ÑuSat
File:Nusat Satellite Series.jpg | |
Mission type | Commercial Earth Observation |
---|---|
Operator | Satellogic S.A. |
Website | www |
Mission duration | Planned: 3 years |
Spacecraft properties | |
Bus | Small Satellite Standard |
Manufacturer | Satellogic |
Launch mass | 82 lb (37 kg) |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 30 May 2016, 00:13 (1st, 2nd) 15 June 2017 (3rd) 2 February 2018 (4th, 5th) 15 January 2020 (7th, 8th) |
Rocket | Long March 4B, Long March 2D |
Launch site | Taiyuan, Jiuquan |
ÑuSat satellite series (Spanish: ÑuSat), is a series of Argentinean commercial Earth observation satellites. They form the Aleph-1 constellation, which is designed, built and operated by Satellogic.
Contents
Overview
Satellites design
The satellites in the constellation are identical 51 cm × 57 cm × 82 cm spacecraft of 85 lb (38.5 kg) mass. The satellites are equipped with an imaging system operating in visible light and infrared. The constellation will allow for commercially available real-time Earth imaging and video with a ground resolution of 3.3 ft (1 m). The satellite were developed based on the experience gained on the BugSat 1 (Tita) prototype satellite.
BugSat 1
The BugSat 1 (nickname Tita, COSPAR 2014-033E) was a technology demonstration mission for the NuSat-satellites. It was launched 19.06.2014 by a Russian Dnepr rocket. It was a microsat weighing 22 kg with outer dimensions of 275 × 500 × 500 mm. It also carried amateur radio capabilities.
Missions
The Aleph-1 constellation will consist of up to 25 satellites.
The first two satellites will be launched as piggy-back payloads on a Chinese CZ-4B rocket in May 2016 from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center into a 500 km sun synchronous orbit with an inclination of 97.5°. Four more were planned to follow later in 2016.
The third satellite was launched as a piggy-back payload on CZ-4B rocket in June 2017.
The fourth and fifth satellites were launched as piggy-backs on a CZ-2D rocket in February 2018.
Satellites number seven and eight were launched as piggy-backs on a CZ-2D rocket in January 2020.
Ground communications
An U/V transponder with 2 W of output power for 8 GHz downlink and 2 GHz uplink will be operating on 100 kHz bandwidth.
LabOSat / MeMOSat payloads
MeMOSat, developed by the LabOSat Group, designed and built by a group of scientists at the National Atomic Energy Commission (Spanish: Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica (CNEA)), the National Institute of Industrial Technology (Spanish: Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Industrial (INTI)), the National University of San Martin (Spanish: Universidad Nacional de San Martín (UNSAM)) and National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET).
This memory was specially designed to operate in harsh environments and adverse conditions, such as the strong radiation it must withstand in space. Its main objective is to test electronic components that will be commercialized in the future.
To do this, the memory is made up of two metallic films with an oxide between about 20 nm thick, with electrical resistance properties, that can send information from the satellites, allowing to study their behavior in these hostile environments.
AMSAT payload
Additionally, ÑuSat-1 carries a U/V linear transponder called LUSEX provided by AMSAT Argentina (AMSAT-LU) to offer services to the HAM community.
List of satellites
Although the satellites are officially named "ÑuSat", each satellite has a nickname, a tradition from Satellogic that dates back since its very first satellite Capitan Beto.
Name [1] | Nickname | COSPAR | In homage to | Launch date | Launch vehicle | Outcome | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ÑuSat 1 (Aleph-1 1, Lusat-OSCAR 87, LO 87) |
Fresco | 2016-033B | Queso blanco (Alongside Batata, they make the traditional Argentinian dessert "Fresco y Batata") | May 30, 2016 | CZ-4B | Success | First commercial small satellite from Argentina |
ÑuSat 2 (Aleph-1 2) | Batata | 2016-033C | Dulce de batata (Alongside Fresco, they make the traditional Argentinian dessert "Fresco y Batata") | May 30, 2016 | CZ-4B | Success | First commercial small satellite from Argentina |
ÑuSat 3 (Aleph-1 3) | Milanesat | 2017-034C | Milanesa | June 15, 2017 | CZ-4B | Success | Nickname proposed by a Reddit user[2] |
ÑuSat 4 (Aleph-1 4) | Ada[3] | 2018-015D | Ada Lovelace[4] | February 2, 2018[5][6] | CZ-2D | Success[7] | |
ÑuSat 5 (Aleph-1 5) | Maryam[3] | 2018-015K | Maryam Mirzakhani[4] | February 2, 2018[5][6] | CZ-2D | Success[7] | |
ÑuSat 6 (Aleph-1 6) | Hypatia[8] | Hypatia | 2020 (planned) | ||||
ÑuSat 7 (Aleph-1 7) | Sophie[9] | 2020-003B | Sophie Germain[9] | 15 January 2020[10] | CZ-2D | Success[10] | |
ÑuSat 8 (Aleph-1 8) | Marie[9] | 2020-003C | Marie Curie[9] | 15 January 2020[10] | CZ-2D | Success[10] |
Gallery
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ÑuSat Satellites Commemorative Launching Postcards.jpg
Legally valid stamps printed in commemoration of ÑuSat Satellites Launching
-
Emiliano Kargieman & Mauricio Macri.jpg
Mauricio Macri alongside Satellogic directives after the launch of Fresco and Batata
-
ÑuSat 4 & 5 mission patch.jpg
Mission patch of the ÑuSat 4 & 5 satellites
-
BBAA-Argentina (Satellogic).jpg
Buenos Aires as seen from one of the ÑuSat satellites
See also
References
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External links
- Launcher Data Release by Space Flights News.
- Technical reference by Gunter's Space Page.
- Alepth Constellation by China Space Flight.
- Launcher Data Release by Gunter's Space Page.
- ↑ http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/nusat-1.htm
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- ↑ 3.0 3.1 https://twitter.com/earlkman/status/893528111886721024
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 https://twitter.com/fedejack/status/893539830487035906
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- Pages with broken file links
- Pages with reference errors
- Articles containing Spanish-language text
- Spacecraft launched in 2016
- Spacecraft launched in 2017
- Spacecraft launched in 2018
- Spacecraft launched in 2020
- Satellites of Argentina
- Earth observation satellites
- Satellite constellations
- 2016 in Argentina
- 2017 in Argentina
- 2018 in Argentina
- 2020 in Argentina