Also known as SAPPHIRE, Navy-Q2008094 45
SAPPHIRE (Stanford AudioPhonic PHotographic IR Experiment, also called Navy-OSCAR 45) was a satellite built by the Stanford University students in Palo Alto, California. thumb|left|150px|Athena 1 rocket launching SAPPHIRE from Kodiak Island, AK. The satellite was launched on September 30, 2001, together with Starshine 3, PICOSat and PCSat on an Athena 1 rocket at the Kodiak Launch Complex, Alaska, United States.
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SAPPHIRE (Stanford AudioPhonic PHotographic IR Experiment, also called Navy-OSCAR 45) was a satellite built by the Stanford University students in Palo Alto, California. thumb|left|150px|Athena 1 rocket launching SAPPHIRE from Kodiak Island, AK. The satellite was launched on September 30, 2001, together with Starshine 3, PICOSat and PCSat on an Athena 1 rocket at the Kodiak Launch Complex, Alaska, United States.
Its purpose was the training of students, the operation of an infrared sensor, a digital camera, a speech synthesizer and from 2002 the operation of an APRS digipeater. He also served to train midshipmen of the US Naval Academy in the field of satellite control.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).