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LAUNCH PAD
Iran Launches Satellite Into Space, First Since 2012
by Staff Writers
Moscow, Russia (Sputnik) Feb 03, 2015


File image.

Iran has launched its Fajr (Dawn) observation satellite, using a Safir-2 rocket, the country's Fars news agency reported, its first launch since 2012 and declared that it has safely entered orbit. The launch marks the 35th anniversary of the Iranian Revolution and comes one day ahead of the country's Space Technology Day.

"Our scientists have entered a new phase for conquering space. We will continue on this path," the country's president, Hassan Rouhani, announced on state television, according to AFP.

The satellite is produced solely out of domestic components with no reliance on technology from aroad, the Fars news agency reported, and was built by the Defense Ministry's Aerospace Industries Organization.

The satellite has been placed into an elliptical orbit 250 to 400 kilometers above earth, according to Iranian international broadcaster PressTV.

According to Fars news agency, Iran is also planning on putting an observation satellite into geostationary orbit at 36,000 kilometers (22,320 miles), as soon as March. The satellite will have a lifespan of 18 months and will photograph and transmit images of the Earth' surface to Earth.

Iran's space program has been subject to international concerns, according to AFP, amid fears that it could be developing its rocket technology for military purposes, a charge which Tehran denies.

In October 2014, Iranian Space Agency deputy head Hamid Fazeli announced the country was preparing to launch three new satellites. The main function of the spacecraft is the transmission of images of the Earth's surface to ground stations.

Iran launched its first domestically-produced satellite in 2009. In July 2014, ISA introduced a 10-year national space program, which includes sending a man into space.


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LAUNCH PAD
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