Röntgen Satellite  The Röntgen Satellite was powered by three solar panels, which provided one kilowatt of power during the sunlit parts of the orbit. It had a rechargeable battery for the shadow phase of its orbit. | Joint US-German-UK satellite launched in 1990 to study cosmic sources of X-rays and extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) wavelengths, named after German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen, the discoverer of X-rays. After more than 9,000 observations of objects including comets, quasars, black holes, clusters of galaxies, and supernovae, the satellite was finally switched off on 12 February 1999. |
| Rosat was designed to produce the first all-sky fully imaging surveys in the X-ray and extreme ultraviolet parts of the spectrum. The satellite used a German X-ray telescope developed under the leadership of the Max Planck Institute, and the Wide-Field Camera (extreme-ultraviolet telescope) constructed by a UK team led by the University of Leicester and funded by the UK's Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC). The USA provided an additional X-ray camera and the launch vehicle, and the main spacecraft and mission operations were funded by Germany. |
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