Intercosmos program  - Germany / German Democratic Republic 1978 - 35 Pfennig

Designer: Jochen Bertholdt, Rostock

Intercosmos program - Germany / German Democratic Republic 1978 - 35 Pfennig


Theme: Astronomy & Space
CountryGermany / German Democratic Republic
Issue Date1978
Face Value 35.00 
Colorblue
PerforationK 14
Printing TypeRotogravure 2
Stamp TypePostage stamp
Item TypeStamp
Chronological Issue Number2054
Chronological ChapterGER-DDR
SID212102
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Intercosmology Program The Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications of the German Democratic Republic publishes three multicolored special postage stamps and a multicolored special postage stamp block for the implementation of the Intercosmology Program. Intercosmic Program In 1965, the USSR proposed to the governments of Bulgaria, Hungary, Cuba, Poland, the Mongolian People's Republic, Romania, Czechoslovakia and the GDR the unification of the scientific and technological potential of the CMEA countries in the field of cosmic sciences. She declared from the outset their willingness to provide free means of transport (rockets, satellites) and the launch and ground technology for cosmic experiments. In April 1967, the joint "Program for Exploring and Utilizing the Cosmic Space for Peaceful Purposes", which in 1970 was given the name "lnterkosmos", was adopted. Four main directions of joint research have been agreed: Cosmic Physics, Cosmic Meteorology, Cosmic Communications and Cosmic Biology and Medicine. With the orientation towards a broader application of cosmos research for the economy in 1975, the remote sensing of the earth was determined by aerocosmic means as the fifth main direction. The GDR contributions focus primarily on the areas of cosmic physics and cosmic meteorology and increasingly on the recent mainstream. Focal points are the development and construction of apparatus and equipment systems for orbital missiles and research rockets for the measurement of physical parameters in near-Earth space or for remote sounding of the earth's surface and for data transmission to Earth. So far, 17 lnterkosmos satellites have been launched in the lnterkosmos community, 10 of which also include equipment from the GDR, which is also equipped with the spacecraft "Soyuz-22", two weather satellites "Meteor", one "cosmos". Satellites, from four "vertical" geophysical rockets and 24 meteorological rockets "MR-12" and "M-100" respectively. So far 42 101 objects have been used on 42 objects. In addition, more than 150 devices have been developed and built for ground use and on-board testing. 35-pfennig value: satellite "Meteor" with spectrometric complex On the Soviet weather satellites "Meteor-25" (start May 15, 1976) and "Meteor-28" (launched June 29, 1977) was one at the Academy of Sciences of the GDR-developed spectrometric device complex Si-1 with an infrared Fourier spectrometer as the core successfully used. It serves to test indirect probing methods for the global extraction of atmospheric parameters (temperature, ozone and water vapor) for numerical weather forecasting and long-term atmospheric monitoring. The enlargement of the ground-oriented lower part of the device section shows the arrangement of the spectrometer complex. The altitudes of these satellites are between 600 and 900 km.

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Intercosmology Program The Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications of the German Democratic Republic publishes three multicolored special postage stamps and a multicolored special postage stamp block for the implementation of the Intercosmology Program. Intercosmic Program In 1965, the USSR proposed to the governments of Bulgaria, Hungary, Cuba, Poland, the Mongolian People's Republic, Romania, Czechoslovakia and the GDR the unification of the scientific and technological potential of the CMEA countries in the field of cosmic sciences. She declared from the outset their willingness to provide free means of transport (rockets, satellites) and the launch and ground technology for cosmic experiments. In April 1967, the joint "Program for Exploring and Utilizing the Cosmic Space for Peaceful Purposes", which in 1970 was given the name "lnterkosmos", was adopted. Four main directions of joint research have been agreed: Cosmic Physics, Cosmic Meteorology, Cosmic Communications and Cosmic Biology and Medicine. With the orientation towards a broader application of cosmos research for the economy in 1975, the remote sensing of the earth was determined by aerocosmic means as the fifth main direction. The GDR contributions focus primarily on the areas of cosmic physics and cosmic meteorology and increasingly on the recent mainstream. Focal points are the development and construction of apparatus and equipment systems for orbital missiles and research rockets for the measurement of physical parameters in near-Earth space or for remote sounding of the earth's surface and for data transmission to Earth. So far, 17 lnterkosmos satellites have been launched in the lnterkosmos community, 10 of which also include equipment from the GDR, which is also equipped with the spacecraft "Soyuz-22", two weather satellites "Meteor", one "cosmos". Satellites, from four "vertical" geophysical rockets and 24 meteorological rockets "MR-12" and "M-100" respectively. So far 42 101 objects have been used on 42 objects. In addition, more than 150 devices have been developed and built for ground use and on-board testing. 35-pfennig value: satellite "Meteor" with spectrometric complex On the Soviet weather satellites "Meteor-25" (start May 15, 1976) and "Meteor-28" (launched June 29, 1977) was one at the Academy of Sciences of the GDR-developed spectrometric device complex Si-1 with an infrared Fourier spectrometer as the core successfully used. It serves to test indirect probing methods for the global extraction of atmospheric parameters (temperature, ozone and water vapor) for numerical weather forecasting and long-term atmospheric monitoring. The enlargement of the ground-oriented lower part of the device section shows the arrangement of the spectrometer complex. The altitudes of these satellites are between 600 and 900 km..