Canadian ConSat-1 CubeSat

ConSat-1 - Image credit ESA - Photo Gregory Gibson.

ConSat-1 – Image credit ESA – Photo Gregory Gibson.

The Canadian ConSat-1 3U CubeSat aims to analyze radiation characteristics in the South-Atlantic Anomaly, and test technology payloads.

Canada is an Associate Member of the European Space Agency (ESA) and ConSat-1 is one of the educational CubeSats chosen for Phase 1 of the ‘Fly Your Satellite!’ initiative.

The ‘Fly Your Satellite!’ initiative builds on the success of the ‘CubeSats for the Vega Maiden Flight’ pilot program. This culminated in 2012 with the launch of seven student-built CubeSats on the first flight of the new ESA Vega launcher.

The South-Atlantic Anomaly is a plasma cloud 200 km from the Earth’s surface, located above the east coast of South America. It appears to be constantly growing in size and a NASA report speculates that by 2240 it might cover approximately half the southern hemisphere. http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20000085550_2000122978.pdf

ConSat-1 plans to look at various aspects of the plasma cloud: its temperature, its atomic and molecular composition, its density, and its volume. The team hope to produce meaningful data which shows the ever-changing characteristics of this extra-spatial hazard.

In this video Nick Sweet of Space Concordia describes his teams winning CubeSat entry and provides an insightful look into the Canadian Satellite Design Challenge at the 2012 Canadian Space Summit.

Watch Space Concordia and the Canadian Satellite Design Challenge

ESA announce six CubeSats chosen for Phase 1 https://amsat-uk.org/2013/06/26/esa-announce-six-cubesats/

ESA ‘Fly Your Satellite’ Initiative http://www.esa.int/Education/Call_for_Proposals_Fly_Your_Satellite

Wiki – South-Atlantic Anomaly http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Atlantic_Anomaly

EEVBlog – ArduSat Arduino CubeSat

ArduSat

Jonathan Oxer VK3FADO talks about the Ardusat project and shows his Arduino based cluster board at the Melbourne Connected Community Hackerspace.

The two Arduino-powered satellites ArduSat-1 and ArduSat-X arrived at the International Space Station on August 9, 2013 in the Japanese HTV-4 cargo vessel along with the PicoDragon and TechEdSat-3 CubeSats and the HamTV transmitter.

Among the other radio amateurs who’ve been working on ArduSat are Jeroen Cappaert KK6BLQ and Joel Spark KK6ANB, both hold the USA equivalent of UK and Australian Foundation licences.

Watch EEVblog #519 – Ardusat Arduino Based CubeSat Satellite

Freetronics: ArduSat – The Arduino Satellite http://www.freetronics.com/pages/ardusat-the-arduino-satellite

ArduSat Arduino CubeSat Technical Details https://amsat-uk.org/2012/06/20/ardusat-arduino-cubesat-technical-details/

ArduSat Control Centre https://ardusat.org/

Electronics Engineering Video Blog – EEVBlog
http://www.eevblog.com/forum/blog/eevblog-519-ardusat-arduino-based-cubesat-satellite/

ArduSat for UK Schools https://amsat-uk.org/2013/04/13/ardusat-for-uk-schools/

LitSat-1 amateur radio frequencies announced

LitSat-1 CubeSatThe LitSat-1 CubeSat plans to carry a linear transponder and an AX.25 packet radio transceiver.

It is hoped that LitSat-1 will be among the CubeSats sent by Nanoracks LLC to the International Space Station (ISS) on the SpaceX CRS-3 mission in January 2014. It will be deployed from the ISS by the JEM Small Satellite Orbital Deployer (J-SSOD) of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA).

LitSat-1 is a 1U CubeSat project being developed by the Lithuanian Space Federation. The satellite aims to use low cost open-source software and hardware for primary and secondary flight computers that will control the payload consisting of an onboard VGA camera, GPS receiver.

The IARU satellite frequency coordination panel have announced coordinated  frequencies for LitSat-1.

