ARISSat-1/KEDR Team announces CW Contest

On August 3, 2011, the Amateur Radio satellite, ARISSat-1 began its education-based mission after deployment from the International Space Station. Students, teachers and amateur radio operators are invited to learn more about the satellite as a tool for education and its other features at http://www.arissat1.org/

The ARISSat-1 mission is to provide a variety of information through its many broadcast modes promoting STEM based education initiatives in the classroom. One of its modes is CW transmission. CW stands for “continuous wave” and is transmitted in Morse code.

To entice student interest in receiving Morse code, a CW contest has been created and all listeners are invited to participate.

Throughout recent history, a number of amateur radio operators, also known as hams, have made significant strides in developing space communications via ham radio. These are hams such as Owen Garriot, W5LFL making the first amateur radio contact from space and Jim White, WD0E, a technical contributor to the amateur satellite program.

To celebrate their accomplishments, the call signs of over 200 of these hams have been digitally stored on board ARISSat-1 and are being transmitted in rotation using Morse code at 145.92 MHz. The call signs can be heard between the RS01S CW identification and the CW telemetry in the repeated code transmission sequence.

To be a participant in the CW contest, all you have to do is copy and submit any 6 of the 200+ call signs you hear during multiple satellite passes, then submit the following information to: cwreport@arissat1.org

+ Your name or group’s name
+ Your ham call sign if applicable
+ Time in UTC and date of reception of each call sign
+ Your City, State, Country
+ Your email address
+ Your list of 6 call signs you have received

A major goal for this contest is to promote student interest in learning Morse code which continues to play an important role in emergency communications and is a fun way of sending messages using ham radio. In that spirit, we ask that participants copy the code by hand and refrain from using artificial means, e.g., electronic decoders, to decode the call signs. Due to the possibility of interference or excessive ambient noise that might be present during the pass, recording the code for playback and deciphering after the pass is permissible.

A copy of this information on the contest can also be found by going to http://www.arissat1.org and choosing the subtitle marked CW CONTEST under the Education menu.

For more detailed information on how to receive and decipher the CW transmissions, visit http://www.arissat1.org/ and choose the menu labeled FAQ and subtitle Receiving ARISSat-1.

We invite everyone to participate and be an important part of the ARISSat-1 mission experience.

Questions concerning the contest should be directed to: kc0zhf@yahoo.com.

A Very Important Note:
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All ARISSat-1 listeners should refrain from publically disclosing any received call signs from their list. The call signs should only be posted to the CWreport email address mentioned above. Posting the contest call signs on the internet, amsat-bb, other bulletin boards or any areas for public viewing will result in the listener or group being disqualified from the contest along with the disclosed call signs.

More information on the transmission schedule and overall mission of ARISSat-1/KEDR can be found at:

ARISSat-1 Web site: http://www.arissat1.org/
AMSAT-NA Web site: http://www.amsat.org/
ARISS Web site: http://www.ariss.org/
ARISS Facebook Page: Amateur Radio on the ISS (ARISS)
ARISS Twitter site: @ARISS_status

The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT) is a non-profit, volunteer organization which designs, builds and operates experimental amateur radio satellites and promotes space education. We work in partnership with government, industry, educational institutions and fellow amateur radio societies. We encourage technical and scientific innovation, and promote the training and development of skilled satellite and ground system designers and operators.

Our vision is to deploy satellite systems with the goal of providing wide area and continuous coverage for amateur radio operators world-wide. AMSAT is also an active participant in human space missions and supports satellites developed in cooperation with the educational community and other amateur satellite groups.

Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) is a volunteer program which inspires students, worldwide, to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and math through amateur radio communications opportunities with the International Space Station on-orbit crew. Students learn about life on board the ISS and explore Earth from space through science and math activities.

ARISS provides opportunities for the school community (students, teachers, families and local residents) to become more aware of the substantial benefits of human space flight and the exploration and discovery that occur on space flight journeys along with learning about technology and amateur radio.

OSCAR News is published quarterly by AMSAT-UK and posted to members. To get your copy join AMSAT-UK online at http://tinyurl.com/JoinAMSAT-UK/
Free sample issue at http://www.uk.amsat.org/on_193_final.pdf

KickSat – a personal spacecraft of your own in space

The website KickSat.org has been launched to give hundreds of people the opportunity to sponsor a small spacecraft they can call their own that will be launched into space.

