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Scotland celebrates successful satellite launch

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UKube-1 will orbit at a distance of about 635km on a mission that is due to last a year



Scotland's first space satellite has been launched successfully in Kazakhstan.

UKube-1 was launched at 5pm UK time on 8 July from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, aboard a Russian Soyuz-2 rocket.

The nanosatellite, designed and manufactured by Clyde Space, is about the size of a shoe box and features GPS devices aimed at measuring space weather, as well as a camera that will take images of the Earth.

Craig Clark, Clyde Space chief executive, said: "This is a very significant day for Clyde Space and we are now looking forward to more space missions and further success.

"It is fantastic that a spacecraft designed, built and tested in Scotland by a Scottish company has been so successful and I'd like to thank everyone who backed us and contributed to this amazing project."

The satellite is part of the national collaborative CubeSat programme and will also carry a payload of five experiments that UK students and the public can interact with.

It will orbit at a distance of about 635km and the mission is due to last for a year, although the satellite itself will have a life-span of up to five years.

Andrew Strain, vice-president of engineering at Clyde Space, recently returned from Baikonur where he supervised the integration of UKube-1 on to the rocket at Launch Site 31.

He said: "After four years working on the UKube project, it's fantastic to have launched successfully and we now look forward to getting the first contact from the satellite which is expected around 10pm tonight.

"This is very exciting day for all of us at Clyde Space and we look forward to further major developments as the company progresses."

The launch was welcomed by First Minister Alex Salmond who heralded it as "one nanosatellite and one giant leap for Scottish space exploration".

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