Linear transponder for SSB/CW communications
• Uplink 435.180 MHz
• Downlink 145.950 MHz

AX.25 packet radio transceiver
• Uplink 435.550 MHz
• Downlink 145.850 MHz

Lithuanian Space Association in Google English http://tinyurl.com/LithuanianSpaceAssociation

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/palydovas

Google English article http://tinyurl.com/LitSat-1-Article

CubeSats in the Press

Clockwise from lower left, GAS team coordinator James Gardiner displays a model of a USU-designed cube satellite with inflatable boom to team members Trevor Kunz KF7YZY, Jorden Luke KF7YEM, Jeremiah Christensen, Micah Fry and Troy Munro KE7URC

Clockwise from lower left, GAS team coordinator James Gardiner displays a model of a USU-designed cube satellite with inflatable boom to team members Trevor Kunz KF7YZY, Jorden Luke KF7YEM, Jeremiah Christensen, Micah Fry and Troy Munro KE7URC

The Sky and Telescope magazine and the Standard-Examiner both carry articles about CubeSats .

The Standard-Examiner reports Utah State University (USU) is conducting research on an inflatable plastic boom that can unfurl once the satellite, about 10 cm square, is deployed. The boom is impregnated with an epoxy that becomes rigid only after being exposed to ultraviolet rays, like those in sunlight.

The rigid boom hangs downward, because of gravity, which creates torque. USU student researchers believe it will stabilize a cube satellite, so it can take clear pictures and host certain types of experiments that can’t be conducted on a spinning satellite.

The newspaper also interviews USU’s Get Away Special (GAS) team member Jorden Luke KF7YEM.

Read the article USU team works on CubeSat control
http://www.standard.net/stories/2013/09/10/usu-team-works-cubesat-control

STARE Concept of Operations - Image credit Naval Postgraduate School

STARE Concept of Operations – Image credit Naval Postgraduate School

Sky and Telescope features the STARE (Space-Based Telescope for Actionable Refinement of Ephemeris) CubeSat project which aims to launch a constellation of 18 orbiting observatories to monitor the entire sky for space junk.

STARE A (Re) was launched on September 13, 2012 and STARE B (Horus) hopes to launch in November 2013. The downlink for the STARE CubeSats is 57.6 kbps BPSK in the 902-928 MHz band.

Read the article CubeSats on Space Patrol
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/news/CubeSats-on-Space-Patrol-223023011.html

STARE CubeSat Comunications Testing, Simulation and Analysis
http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a567695.pdf

Naval Postgraduate School: 915 MHz 57.6 kbps modem http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a556715.pdf

Inflatable Antenna Could Give CubeSats Greater Reach

CubeSat equipped with an inflated antenna, in a NASA radiation chamber - Image credit Alessandra Babuscia

CubeSat equipped with an inflated antenna, in a NASA radiation chamber – Image credit Alessandra Babuscia

MIT report researchers led by Alessandra Babuscia have developed a new design of antenna for small satellites known as CubeSats.

Professor Sara Seager KB1WTW - Image credit MIT

Professor Sara Seager KB1WTW – Image credit MIT

Due the their small size CubeSats have been restricted to small monopole or dipole antennas. Such low gain omni-directional antennas have restricted CubeSats to Low Earth Orbits (LEO) using lower data rates than would be possible with a large dish antenna.

The MIT team, led by Alessandra Babuscia, is part of the research group of radio amateur Professor Sara Seager KB1WTW and also includes graduate students Mary Knapp KB1WUA, Benjamin Corbin, and Mark Van de Loo from MIT, and Rebecca Jensen-Clem from the California Institute of Technology.

The new inflatable antenna developed by Alessandra Babuscia and her team may significantly increase the communication range of these small satellites, enabling them to travel much farther in the solar system: The team has built and tested an inflatable antenna that can fold into a compact space and inflate when in orbit.

It is claimed the distance that can be covered by a satellite with an inflatable antenna is seven times farther than that of existing CubeSat communications.

Alessandra Babuscia - Image Credit MIT

Alessandra Babuscia – Image Credit MIT

“With this antenna you could transmit from the moon, and even farther than that,” says Alessandra Babuscia, who led the research as a postdoc at MIT. “This antenna is one of the cheapest and most economical solutions to the problem of communications.”

‘Magic’ powder

An inflatable antenna is not a new idea. In fact, previous experiments in space have successfully tested such designs, though mostly for large satellites: To inflate these bulkier antennas, engineers install a system of pressure valves to fill them with air once in space — heavy, cumbersome equipment that would not fit within a CubeSat’s limited real estate.

Babuscia raises another concern: As small satellites are often launched as secondary payloads aboard rockets containing other scientific missions, a satellite loaded with pressure valves may backfire, with explosive consequences, jeopardizing everything on board. This is all the more reason, she says, to find a new inflation mechanism.

