Armadillo CubeSat to use Cold Gas Thruster

The amateur radio 3U CubeSat Armadillo is a collaboration between students at University of Texas at Austin and Baylor University.

Armadillo stands for Attitude Related Maneuvers And Debris Instrument in Low (L) Orbit and the satellite is being designed for Flight Unit delivery in June 2013 with an assumed launch in January 2014.

Mission Objectives:

– Characterize the low altitude space dust environment and the orbit effects of this space dust as potential threats to military satellites.

– Operate a cold-gas thruster to extend mission lifetime and perform a controlled de-orbit maneuver in order to gather more scientific data at different altitudes.

– Establish optical navigation by taking and downloading a celestial image to obtain an independent verification of satellite position and attitude.

– Demonstrate on-orbit reprogrammable software so the satellite may use updated commands and algorithms.

– Develop a reusable 3U picosatellite bus for potential use on future missions in an effort to cut design and fabrication costs

Watch Bevo 2 / ARMADILLO Cold Gas Thruster Pendulum Test 3

Armadillo website http://armadillo.ae.utexas.edu/

Information, Videos , News and Images about Cold Gas Thruster http://www.rtbot.net/cold_gas_thruster

Cold Gas Thruster spec sheet http://austinsat.net/datasheets/Thruster%20Spec%20Sheet%20rev2.pdf

Texas CubeSat 2011 Presentation http://lightsey.ae.utexas.edu/publications/TEXAS_CubeSat_2011_Presentation.pdf

OSSI Art CubeSat to Launch in August

Hojun Song DS1SBO and the NovaNano FlyMate™ deployer

Hojun Song DS1SBO and the NovaNano FlyMate™ deployer

Hojun Song DS1SBO is a cutting-edge, tech-obsessed Korean artist breaking boundaries with his passion for telling stories through technology. He hopes to instill a sense of empowerment in the world, through the DIY nature and uplifting undertones in each of his works.

OSSI CubeSat

OSSI CubeSat

At univeristy he studied Electrical Engineering and Computer Science after which he started working on his art.

After years of research he has found that it is indeed possible to launch and operate a personal satellite at a fairly reasonable price. For the past six years he has been exploring ways to integrate the concept of a personal satellite project into cultural contexts and into his artistic practice.

Hojun Song’s first satellite OSSI will take off on a Soyuz rocket from Baikonour in Kazakhstan this August. He obtained his rocket launch through a new French launch brokerage company NovaNano http://www.novanano.com/. In this video he shares his story, his struggles and his plans.

Watch The Open Source Satellite Initiative by Hojun Song

The OSSI CubeSat should be delivered on May 31 in preperation for its launch on August 31. The team are working hard to finish building the satellite.

Watch Building OSSI EPS / 20120429

Open Source Satellite Initiative (OSSI) http://opensat.cc/

The Creators Project http://thecreatorsproject.com/en-uk/creators/hojun-song

DIY Satellite http://opensat.cc/download/DIYSatellite_en.pdf

Studio hhjjj http://www.hhjjj.com/

New IARU Satellite Advisor Region 1

Mike Rupprecht DK3WN 640

Mike Rupprecht DK3WN

AMSAT-DL President, Peter Gülzow, DB2OS reports on a new IARU appointment:

I have recommended to the IARU Satellite Adviser that Mike Rupprecht, DK3WN takes over membership of the advisory panel form Norbert Nothoff, DF5DP and I’m happy to notify interested parties that he has agreed to appoint Mike, DK3WN as a panel member. He has thanked Norbert, DF5DP for his support as a member of the Advisory panel for many years and said that he is looking forward to work with Mike.

Mike Rupprecht, DK3WN will help with the IARU Satellite Frequency Coordination process in Region 1 and in particular here in Germany. Mike is very active and well known on the satellite bands and Internet boards, and he has particularly profound knowledge of all cubesat operations. He is also very well known in the community of cubesat operators, including excellent communication connections to that groups.

Mike Ruprecht, DK3WN will support Norbert Nothoff, DF5DP and take over the coordination process of satellite projects from him, which includes correspondence with the coordination group and the satellite operators.

Norbert Nothoff, DF5DP will continue to stay in charge of anything which is related to government issues (government and office liaison, laws, bylaws, and regulations of satellite operations) in Germany.

Peter Gülzow, DB2OS
President, AMSAT-DL

IARU Satellite Advisory Panel http://www.iaru.org/satellite/advisory-panel.html

Medgar Evers College students help develop ‘CubeSat’

Medgar Evers College students and professors are excited to be part of a NASA micro satellite project that will send their CubeSat experiment into space. 

Medgar Evers College students and professors are excited to be part of a NASA satellite project that will send their CubeSat experiment into space. Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/medgar-evers-college-students-develope-cubesat-nasa-communication-satellite-article-1.1069110#ixzz1tXRe1gw3

Medgar Evers College students help develope ‘CubeSat’ for NASA communication satellite
Eagerly await ‘CUNYSAT’ lift-off to test 3 year-long science experiment.

For a little piece of equipment, the 4×4-inch cube tucked in an anti-static bag in a plastic lined clean room at Medgar Evers College is pretty huge.

When it heads into space next year the CubeSat, as it is called, will be the culmination of three years of computer programing, engineering and testing involving more than 60 students — most of them from Medgar — from colleges across the Metro area.

Medgar professor and Project Director Shermane Austin said creating the satellite, dubbed CUNYSAT, allows students to “get experience in what NASA does, and also lets the faculty understand the science involved in these things.

“This not like a puzzle that you just put all the pieces together and see if it works,” she said. “There is a significant amount of work by the students.”

