquarters.
Launch
The Delta launch vehicle will boost the Syncom to an al-
titude of about 140 miles where the spacecraft will enter an
elliptical orbit. The Delta will be launched in an azimuth
direction of about 108 degrees from Cape Canaveral.
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Just before the third stage of the Delta fires it is
given a spin rate of approximately 150 rpm so that the
attitude of the satellite and its apogee mnotor will be
maintained correctly as it coasts toward apogee following
separation, A timer aboard the spacecraft is set to fire
the apogee motor some 5i hours after injection into the
elliptical orbit at perigee. The motor can also be fired
on command from the ground.
Sequence of Events
The entry into synchronous orbit is scheduled to
take place over the coast of Mozambique, East Africa.
However, the final planned position for Syncom is over
the Atlantic Ocean between Africa and South America.
Moving Syncom westward to the desired location is one
task of the spacecraft's jet control system. The ground
stations on the day following apogee motor firing will
determine whether Syncom is drifting eastward or westward
and at what rat-. If it is drifting westward at the
correct speed no corrections will be made. Otherwise a
hydrogen peroxide rccket motor aboard the satellite will
be comm;andcd to move Syncom westward at the desired drift
rate of 4.6 degrees per day. Aproximately three days after
launCh reorieentation will begin. This will be accomplished
by operation of a second jet control system which will
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realign the satellite's spin axis so that it is
perpendicular to the plane of the orbit and the satellite
antenna is in its operational attitude. This control
system uses nitrogen under pressure and its operation
to reorient the satellite will reduce the drift rate
to 3" degrees per day. The satellite's motion will be
measured by the ground stations and, if required, additional
corrections will be made by another nitrogen jet or
alternatively by a second peroxide jet.
If everything goes well the satellite will reachi
the desired longitude (40 degrees west) approximately
18 days after launch. The control system will then be
used to adjust the satellite's velocity to stop the drift
so that the satellite will be synchronous and over the
desired meridian of longitude. However, it is expected
to be in position for communications testing--ship,
satellite, Lakehurst and returr--about eight days after
launch.
In its final location in orbit Syncom will not be
in a truly stationary orbit. This would require that
the orbit be circular and in perfect alignment with the
plane of the equator in addition to having a period of
24 hours. Syncom is designed only to meet the 24-hour
orbital-period requirements.
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The satellite's transmitting antenna, a coaxial
slot array, transmits to ground at 1815 mc.
On the ground, signals are intercepted by two 30-
foot parabolic antennas. One is at Lakehurst, New Jersey,
the other aboard the Kingsport. Parametric amplifier
receivers are used.
Ground station transmitters deliver 20 kw at 7360 mc,
and are frequency modulated with a bandwidth up to 80 kc.
Ground station receiver bandwidths are 100 kc maximum.
Ground stations of the U.S. Army Satellite Communications
Agency under NASA direction will conduct the communications
experiments designed for Syncom. The overall Syncom
system will be able to conduct two-way telephone, teletype
and facsimile transmission but not television.
Public demonstrations may be conducted, depending on
the condition of the spacecraft, after the satellite
reaches its final destination in orbit and is checked out.
Operational control of the Syncom spacecraft is exercised
from the Communicationr. Spacecraft Control Center (COPISOC)
at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland,
which is in constant communication by teletype and telephone
with the communications ground stations and tracking stations.
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Tracking is carried out by the Syncom communications
ground stations, employing a range and range rate system
supplied by Space Technology Laboratories under NASA
contract. The Space Tracking and Data Acquisition Network
(STADAN) will also track the satellite to provide important
early-time data and provide a back-up capability. Specialized
project telemetry and command equipment developed by Hughes
Aircraft Company under contract will be used at the ground
stations to receive telemetry on the attitude and operating
condition of the satellite, and to command operation of
its various functions including control of the hydrogen
peroxide rocket motor and nitrogen gas jets.
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The 24-Hour Orbit
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration will
launch the Syncom satellite as part of its program in develop-
ing a capability of placing satellites into 24-hour orbits
22,300 miles above the earth.
