Ariel 5 was the fifth and penultimate satellite of the joint British and American Ariel programme. It was the third satellite in the series built entirely in the UK. It was named UK 5 before launch and renamed to Ariel 5 after the successful launch. Plans for Ariel 5 were first discussed between the UK and US in May 1967 at the Ariel 3 launch. The Science Research Council advertised a request for proposal for experiments in June. Experiments were formally proposed to NASA in July 1968.
Satellite design
Development
in Portsmouth was selected as the prime contractor in 1969. SRC had them select MSDS Frimley for the attitude control system and MSDS Stanmore for the core stores. A study was performed to see if the Scout rocket's heat shield could be enlarged to accommodate larger experiments for this mission. A larger heat shield was designed which allowed for a US experiment and five British experiments.
Operation
Ariel 5 was spin-stabilized. The satellite improved on the attitude control of Ariel 4. It used liquid propane that was expanded through a reducing valve and heated with the bulk tank temperature. Power was derived from solar cells that were mounted to 7/8's of the circumference of the spacecraft. It was stored in a 3.0 Ah Ni-Cd battery.
Sensors
The all-sky monitor was two one-dimensional pinhole cameras scanned most of the sky every spacecraft revolution. The angular resolution was 10 × 10°, with an effective area of, and a bandpass of 3–6 keV. The ASM was designed to fit a resource budget of, 1 bit per second, and 1 W. The sky survey instrument had an angular resolution of 0.75 × 10.6°, with an effective area of, and a bandpass of 2–20 keV.
Mission
Launch
Launch operations took six weeks, starting from the time the Guppy took off from Thorney Island. The satellite was launched on 15 October 1974 from the San Marco platform in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Italy.
Operations
The satellite was controlled via a mission control centre in Appleton Lab. It spun at over 10 revolutions/minute. Ariel 5 operated until 1980.
Results
Over 100 scientific papers were published within four years of the launch.