Last week several students, including Elston Alexis, Leston AlexisRalph DumervilVinchencia Henderson, Fari Lindo, Kirt St. Louis, and Bridgette Miles joined former students Riguel FabreErnst Etienne and Patrick Dumervil, as well as Austin and physics professor Leon Johnson and computer science professor Laura Zavaka to discuss the project.

Austin said students from Cornell University, City College of New York, Queensborough College, The College of Staten Island, Cooper Union, Brooklyn College and the New Jersey Institute of Technology have contributed to the project.

Basically students were charged with designing mechanical, electrical, communication, date handling, and command systems in the cube which could survive the violent vibrations of a rocket launch and the hostile temperatures of space and still communicate with a ground station manned by students at Medgar.

Although students followed some guidelines already established by National Aeronautics and Space Administration, they were responsible for writing software and repeatedly testing each system.

It is not nearly as simple as it sounds. Patrick Dumervil noted that the electrical system had to be designed to run off a conventional and a solar battery which had to be recharged by solar panels fixed to the cube.

“My job was to make sure the electrical system is balanced,” he said.

“We have to make sure the integrity of the cube is maintained,” said Etienne. “Basically the whole thing is to just maintain the integrity of the Cubesat and make sure it survives.”

The systems are installed in the cub in a clean room — students had to wear gloves, masks and paper clean suits to maintain the sterile environment.

The cube is expected to spend about 120 days in space before falling to earth, Austin said.

The launch date is secret, but Garrett Skrobot, a NASA launch engineer who created the program (formal name Educational Launch of Nanosatellite, or ELaNa) three years ago said he is only awaiting administrative approval to schedule the CUNYSAT for a space flight.

NASA has launched eight cubes so far, and has another 17 awaiting a launch date. Skrobot said he expects that Medgar will design even more sophisticated cubes for future launches. “After all, this is their first one,” he said.

Lindo, part of the ground team writing the communication software, said the team is still hopeful it can include more ambitious experiments in this first cube.

“We’re still trying to see if we can do some ionospheric experiments,” he said.

“Before working on this project I had no idea about these systems,” said Elston Alexis. “Within a few days of coming in I had learned how to track a satellite. This is a great learning experience, and it looks good on a resume.”

Miles said she is so involved in the project that “sometimes late at night I’ll get an idea and sit straight up in the bed. It really is exciting.”

Medgar Evers College website is mec.cuny.edu.

crichardson@ nydailynews.   com

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/medgar-evers-college-students-develope-cubesat-nasa-communication-satellite-article-1.1069110#ixzz1tXRpWDtc

Ecuadorian CubeSat will monitor near-earth objects

Ecuadors first satellite NEE-01 Pegasus is slated to launch from Yasny this October on the same DNEPR rocket as the AMSAT-UK FUNcube-1.

NEE-01 Pegasus is a 1U CubeSat with two large (for a CubeSat) deployable solar panels and the Ecuadorian Civilian Space Agency (EXA) indicates 28.8 amps can be generated. There is an onboard camera to send live video from space from a 3 watt TV transmitter in the 902 MHz band along with a beacon that will send an ID and Ecuador’s national anthem.

NEE-01 Pegasus LogoOn April 25, EXA announced that it will be adding a mission to NEE-01 Pegasus: It will help monitoring near-earth objects from orbit using its onboard 720p HD video camera and will also help in the catalog and control of orbital debris (space junk), this new mission will turn the NEE-01 in to the first online, real time orbital video sentry for the planet, as the satellite has the capability to stream its video signal directly to the Internet.

It is hoped NEE-01 Pegasus will be able to detect medium to small sized near-earth objects, like very small asteroids which are normally very difficult to detect but have enough mass to pose a threath to populated areas, like the one which exploded over California in April.

Astronaut Ronnie Nader and NEE-01 Pegasus model

Astronaut Ronnie Nader and NEE-01 Pegasus model

Another of the satellites objectives is to serve as a space platform for elementary education.

The satellite will send two signals that will be received and decoded by the EXA’s HERMES-A ground station in Guayaquil and then uploaded live to the Internet using Twitter and Facebook.

The first signal will contain text book questions and the second will contain an image related to the question. If the students are able to answer the question correctly they will be granted access to the video camera onboard the spacecraft and will be able to see earth from space as the astronauts see it in their space missions.

More advanced students will have access to the pure radio signal so they can try decoding it by themselves. The EXA will provide them with the appropriate support software free of charge.

EXA Press release http://exa.ec/bp42/index-en.html

Ecuador’s first astronaut Ronnie Nader has been leading the team building the Cubesat
http://www.exa.ec/whois.htm

NEE-01 Pegasus http://exa.ec/bp37/index-en.html

We Are Makers

MAKE magazine publisher Dale Dougherty says we’re all makers at heart, and shows cool new tools to tinker with, like Arduinos, affordable 3D printers, even DIY satellites.

The brief DIY satellite segment, with a picture of the Amateur Radio satellite OSCAR-7 starts 10:00 minutes into the video.

Watch Dale Dougherty: We are makers

The Making Your Own Satellites article refered to in the video appeared in editon 24 of MAKE magazine http://makezine.com/24/make_satellites/ . The $19.99 Digital Edition subscription covers 4 quarterly issues and all back issues.

Open Source Satellite Initiative DIYsatellite http://opensat.cc/download/DIYSatellite_en.pdf

London Hackspace work on HackSat1 http://www.uk.amsat.org/2482

2E0HTS Working the OSCAR-7 Satellite http://www.uk.amsat.org/4105