AMSAT-UK congratulates the Fox team

AMSAT-UK LogoOn behalf of all members of AMSAT-UK I send our congratulations the AMSAT team in the USA for all their hard work in recent years on FOX-1A which having been successfully launched, and from which telemetry signals have been successfully received and decoded on earth, is now known as AO-85.

This is a great achievement. I wish the team well during the forthcoming commissioning, and we all hope that the new satellite will have a long and useful life operating in the Amateur Satellite Service.

73

Martin Sweeting, G3YJO

Chairman AMSAT-UK

AO-85 (Fox-1A) FM Voice Transponder Activated

Keen amateur satellite operator Hope KM4IPF

Keen amateur satellite operator Hope KM4IPF

The 435 to 145 MHz FM voice transponder on AO-85 was activated during Friday, October 9 allowing many contacts to be made. Among those active on the satellite was 9-year-old Hope KM4IPF.

Hope is the daughter of Michelle N8ZQZ and James WX4TV, other radio amateurs in the family are Hope’s elder sister Faith WA4BBC and brother Zechariah WX4TVJ, her younger sister is studying for her licence.

In this video Hope KM4IPF describes her first AO-85 (Fox-1A) contact

Fox-1A Real-time track and Orbital Predictions (click on Draw Footprint to show coverage area)
http://www.n2yo.com/?s=40967

Read the Fox Operating Guide to find out how to set up your handheld radio to work the satellite
http://www.amsat.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/FoxOperatingGuide_May2015_Hi.pdf
Note: If your rig has selectable FM filters use the wider filter for 5 kHz deviation 25 kHz channel spacing.

Download your free copy of the AMSAT Journal Fox-1A Launch special issue

Fox-1A Launched https://amsat-uk.org/2015/10/07/fox-1a-launch/

Jerry Buxton, N0JY talking about Fox-1A on NASA TV
https://amsat-uk.org/2015/10/07/radio-amateurs-on-nasa-tv/

AO-85 OSCAR Number Assigned for Fox-1A

Tony Monteiro AA2TX and Fox-1 model

Tony Monteiro AA2TX and Fox-1 model

Willian (Bill) Tynan, W3XO, AMSAT-NA OSCAR Number Administrator has issued the following release:

I have been informed of the successful launch today, October 8, 2015 of the AMSAT-NA-built Fox-1A CubeSat. I am also informed that the satellite has been heard by several amateurs in various countries.

This successful launch comes after years of diligent and dedicated work on the part of AMSAT-NA volunteers including Tony Monteiro, AA2TX, who became a silent key in March, 2014.  It was Tony who spearheaded and guided the work on all AMSAT-NA CubeSats until his untimely passing. Thus, it is only fitting that this spacecraft be dedicated to his memory.

Following Tony’s death, the work of completing and preparing for launch fell to Jerry Buxton, W0JY, who took over Tony’s post of AMSAT-NA’s Vice President for Engineering and saw to Fox-1A’s successful completion and its preparation for launch.

All of those who had a part in designing, constructing and testing Fox-1A and its various subsystems are to be congratulated for jobs well done.

Fox-1A Flight Unit

Fox-1A Flight Unit

Since Fox-1A was properly coordinated through IARU as an Amateur Radio satellite, has been successfully launched and its signals have been received; I, under the authority vested in me by the AMSAT-NA President, do hereby issue to Fox-1A the designation AMSAT-OSCAR-85, or AO-85.

May AO-85 serve the radio amateurs of world for many years to come.

[Thanks Bill, W3XO, and AMSAT-NA for the above information]

Fox-1A Launched https://amsat-uk.org/2015/10/07/fox-1a-launch/

Jerry Buxton, N0JY talking about Fox-1A on NASA TV
https://amsat-uk.org/2015/10/07/radio-amateurs-on-nasa-tv/

Fox-1A (AO-85) Launched

Fox-1A - To inspire, engage and educate the next generation

Fox-1A – To inspire, engage and educate the next generation

The amateur radio FM transponder CubeSat, AMSAT Fox-1A, was among 13 CubeSats flying as secondary payloads on the NROL-55 mission.

