# USA 136

> 25034

**Wikidata**: [Q111498559](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q111498559)  
**Source**: https://4ort.xyz/entity/usa-136

## Summary
USA 136 is an artificial satellite. It is associated with the identifier "25034" in the provided structured sources and appears in machine-readable knowledge systems such as Wikidata and the Wolfram Language.

## Key Facts
- USA 136 is an instance of an artificial satellite (a human-made object placed into orbit).  
- The provided raw description for USA 136 is the identifier "25034".  
- The Wikidata description field for USA 136 is recorded as "25034".  
- The Wolfram Language entity code for USA 136 is Entity["Satellite", "25034"].  
- USA 136 is represented in structured knowledge sources (Wikidata and Wolfram Language) according to the supplied metadata.  
- No launch date, operator, mission type, or physical specifications are included in the provided source material.  
- The term "artificial satellite" is defined in the related class as a human-made object put into an orbit.

## FAQs
### Q: What is USA 136?
A: USA 136 is an artificial satellite. In the supplied sources it is identified by the number "25034" and appears in knowledge systems such as Wikidata and the Wolfram Language.

### Q: When was USA 136 launched?
A: The provided material does not include any launch date or temporal information for USA 136.

### Q: Who operates USA 136 and what is its mission?
A: Operation and mission details for USA 136 are not present in the supplied sources.

### Q: How is USA 136 cataloged in databases?
A: In the provided metadata, USA 136 is cataloged with the identifier "25034", has a Wikidata description of "25034", and a Wolfram Language entity code Entity["Satellite", "25034"].

## Why It Matters
Artificial satellites are foundational infrastructure for communication, Earth observation, navigation, science, and national security. As an entry classified as an artificial satellite, USA 136 is part of that broad category of human-made objects placed into orbit. Even when specific mission details are not available, knowing an object’s presence in structured knowledge systems matters for data interoperability, cataloging, and cross-referencing across scientific and technical databases. The association of USA 136 with a numeric identifier ("25034") and machine-readable representations (Wikidata description and Wolfram Language entity code) enables automated discovery and linkage in research, tracking, and archival contexts. For researchers, engineers, and information managers, these identifiers provide the minimal anchors needed to connect disparate datasets and to request or verify additional operational details from authoritative space object catalogs.

## Notable For
- Being recorded as an artificial satellite in the supplied structured properties.  
- Having the identifier "25034" as its primary provided descriptor.  
- Having a Wikidata description field explicitly set to "25034".  
- Being represented in the Wolfram Language as Entity["Satellite", "25034"].  
- Appearing in machine-readable knowledge sources even though operational and technical details are not present in the provided material.

## Body
### Identification
- Primary identifier in the supplied material: "25034".  
- Wikidata description string: "25034".  
- Wolfram Language entity: Entity["Satellite", "25034"].

### Classification
- Instance of: artificial satellite.  
- Related class definition (from supplied material): artificial satellite — a human-made object put into an orbit.

### Database and Knowledge-graph Representation
- Appears in structured property lists derived from Wikidata and academic sources.  
- Represented in at least two machine-readable systems (Wikidata description field and Wolfram Language entity code) according to the provided metadata.

### Available Metadata and Limitations
- Available metadata in the provided source: instance_of (artificial satellite), wikidata_description ("25034"), wolfram_language_entity_code (Entity["Satellite", "25034"]).  
- Missing from provided source: launch date, operator, mission purpose, orbital parameters, physical dimensions, and technical specifications.  
- No SEO data or additional contextual notes were provided.

### Usage Notes
- The supplied identifiers (Wikidata description and Wolfram code) can be used as anchors for querying external authoritative catalogs if more information is required.  
- Because operational and technical details are absent from the provided source, further research in dedicated space-object catalogs or primary mission documents would be necessary to obtain mission-specific facts.