NASA does not intend to place Syncom in an equatorial
orbit but rather in an orbit inclined about 30 degrees to
the equator. BeccL1s2 of this Syncom will not be stationary
but will appear to trace an elongated figure 8 over the
Atlantic Ocean between Africa and South America every 24
hours. It will travel from about 30 degrees north of the
equator to 30 degrees south of the equator while tracing
this pattern over the surface of the earth, but will always
stay within a few degrees of longitude.
Later synchronous satellites are planned to be placed
into 24-hour equatorial orbits. These satellites would appear
to be stationary above a point on the equator and are usually
referred to as stationary satellites. Three stationary
satellites equally spaced in such a 24-hour equatorial orbit
would give a near global communications capability. If
lower-altitude random-orbit satellites are used, as many as
50 might be needed for global comnunications.
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Another advantage of a stationary satellite is that it
requires less elaborate and costly ground equipment than
does the lower altitude satellite system since the ground
antenna system would require no extensive provision for
tracking. In addition, a synchronous satellite can operate
on solar power most of the time since 995 of the time it is
in the sunlight. No active temperature control system is
needed and fewer batteries are required, resulting in weight
savings.
Synchronous satellites have less complex problems of
power supply and thermal control than some others. However,
they are inherently more complex than communications
satellites in lower orbits need to be.
Spacecraft Facts
Syncom, without antennas or apogee motor, is a cylinder
28 inches in diameter and 151 inches high. The apogee motor
rocket nozzle protrudes from one end, communications antennas
from the other. Weight of the spacecraft, including the apogee
motor case with all the fuel gone, is 36 pounds. Payload
weight is 147 pounds at separation from the third stage of
the Delta launch vehicle.
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The side surface of Syncom is covered with 3840 silicon
solar cells which supply energy to the nickel cadmium
batteries.
The satellite's outer structure supports the solar
panels and contains the nitrogen and hydrogen peroxide gas
control systems and most of the satellite's electronics.
An inner structure supports the apogee motor and the remaining
electronics.
Antennas include a slotted array antenna for communi-
cations transmission, a dipole for communication receiving
and four whip antennas in a turnstile arrangement for
telemetry and command.
Syncom has a passive temperature control system. Adequate
temperature control is achieved by the design and materials
used on the external surface and by properly insulating
sub-system equipment.
Control Systems
Syncom's control in orbit is achieved through a nitrogen
gas control system and a hydrogen peroxide system. Two
pressurized spherical tanks mounted opposite each other and
connected by a manifold contain the gases for each system.
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Each control system has two jets. One jet fires
parallel to the spin axis and the other perpendicular to
the axis. The nitrogen system contains about 1.7 pounds of
nitrogen at 2500 psi and the other system contains 5 pounds
of 90% hydrogen peroxide pressurized to 200 psi by nitrogen.
The nitrogen system has a total correction capability of
about 47 feet per second and the hydrogen peroxide system
has a correction capability of about 300 feet per second.
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Electronics
Most electronic subsystems on Syncom are duplicative.
Included are transponders with two traveling-wave tube
transmitters and two receivers, either receiver of which
may be used with either transmitter. One receiver has two
narrowband channels, each with a noise bandwidth of 500 kc.
The other has a noise bandwidth of 5 me. Syncom's receiver
noise figure is lOdb; antenna gain is 2 db through a skirted
dipole antenna.
The antenna receives signals from ground stations on
two frequencies near 7360 me, and supplies them to one of
the two receivers. At any one time, only one of the re-
ceivers operates; the one chosen is selected by command.
Two-way communications can pass through either receiver.
The receiver then drives one of the two transmitters, the
traveling wave tube of which delivers two watts to the antenna
at a frequency of 1815 me. The transmitter also provides a
100 milliwatt tracking beacon signal at 1820 mc.
The total transponder power consumption is 16 watts. A
transponder weighs eight pounds, including the traveling wave
tube and high voltage power supply.
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B3esides acting as a beacon and a communications
tr-anspunder, Synco>.-'s communication system will also trans-
pond signals to measure range and range-rate of the satel-
lite to determine its orbit.