ELaNa XII LogoThe launch took place at 12:49:30 UT on Thursday, October 8 on a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

Jan van Gills PE0SAT in the Netherlands reported receiving Fox-1A at 1724 UT and Masahiro Arai JN1GKZ received it at 1746 UT in Japan. Ken Eaton GW1FKY said “I am hearing Fox-1A here in Wales – UK on the pass 2029 hrs Zulu. The announcement – Fox One Speech Mode – is very loud and clear. Congratulations to all involved in the success of the launch activation and support for the project.”

Listen online to the signal from Fox-1A when it’s in range of London from anywhere in the world by using the SUWS WebSDR remote receiver. Select Frequency: 145980 kHz and Mode: FM. http://websdr.suws.org.uk

Fox-1A Real-time track and Orbital Predictions (click on Draw Footprint to show coverage area) http://www.n2yo.com/?s=40967

Fox-1A is a 1-Unit CubeSat carrying an FM repeater that will allow simple ground stations using an HT and an “Arrow” or “Elk” type antenna to make contacts using the satellite. Data Under Voice (DUV) is used to send 200 bps FSK telemetry data at the same time as FM audio. This is achieved by making use of sub-audible frequencies below 200 Hz. The FM voice transponder was activated during Friday, October 9.

Fox-1A frequencies, see Operating Guide to set up your rigs memory channels:
435.180 MHz FM Uplink 67 Hz CTCSS PL tone required
145.980 MHz FM Downlink
Note: If your rig has selectable FM filters use the wider filter for 5 kHz deviation 25 kHz channel spacing.

Download your free copy of the AMSAT Journal Fox-1A Launch special issue

FM transponder operating techniques http://www.dk3wn.info/p/?p=44412

On the AMSAT Bulletin Board Burns Fisher, W2BFJ provided this information prior to launch:

Initially the transponder will not be on and will not respond to uplinks.  *Please do not attempt to uplink while we check out the satellite and commission it*.  We will publicize when we have opened the transponder to general use.  You should expect the checkout phase to last for a minimum of several days and possibly for several weeks.

Fox-1A Flight Unit

Fox-1A Flight Unit

During the initial checkout period and when the satellite is in range, every two minutes you will generally hear about 5 seconds of data followed by a few seconds of a voice ID (and possibly a second data packet).  You may occasionally hear ‘data’ mode which Chris Thompson, G0KLA, has famously described as sounding like an old-fashioned telephone modem.  If you should happen to hear what appear to be QSOs, please resist the temptation to join in before the commissioning period is over.

AMSAT-NA would love to have you collect and upload as much data as you can, and to give any other kind of report on the amsat-bb mailing list (which some of the Fox team will monitor) http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb

You can also report hearing or not hearing it on http://www.amsat.org/status/

You can upload data using the FoxTelem telemetry program that was recently released by Chris Thompson, G0KLA. (Check the “upload to server” box in the properties/preference page).  More data will help us do the checkout faster!  Remember if you hear the “telephone modem” sound, you must switch FoxTelem to high-speed mode manually.  Similarly FoxTelem must be in low-speed mode at other times.

AMSAT-NA are planning a special award to the person who submits the first data from the satellite (by which we mean the earliest downlinked mission elapsed time), so get your rigs ready!

Information on the free Fox telemetry decoder software is at
https://amsat-uk.org/2015/09/23/fox-telemetry-decoder-software/
Note: Please make sure “upload to server” is enabled in decoder settings

Fox-1A Telemetry Leaderboard Statistics http://www.amsat.org/tlm/

Read the Fox Operating Guide at
http://www.amsat.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/FoxOperatingGuide_May2015_Hi.pdf

BisonSat CubeSat

BisonSat CubeSat

Among the other CubeSats on the same launch as Fox-1A were BisonSat and ARC1 which both carry amateur radio payloads.

BisonSat, the first satellite developed by Native American tribal college students. Using BisonSat’s 100-meter resolution camera the Salish Kootenai College students hope to acquire images of the Flathead Indian Reservation.

