
Seven satellites will launch on the Soyuz rocket
Two British spacecraft, including the first satellite made in Scotland, are due to go into orbit on Tuesday.
The pair will launch on a Soyuz rocket from Baikonur in Kazakhstan.TechDemoSat-1 was prepared in Guildford by Surrey Satellite Technology Limited, with the assembly of UKube-1 undertaken at Clyde Space in Glasgow.
Both platforms will trial innovative components, sensors and instruments that their producers hope can go on to win future business.
TDS-1 and UKube-1 have emerged from government-backed programmes designed to spur growth in the British space sector.
Ministers have identified satellites as one of their "eight great technologies" that can help rebalance the economy.
Lift-off for the Soyuz is timed for 21:58 local time (16:58 BST).
The UK missions are actually secondary payloads on the flight; its main purpose is to launch a Russian meteorological satellite, Meteor-M2.
TechDemoSat-1 is the bigger of the British duo at 157kg.
Among its demonstration systems is a suite of instruments to study "space weather" - the storm of charged particles, mostly from our Sun, that envelop the Earth. These particles can prove problematic - and even limit the life of - spacecraft systems.
TDS-1 also carries an innovative approach to monitoring the state of the ocean surface. It works this out by looking at how GPS signals are scattered off the water.
UKube-1 is much smaller than its "English brother". The Scottish platform weighs just 3.5kg. But, again, it holds some smart technologies that their developers want to prove in orbit.

Public funding for TDS-1 has come in large part from the government's Technology Strategy Board.
The UKube-1 project has been administered by the UK Space Agency.
But both SSTL and Clyde Space have invested their own cash in the ventures as well.
For Clyde Space, this is already paying dividends.
"This has been important for the development of our company," said sales manager Robin Sampson. "This has helped us mature into a complete satellite platform provider.
"Previously, we've tended to supply mainly spacecraft sub-systems, but this will be the first time we've put an entire satellite together to go into orbit. And already we've got more platform orders on our books," he told BBC News.
The intention is that UKube becomes a repeat programme. There should soon be an announcement on a UKube-2.
SSTL hopes the same will be true for TechDemoSat.
"A lot of people want to see TDS-1 work first, but we will continue to push for an ongoing programme," said the company's Doug Liddle.

"If it were like a timetable, like catching a bus, you could plan your developments much better. It's been shown to work for academia, for research programmes, and for commercial operators.
"To have that for demonstration satellites as a national capability would be a fantastic thing."
Among the seven missions on Tuesday's Soyuz flight is SkySat-2 - the second Earth observer for California's Skybox Imaging. The company, which is making snatches of video of the Earth's surface, hit the headlines last month when it was purchased by Google for $500m.
One satellite not going up is M3M. This Canadian platform was pulled from the manifest in April by the North American country's government amid the row over Russia's actions in Ukraine.

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