The transmittin- antenna, located on the spin axis and
opposite teic apogee motor, is a slotted array of dipoles and
has a gainl of 5.' db. It radiates a pancake-shaped beam with
its plane perpendicular to the spacecraft's spin axis. The
beam covers toe earth at all points in line of sight.
The turnstile antenna will be used for both conmand and
telemetry. Telemetry data to be transmittod include tempera-
tues; power supply voltage and current, signal st,'engtii at
the communication-s receiver and transmitter; solar sensor's
u\Itput ; and pressure ol nitrogen and hydrogen peroxide gas
systeas.
Nineteen analo-; and pu:lse signals v.ill. be telemetered
[rolim the encoders. Analog inputs will be sequentially
mullti.p:lexed, Jour clhannels per second, onto a frequency-
modulated sub-carrier oscillator with a 14'5 Icc center fre-
quency. SUIn sensor and accelerometer outputs, directly
modulate the telemetry transmitter.
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The two i13 mc command receivers are identical.
Each has its o'n mixer, i-f amplifier an, AM. letector. The
hybrid network allows command receivers and telemetry
systems to share the turnstile antenna which has a minimum
of -4.5 db gain. Commands to be transmitted to SYNCOM from
ground stations include telemetry and -munications system
switching, gas jet firing, and apogee mf.tor firing.
The command decoders consist of the circu-itry required
to process the ground commands. Ei.ectronics are turned on
or off with 12 command signals; another 13 commands are used
for control.
An audio tone is supied to one of three channels 'n
each decouer, the enable channel. When this channel detects
t-e tone, a switch connects the other two channels, the logic
and execute channels. The logic channel sets up the coriand
on receiving the proper number of pulses fropm the ground.
The command is set up and verified by telemetry before the
command is execuied.
Power supply is intended to supply about 25 watts at
28 vojts.
Flanges in Syncom Since First Launch
Several changes have been made in the Syncom spacecraft
following the experience with Syncom I. They are:
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1. A small silver-zinc battery has been installed
to supply power to operate a second beacon aid telemetry
system for about 30 to 40 minutes in the event of a failure
in the primary power supply.
2. The power distribution system has been changed so
that there are redundant paths for supplying power to each
system of the satellite.
3. An accelerometer has been installed to measure accel-
eration levels during burning of the apogee kick motor.
4. A Jet Propulsion Laboratory Starfinder solid propel-
lant motor is being used instead of the Tfliokol TE _75 used
in Syncorn I for the a.pcgee kick stage. The JPL motor is
specifically configured for the Syncom wnile the Thiokol|
motor was adapted from a mooior designed for another use.
5. Clearances between the nitrogen tanks and the space-
craft structure have been increased to avoid contact and the
possibility of damage to the tank and structure by forces
encountered from vibration during the apogee stage firing.
In addition, several tests were conducted to investizate
possible sources of the power failure on Syncom I.
These tests include:
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1. Firing of the Thiokol and JPL motors on spacecraft
mounted on test stands in the vacuum chamber at Tullahoma,
Tennessee.
2. Firing of the JPL apogee motor on a centrifuge.
3. Fracture testing of the titanium nitrogen tanks.
The latter test gave an indication that a nitrogen tank
failure could have led to the power failure in Syncom I.
Although it probably never will be known for sure wihat caused
the Syncom I power failure, technicians say that either an
electrical failure or a nitrogen tan'c failure is a plausible
cause,
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2he Syncom Team
The Nauional Aeronautics and Space Administration is re-
sponsible for the Syncom Project. Development and operational
phases ol LShe project are directed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center, Greenbelt, Maryland.
Design and construction of the Syncom spacecraft was ac-
complished under NASA contract by Hughes Aircraft Company, Cul-
ver City, California, under the technical direction of Goddard.
Responsible for the ground communications equipment is The Bendix
Corporation under contract with the Department of Defense for
NASA.
Prime contractor for the Delta vehicle is Douglas Aircraft
Company, Inc., Santa Monica, California, which is also respon-
sible for pre-launch and launch operations. Logistic support
is provided by the Atlantic Missile Range.