BisonSat (Nʷist Q́ʷiq́ʷay in the Salish language)
Beacon 437.375 MHz GMSK AX.25, 9600 bps, 60 sec interval
http://cubesat.skc.edu/
https://www.facebook.com/Bisonsat
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WeGvRhzRu2o

Colleges run by Native American tribes are graduating more students in STEM fields
http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/magazine/physicstoday/news/10.1063/PT.4.2484

Morgan Johnson team lead for the ARC CubeSat

Morgan Johnson team lead for the ARC CubeSat

The Alaska Research CubeSat (ARC1) is a 1-Unit CubeSat designed and constructed entirely by engineering and science students from the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF).

ARC1 has four basic mission objectives:
• Provide authentic, interdisciplinary, hands-on student experiences in science and engineering through the design, development, and operation of a student small satellite mission
• Characterize the thermal and vibration environment inside the launch vehicle from ignition to orbit insertion
• Validate a novel low power Attitude Control and Determination System (ACDS)
• Validate a high bandwidth communication system by obtaining images of changing snow/ice coverage in arctic regions

ARC1 frequencies:
437.565 MHz CW beacon and 9600 bps FSK, AX.25, 10 sec interval.  Initial message in ASCII switching later to satellite health telemetry
2440.5 MHz at 1 Mbps
https://ssep.community.uaf.edu/projects/alaska-research-cubesat-1/

Watch NASA TV at http://www.nasa.gov/nasatv

NROL-55 ELaNa XII CubeSat Launch – Status information
http://spaceflightnow.com/2015/10/07/av058-journal/

IRC channel to coordinate object identification
http://cubesat.calpoly.edu/index.php/collaborate/ground-operators

Payload information and the latest TLEs
http://cubesat.net/index.php/missions/upcoming-launches/155-nrol55-launch-alert

Fox-1A on NASA TV https://amsat-uk.org/2015/10/07/radio-amateurs-on-nasa-tv/

Radio Amateurs on NASA TV

Jerry Buxton N0JY on NASA TV

Jerry Buxton N0JY on NASA TV

Radio amateurs Jerry Buxton, N0JY and Courtney Duncan, N5BF were on the panel at a NASA prelaunch briefing on Wednesday, October 7.

Participants in the news briefing discussed several of the specific CubeSats aboard the National Reconnaissance Office’s NRO-L55 mission. Four of the CubeSats are NASA-sponsored and nine are NRO-sponsored, one of which was developed with NASA funding. The mission is scheduled to launch Oct. 8 from California’s Vandenburg Air Force Base.

The panel comprised:
• Richard Welle, director, Microsatellite Systems department at The Aerospace Corporation
• Tim Olson, principal investigator for BisonSat, Salish Kootenai College, Pablo, Montana
• Morgan Johnson, team lead for the ARC CubeSat, University of Alaska, Fairbanks
• Jerry Buxton, N0JY vice president, Engineering, for AMSAT Fox-1
• Courtney Duncan, N5BF, principal investigator for LMRST-Sat, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California

Jerry described the Fox-1A mission and science, and answered questions.

Watch CubeSats on a Mission!

LQSat Launched

A CZ-2D rocket launch

A CZ-2D rocket launch

LQSat was launched into a 656 km sun synchronous orbit at 0413 UT on Wednesday, October 7 from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center (JSLC) in Inner Mongolia on a Chang Zheng 2D (CZ-2D) rocket.

The satellite was developed by researchers and students at the Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics (CIOMP) and carries an amateur radio payload.

LQSat is technology demonstrator measuring 40x40x60 cm with a mass of 50 kg and carries a 2 m resolution camera as the main payload.

The IARU coordinated downlink frequencies are
• 437.650 MHz at 0.5 watts (27 dBm) with either 25 WPM CW or 4800 bps MSK CSP packet data
• 2404 MHz at 1 watt (30 dBm) using 1 Mbps QPSK

Launch report http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2015/10/china-launches-jilin-1-mission-long-march-2d/