Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4356699> ?p ?o }
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- Q4356699 subject Q15406201.
- Q4356699 subject Q7582074.
- Q4356699 subject Q8705243.
- Q4356699 subject Q8822850.
- Q4356699 abstract "Hermes was an American satellite which was to have been operated by the Colorado Space Grant Consortium. Intended to perform technology demonstration experiments in low Earth orbit, it was lost during launch in March 2011 when the rocket that was carrying it failed to achieve orbit.Hermes was a single-unit CubeSat picosatellite which was primarily designed to test communications systems for future satellites. It was intended to test a new system which would allow data to be transferred at a higher rate than on previous satellites, thereby enabling future missions to return more data from scientific experiments or images. A secondary objective was to have seen tests performed upon the satellite bus, which was to have served as the basis for future COSGC missions. The satellite would also have returned data on the temperature and magnetic field of its surroundings.Hermes was launched by Orbital Sciences Corporation using a Taurus-XL 3110 carrier rocket flying from Launch Complex 576E at the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. It was a secondary payload on the launch, with the primary payload being the NASA Glory spacecraft. The KySat-1 and Explorer-1 [Prime] satellites were launched aboard the same rocket. The launch took place at 10:09:43 UTC on 4 March 2011, and ended in failure after the payload fairing failed to separate from around the spacecraft just under three minutes after launch. With the fairing still attached the rocket had too much mass to achieve orbit, and reentered over the southern Pacific Ocean or the Antarctic. It was the second consecutive failure of a Taurus rocket, following the loss of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory in 2009.".
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q1030096.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q1086610.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q1142930.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q1532148.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q15406201.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q1555938.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q1579577.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q1580082.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q175127.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q1757575.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q201032.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q23548.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q26540.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q3544978.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q4356527.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q461492.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q531716.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q663611.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q697175.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q7582074.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q8705243.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q8822850.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q98.
- Q4356699 wikiPageWikiLink Q99.
- Q4356699 type Place.
- Q4356699 type ArtificialSatellite.
- Q4356699 type CelestialBody.
- Q4356699 type Location.
- Q4356699 type Place.
- Q4356699 type Satellite.
- Q4356699 type Thing.
- Q4356699 comment "Hermes was an American satellite which was to have been operated by the Colorado Space Grant Consortium. Intended to perform technology demonstration experiments in low Earth orbit, it was lost during launch in March 2011 when the rocket that was carrying it failed to achieve orbit.Hermes was a single-unit CubeSat picosatellite which was primarily designed to test communications systems for future satellites.".
- Q4356699 label "Hermes (satellite)".