Key officials responsible for the Syncom Project are:
NASA HEADQUARTERS
Robert F. Garbarini, Director, Office of Applications
Leonard Jaffe, Director Communications Systems, Office of
Applications
Robert E. Warren, Deputy Director, Communications Systems,
Office of Applications
J. R. Burke, Syncom Project Officer, Office of Applications
John J. Kelleher, Chief, Communication Satellite Systems
Operations Division, Office of Applicr'-t:ns
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GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CEFTER
Dr. Harry J. Goett, Director
Daniel G. Mazur, Chief, Spacecraft Systems and Projects Division
Robert J. Mackey, Jr.., Chief, Spacecraft Communications
Alton E. Jones, Syncom Project Manager
Robert J. Darcey, Assistant Syncom Project Manager
Paul Karpiscak, Syncom Project Coordinator
HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANY
C. Gordon Murphy, Syncom Project Manager
Pr. Harold Rosen, Assistant Syncom Project Manager
D. D. Williams, Orbital Mechanics Scientist
DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INCORPORATED
J. Klein, Chief Project Engineer
G. Fe Hansen, Head of AMR Field Station
The Delta Launch Vehicle
The launch vehicle for Syncom is the NASA-developed Delta,
a three-stage rocket which has performed flawlessly in the last
18 of its 19 launch attempts. Delta is nine ritories high and
weighs 57 tons.
The vehicle's first stage is a 60-foot modification of
the Air Force-developed Thor (DM-21) space booster and generates
more than 170,000 pounds of thrust duiring the two-minute, 25-
second period its 50 tons of propellant burn.
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The second stage is 17 feet tall and weighs a little more
than two and one-half tcns. It is powered by an Aerojet-General
liquid engine which develops 7,500 pounds of thrust and burns
slightly more than two minutes.
Delta's one-quarter ton solid propellant third stage is five
feet high and uses an Allegany Ballistics Laborator7 ABL 248
engine with a thrust rating of 3,000 pounds. Its burning time
is 40 seconds.
For a minute and a half after lift-off, Delta is guided
by its Thor auto-pilot. At that point, a Bell Telephone Labora-
tories radio guidance system makes refined velocity and steering
corrections as needed. Shortly after first stage burn-out and
separation, and after ignition of the second stage, the fairing
(covering the third stage and the Syncom payload) is jettisoned.
Second stage burning ends about five and one-quarter minutes
after lift-off. .,he vehicle with second and third stages still
attached is now at an altitude of about 125 miles, At this point
a 40-second coast period occurs. During this period, guidance
is provided by a 42-pound flight corntrol systeim contained in
the second stage. The satellite and the third stage are "spun
up" by small rockets mounted on a "spin table" between the second
and third stages. At the end of the coast period the second stage
separates, and third stage ignition occurs. Soon the required
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orbital velocity of 17,000 miles per hour is reached. The payload,
now in the preliminary or "perigee" phase of its transfer orbit
is more than 151 miles above the earth and 1,000 miles from Cape
Canaveral.
Program manager for the Delta is T. B. Norris, of the NASA
Headquarters. The Goddard Delta vehicle manager Is William R.
Schindler. Robert H. Gray heads the Goddard Field Projects
Branch at Cape Canaveral.
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Syncom Ground Stations
The space-age electronic surface facilities of the U.S.
Army Satellite Communications (SATCOM) Agency, Fort Monmouth,
New Jersey, will send signals through 22,300 miles of space
to test the "talking" capabi ities of this nation's newest
communications satellite, NASA's Syncom.
Because of its experience gained in previous satellite
communications projects, and because of the facilities it has
already developed, the SATCOM Agency was seI - <1 to support
NASA iln this pioneering space effort by providing the surface
terminals and conducting the space communications experiments.
Although Syncom is a synchronous orbit satellite, the
SATCOM Agency's role includes development of facilities for
communicating through random orbit satellites as well. Ter-
minals the Agency has previously developed have been modified
to support the Syncom program.
Synchronous Orbit Communications
The USNS Kingsport is scheduled to transmit the first
historic communication through Syncom, on a loop circuit,
once the satellite is oriented in its synchronous orbit. The
successful completion of the 45,000-mile loop circuit will
be the first demonstration of communications via a satellite
in the synchronous orbit.
