FUNcube Dongle as a Radio Telescope?

A Radio Astronomy paper describes the use of the AMSAT-UK FUNcube Dongle Software Defined Radio as part of a Radio Telescope.

In the paper Dr David Morgan of the British Astronomical Association Radio Astronomy Group (BAA-RAG) describes how he used the FUNcube Dongle as the heart of a Radio Telescope operating on 1420 MHz.

He concludes that “A newly available SDR component has been shown to be very capable of acting as the heart of a simple and inexpensive three component radio telescope.”.

You can download the paper ‘Experiments with a Software Defined Radio Telescope’ by Dr David Morgan at
http://www.britastro.org/radio/projects/
An_SDR_Radio_Telescope.pdf

General Radio Astronomy Projects
http://www.britastro.org/radio/projects/otherproj.html

BAA-RAG Yahoo Group
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/baa-rag/

AMSAT-UK FUNcube Yahoo Group
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FUNcube/

 

SSTV sent through ARISSat-1 transponder

SSTV sent through ARISSat-1 transponder

Henk PA3GUO has made the first successful transmission of a Slow Scan TV (SSTV) image through the ARISSat-1 linear transponder. His receiver was an AMSAT-UK FUNcube Dongle SDR

FUNcube Dongle pro

AMSAT-UK FUNcube Dongle Pro

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ARISSat-1 Deployed

The Amateur Radio satellite ARISSat-1 has been deployed from the International Space International Space Station and its 145.950 MHz FM/SSTV and145.920 MHz BPSK signals have been received around the world

On the AMSAT bulletin board Gould, WA4SXM writes:

The ARISSat-1 space craft was deployed from the ISS today at 1443 EDT (1843 UTC) after a hold based upon questions about the 70cm antenna.

Congratulations to the ARISSat-1 team!  Now bring on those reception reports.

Drew, KO4MA reported that a station in Japan, JR8LWY-QN12 reported on the dcarr site [live satellite status] that he received ARISSat-1 telemetry at 2011-08-03  19:16-:30 UTC.

Deployment pictures: http://www.flickr.com/photos/valkyries1/6005117203/in/set-72157627223306577/

ARISS Slow Scan TV (SSTV) Gallery: http://www.amsat.org/amsat/ariss/SSTV/

Free Slow Scan TV Software MMSSTV uses your PCs Soundcard: http://mmhamsoft.amateur-radio.ca/

IZ8BLY Vox Recoder, enables you to record the signal from ARISSat-1 on 145.950 MHz FM while you’re at work or asleep: http://antoninoporcino.xoom.it/VoxRecorder/

How to receive ARISSat-1: http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/ARISSat/ARISSatHowTo.php

Follow ARISSat-1 on Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/arissat1

Online Satellite Pass Predictions, select ARISSat-1: http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/tools/predict/

The grab handles on ARISSat-1 were provided  by a member of AMSAT-UK.

ARISSat-1/KEDR is now ready for deployment Today.

ARISSat-1/KEDR deployment on August 3

ARISSat-1/KEDR is now ready for deployment from the International Space Station during EVA 29 today, August 3.

NASA TV will cover the EVA live starting at 1400 GMT, August 3.
1430: Hatch Open
1446: Egress ARISSat-1/KEDR and secure to airlock ladder
1452: Remove solar panel covers
1507: Translate to deploy site, activate PWR, TIMER1 and TIMER2 switches, verify LEDs on, and deploy
(Internet streaming:http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/index.html)

Read the NASA Press Release about EVA-29 and ARISSat-1/KEDR at: http://tinyurl.com/3hdn5k4 (nasa.gov)

 

AMSAT-UK Photo Gallery

Upload your 2011 Colloquium Photo’s to the AMSAT-UK photo gallery.
http://t.co/BW8s9JL

Radio-to-Soundcard interface to receive satellite SSTV

The ARISSat-1/KEDR team have released this information about receiving the satellite:

The FM downlink on 145.950 MHz will be audible on all common 2 meter amateur radio receivers with no modification needed to your equipment.

A CW/SSB receiver will also receive the CW beacons on 145.919 MHz or 145.939 MHz and the signals on the linear transponder passband between 145.922 to 145.938 MHz.

To take advantage of the full bandwidth of the downlink for SSTV, CW Decoding, BPSK Decoding you’ll need to add a few things:

+ You’ll need an audio patch cable from your receiver to your computer soundcard audio input. If you are already on the air with other amateur radio soundcard applications then you are ready with the hardware to receive, decode, and display the SSTV, BPSK-1000 or BPSK-400 downlinks.

+ You’ll need SSTV software (refer to the SSTV news item)

+ You’ll need the ARISSatTLM software to decode the BPSK telemetry. (refer to the ARISSatTLM news item)

The key difference is that the SSTV signal is transmitted on the
FM downlink on 145.950 MHz. The BPSK-1000 downlink is transmitted in SSB mode on 145.920 MHz. Depending on your equipment you may need to fabricate an audio patch to the computer soundcard input from both your 2 meter FM radio and 2 meter SSB radio.

An initial “RECEIVE ONLY” configuration is easily done consisting of an audio patch cable between your radio and the soundcard. The ARISSat-1/KEDR team testing the software noted that a minimal set up consisting of an audio cable from the speaker or headphone output from the radio to the line (or mic) input on your PC sound card was successful. If your rig has a ‘Line Out’ audio connection this can be run to the soundcard ‘Line In’ connection.

Many amateur radio “digital modes” articles, web pages, and books also discuss the more complex requirements to interface your transmitter to the soundcard and to control the push-to-talk functions. This is NOT required for you to successfully receive, decode, and display the signals you receive from ARISSat-1/ KEDR. To join into the all the fun your “RECEIVE ONLY” configuration will just need the audio cable!