KickSat.org is a spare time project run by Zac Manchester KD2BHC, an aerospace engineering graduate student at Cornell University, to launch a CubeSat filled with hundreds of Sprite ChipSat proof of concept spacecraft that he has developed into low earth orbit to demonstrate their viability. He needs to raise at least $30,000 to do the mission and has launched a public appeal to help raise the funds for the project via KickSat.org and the KickStarter creative project funding website.

Donors who donate $300 or more will be able to call one of the Sprite spacecraft their own, name it and specify a short message that it will transmit. Groups and clubs can sponsor small fleets of Sprites. The transmissions of the small spacecraft will be able to be received by amateur radio operators around the world with the appropriate equipment including members of the GENSO network.

Zac is doing the project because he is passionate about the democratisation of space exploration and hopes that by encouraging members of the public to be involved in hands on space research many more, and more ambitious, missions might be possible in future.

Watch Zac KD2BHC’s video

Daily Mail newspaper – Your own personal Sputnik: Launch a satellite and beam signals from orbit for just $300
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2047555/Kicksat-Sputnik-Launch-satellite-beam-signals-orbit-300.html

AubieSat-1 launch rescheduled

Due to unforseen mechanical issues involving the launch vehicle hydraulic system and exhaust ducts, the launch date of AubieSat-1 has been postponed until October 27, 2011.

More specific details about the problem can be found at http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/NPP/launch/index.html

Original AubieSat-1 Launch Information http://www.uk.amsat.org/2011/09/30/aubiesat-1-launch-information/

Winners of Space App Competition announced

The AMSAT-UK FUNcube team are among the winners in a competition to fly an Android App on the amateur radio Smartphone satellite STRaND-1 due for launch next year.

Space technology experts from Surrey Satellite Technology (SSTL) and the Surrey Space Centre (SSC) at the University of Surrey announced on Wednesday the four lucky winners of the ‘Space App Competition’ who will see their Android Applications run on smartphone-powered satellite STRaND-1, due for launch into space next year.

‘The STRaND Data’ app will show satellite telemetry on the smartphone’s display which can be imaged by an additional camera on-board. This app is developed by the team behind the AMSAT-UK FUNcube satellite and will not only enable new graphical telemetry to interpret trends but also provide a last way of communicating with the smartphone.

Read the SSTL Press Release at http://www.sstl.co.uk/news-and-events?story=1898

Read about the UK Smartphone STRaND-1 satellite in the Spring 2011 edition of OSCAR News at http://www.uk.amsat.org/on_193_final.pdf

New Scientist – Space apps: smartphone at heart of satellite mission
http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/onepercent/2011/10/britains-smartphone-spaceshot.html

OSCAR News is published quarterly by AMSAT-UK and posted to members. To get your copy join AMSAT-UK online at http://tinyurl.com/JoinAMSAT-UK/

Join the FUNcube Yahoo Group http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FUNcube

ARI Amateur Radio Satellite Meeting Report

The 8th Italian Amateur Radio Association (ARI) satellite meeting was held at the Joseph Hotel in Marina di Pietrasanta (Lu) on September 18, 2011.

The meeting was open to everyone and offered an agenda that covered current amateur radio satellite issues as well as technical lectures.

The presentation by ARI satellite manager, Roberto IW5BSF,  covered the problem of  interference to the Amateur Radio satellites from FM and Digital D-STAR repeaters operating in the Amateur Satellite service segments of the 2m and 70cm bands.

A PDF report of the meeting in English can be seen here, pictures can be seen here.

Italian Amateur Radio Association (ARI) Satellite page in Google English http://tinyurl.com/ARIsatellite and in Italian here.

Neptune TubeSat and CubeSat Launcher

Randa Relich Milliron CEO Interorbital Systems

Randa Relich Milliron CEO Interorbital Systems

The October issue of Sat Magazine carries an 8 page article by Randa Relich Milliron, Interorbital Systems Chief Executive Officer, in which she describes the Neptune rockets and their TubeSat and CubeSat payloads.

The first Neptune 9 rocket is planned to launch mid 2012 and will carry 40+ TubeSats and CubeSats. A number of amateur radio CubeSats will be on this launch including Vietnam’s F-1 and the Danish EuroLuna, Romit 1.

Read pages 46-53 of the October Sat Magazine at http://www.satmagazine.com/2011/SM_Oct_2011.pdf

Interorbital Systems http://www.interorbital.com/