PARS 1 SATELLITE – SCI & TECH News: Iran's Pars 1 satellite enters space after Russian launch

PARS
1 SATELLITE – SCI & TECH

News:
Iran's Pars 1 satellite
enters space after Russian launch

 

What's
in the news?

      
Iran
successfully put the "Pars-I" remote sensing and imaging satellite
into space with the assistance of Russia.

 

Key
takeaways:

      
The remote Pars 1 research-sensing
satellite, launched by a Russian Soyuz
rocket
from the Vostochny Cosmodrome, weighs 134 kg.

 

Pars
1 Satellite:

Launched
from:

      
The satellite was launched from Russia's
Vostochny launch base, which is located about 8,000 km (5,000 miles) east of
Moscow.

 

Developed
by:

      
"Pars-I" is fully developed
domestically within Iran.

 

Objective:

      
Pars 1, intended for land observation from an altitude of 310 miles, shows Iran's
advancement in space technology.

      
Remote
sensing and imaging
, focused on scanning Iran’s topography.

 

Orbit
Altitude
:
310 miles (500km)

 

Significance:

      
The launch is part of Iran’s broader
efforts in space technology, following its claim of launching three satellites
into orbit using its own rocket earlier in January.

 

Criticisms:

      
These developments have sparked
international debates over the dual-use nature of satellite launch
technologies, which could be repurposed for ballistic missile capabilities,
including those potentially carrying nuclear warheads.

 

Go
back to basics:

Russo-Iranian
Cooperation:

      
The launch of Pars 1 follows the August
2022 deployment of Iran’s Khayyam
satellite, also facilitated by Russia.

      
This pattern of collaboration indicates a
strengthening of scientific and technological ties between Iran and Russia,
amidst broader geopolitical tensions.

































































      
There’s speculation and concern about the
potential military advantages such cooperation might afford Russia,
particularly in the context of its military activities in Ukraine.