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The theory was virtually demonstrated in February during
the launch of the first Syncom satellite. Just before it a-
chieved apogee and separation from its booster, about five
hours after launch, a series of tone-voice-music test messages
was transmitted from the Kingsport to the satellite. Even
though Syrntom was 20,000 miles high at the time (and still
climbing) and even though its communications antenna was not
favorably oriented toward the earth, the return messages from
the satellite were reciLved back at the Kingsport.
The Kingsport
The ship station is a former World War II Victory ship
which was transformed into a seagoing satellite communica-
tions laboratory last year by the Navy Bureau of Ships under
the SATCOM Agency's direction.
The 11,000-ton Kingsport has a 10,000-mile range at a
sustained speed of 15 knots. This mobility will enable sci-
entists and technicians to gain valuable and extensive data
on satellite communications capabilities from fringe angle
areas, over various combinations of land and water, and un-
der differing hemispheric and atmospheric conditions.
The ship's satellite communications and tracking anten-
na, which features a 30-foot parabolic reflector, is gyro-
stabilized on three axes and is housed beneath a hypalon-
coated ducron radome on the deckhouse aft.
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Air-Transportable Terminal
'he second link in the Syncom test network has been
located at the Lakehurst, New Jersey, Naval Air Station.
This termirawl is composed of 11 wheeled vehicles which can
be transported by train, ship, or cargo plane to various
points around the globe.
The terminal at Lakehurst features a 30-foot parabolic
reflector antenna. It is being operated for this NASA
research and development activity by highly trained communi-
cations specialists provided for the purpose by the DOD.
Transatlantic Hookup Via Syncom
Once Syncom has achieved orbit and successful communi-
cations have been demonstrated on a loop circuit from the
USNS Kingsport, the satellite's drift will carry it westward
over the Atlantic Ocean at a rate of approximately two
degrees a day. When Syncom reaches a point .En radio line-of-
sight o' the SATCOM terminal at Lakehurst, test messages
will be exchanged between the continents of North America
and Africa, via satellite.
When Syncom reaches its desired location it Will be
usable almost 90 percent of the time for transoceanic
communications and a planned program of space communications
experiments will be conducted on a comparatively uninterrupted
basis between Lakehurst and the ship in Lagos Harbor or at
sea.
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Fixed Terminal Station
A few miles southwest of the Lakehurst Terminal is the
SATCOM Agency's fixed terminal station at Fort Dix, New
Jersey. This station is a permanently emplaced high precision
research facility as opposed to the air-transportable tenrinal.
The Fort Dix station, and an electronic twin facility construct-
ed at Camp Roberts, California, feature 60-foot parabolic reflector
antennas which possess a tracking accuracy of .024 degrees.
The Fort DiX Zround station will be monitoring all the
activities of the Lakehurst terminal in the Syncon. experiments.
After Syncom's signal link between the ship and Lakcehurst has
been established, and the communications system of the satellit-
has been tested and evaluated, it is planned to exercise the
Fort Dix station withl the satellite. The station at Camp Roberts
w.fill not be in line-of-sight of the satellite during this phase
of the Syncom program.
Test Operations Center
The communications experiments used to test and evaluate
the capabilities of Syncom as a signal relay point will be
managed in behalf of the NASA from the SATCOM Agency's Test
Operations Center, located at Agency Headquarters, Fort Monmouth,
New Jersey. Here SATCOM Agency Commander, Brlg. Gen. J. Wilson
Johnston; Technical Director, Samuel P. Brown; and the Agency's
technical-engineering staff assigned to the project will direct
and implement the communications test series that has been
programmed.
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The satellite communications performance tests
planned include single channel voice, single channel
teletype, multi-channel audio, multi-channel teletype, simul-
taneous voice and teletype, facsimile, phase delay and other
variations to determine system capacity, fidelity and level
of quality under varying conditions.
The success of the current attempt to demonstrate
synchronous orbit satellite communications will depend not
only on orbiting a workable satellite package; to a large
extent, success will depend on the accuracy and reliability
of the surface terminal facilities.
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