Mary Knapp KB1WUA - Image credit Interplanetary Small Satellite Conference

Mary Knapp KB1WUA – Image credit Interplanetary Small Satellite Conference

The team landed on a lighter, safer solution, based on sublimating powder, a chemical compound that transforms from a solid powder to a gas when exposed to low pressure.

“It’s almost like magic,” Babuscia explains. “Once you are in space, the difference in pressure triggers a chemical reaction that makes the powder sublimate from the solid state to the gas state, and that inflates the antenna.”

Testing an inflating idea

Babuscia and her colleagues built two prototype antennas, each a meter wide, out of Mylar; one resembled a cone and the other a cylinder when inflated. They determined an optimal folding configuration for each design, and packed each antenna into a 10-cubic-centimeter space within a CubeSat, along with a few grams of benzoic acid, a type of sublimating powder. The team tested each antenna’s inflation in a vacuum chamber at MIT, lowering the pressure to just above that experienced in space. In response, the powder converted to a gas, inflating both antennas to the desired shape.

Rebecca Jensen-Clem - Image credit Interplanetary Small Satellite Conference

Rebecca Jensen-Clem – Image credit Interplanetary Small Satellite Conference

The group also tested each antenna’s electromagnetic properties — an indication of how well an antenna can transmit data. In radiation simulations of both the conical and cylindrical designs, the researchers observed that the cylindrical antenna performed slightly better, transmitting data 10 times faster, and seven times farther, than existing CubeSat antennas.

An antenna made of thin Mylar, while potentially powerful, can be vulnerable to passing detritus in space. Micrometeroids, for example, can puncture a balloon, causing leaks and affecting an antenna’s performance. But Babuscia says the use of sublimating powder can circumvent the problems caused by micrometeroid impacts. She explains that a sublimating powder will only create as much gas as needed to fully inflate an antenna, leaving residual powder to sublimate later, to compensate for any later leaks or punctures.

MIT student with a CubeSat - Image credit MIT

MIT student with a CubeSat – Image credit MIT

The group tested this theory in a coarse simulation, modeling the inflatable antenna’s behavior with different frequency of impacts to assess how much of an antenna’s surface may be punctured and how much air may leak out without compromising its performance. The researchers found that with the right sublimating powder, the lifetime of a CubeSat’s inflatable antenna may be a few years, even if it is riddled with small holes.

Kar-Ming Cheung, an engineer specializing in space communications operations at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), says the group’s design addresses today’s main limitations in CubeSat communications: size, weight and power.

“A directional antenna has been out of the question for CubeSats,” says Cheung, who was not involved in the research. “An inflatable antenna would enable orders of magnitude improvement in data return. This idea is very promising.”

Babuscia says future tests may involve creating tiny holes in a prototype and inflating it in a vacuum chamber to see how much powder would be required to keep the antenna inflated. She is now continuing to refine the antenna design at JPL.

Students build a 3U CubeSat - Image Credit NASA

Students build a 3U CubeSat – Image Credit NASA

“In the end, what’s going to make the success of CubeSat communications will be a lot of different ideas, and the ability of engineers to find the right solution for each mission,” Babuscia says. “So inflatable antennas could be for a spacecraft going by itself to an asteroid. For another problem, you’d need another solution. But all this research builds a set of options to allow these spacecraft, made directly by universities, to fly in deep space.”

Alessandra Babuscia is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). She has worked on several satellite projects including CASTOR, ExoplanetSat, Rexis and TerSat.

Source – MIT press release
http://www.mit.edu/newsoffice/2013/inflatable-antennae-could-give-cubesats-greater-reach-0906.html

Video: Loading the ISILaunch03 ISIPOD with ham radio CubeSats

ZACUBE-1, FUNcube-1 and HinCube in the pod

ZACUBE-1, FUNcube-1 and HinCube in the pod

Wouter Weggelaar PA3WEG has released a HD video showing the loading of three CubeSats, ZACUBE-1, FUNcube-1 and HiNcube, into their ISIPOD deployer in the ISIS clean room in Delft, The Netherlands.

This 3U ISIPOD is shared between three teams. First in is ZACUBE-1, second is FUNcube-1, and last in is HiNcube. The material was shot by Leon Steenkamp of the ZAcube-1 team, and kindly provided to me.

The stills are shot by Gerard Aalbers of the FUNcube-1 team, and Charl Jooste of the ZACUBE-1 team.

Watch Loading the ISILaunch03 ISIPOD with ZACUBE-1, FUNcube-1 and HiNcube

FUNcube-1 is in its Pod https://amsat-uk.org/2013/09/04/funcube-1-is-in-its-pod/