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Nov. 19, 2013
Launch of Record-Breaking 29 Satellites on Minotaur I Rocket
With help from NASA, 11 small cubesat research satellites, including the first developed by high school students, launched into space from the Virginia coast. The cubesats were included as auxiliary payload aboard a U.S. Air Force Minotaur 1 rocket that lifted off from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility at 8:15 p.m. EST on Nov. 19.
NASA selected 10 educational institutions to design and build CubeSats for ELaNa IV
Nine university teams and one high school team will experience on Tuesday a feat that few outside the aerospace industry will ever realize: watching the nanosatellites, or cubesats, that they designed and built launch into space. An addition to the NASA PhoneSat technology demonstration will also be aboard.
More than 300 students took part in this fourth installment of NASA’s cubesat Launch Initiative and it’s Educational Launch of Nanosatellite (ELaNa) Missions, which enables students, teachers and faculty to obtain hands-on flight hardware development experience. This launch marks the first time NASA will launch a cubesat developed by students not yet in college – high school students from Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology of Alexandria, Va.
Image above: University of New Mexico Students inspect their CubeSat, Trailblazer. Image Credit: University of New Mexico.
"The advancements of the cubesat community are enabling an acceleration of flight-qualified technology that will ripple through the aerospace industry," said Jason Crusan, director of Advanced Exploration Systems, the office that oversees the Cubesat Launch Initiative at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Our future missions will be standing on the developments the cubesat community has enabled."
Since 2010, the cubesat Launch Initiative has issued four announcements of opportunity and selected more than 90 cubesats from public and private institutions and government labs to launch as auxillary payloads aboard commercial rockets. The cube-shaped satellites are approximately four inches long per unit, have a volume of about one quart and weigh less than three pounds. Cubesat research addresses science, exploration, technology development, education or operations.
Image above: University of Kentucky students Alex Clements and Jason Rexroat conduct final CubeSat acceptance measurements on KYSat-2, a collaborative project between the University of Kentucky and Morehead State University. Image Credit: University of Kentucky.
In many cases, student teams are able to connect with mentors in the aerospace industry to help them develop their cubesats. Twyman Clements of Kentucky Space LLC, is mentor to the ELaNa IV KySat-2 team comprising students from the University of Kentucky and Morehead State University. “There’s an enormous sense of accomplishment,” he says, “Not just in designing with a great team but also encouraging the students to take the initiative and learn their areas of strength to become better students – and much more importantly, better professionals. There’s nothing like an impending satellite launch to motivate you.”
Success of the ELaNa missions has also helped universities to secure funding for future projects. According to Craig Kief, Deputy Director of the Configurable Space Microsystems Innovations & Applications Center (COSMIAC), "ELaNa has proven to be a game-changing endeavor. It has allowed us to be able to show past performance in the areas of nanosatellite development. This achievement has easily resulted in over $1M in future research projects for the University of New Mexico.”
Image above: Asha Punnoose beams next to TJ3Sat, a the first CubeSat to be built by high school students and launched into space through NASA's ELaNA program. Image Credit: Thomas Jefferson High School.
The 11 ELaNa IV cubesats are scheduled to launch aboard the Orbital Sciences Corporation’s Minotaur-1 rocket on Nov. 19, between 7:30-9:30 p.m. EST. Over the next few months, they will receive data from their satellites in space. As part of their agreement with NASA, they will provide NASA a report on their outcomes and scientific findings.
Image above: Student Bungo Shiotani shows off the University of Florida's SwampSat. Image Credit: University of Florida.
Download the ELaNa IV Fact Sheet (2.1 MB PDF): http://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/files/ELaNa-IV-Factsheet-508.pdf
Learn more about the ELaNa IV CubeSats:
- TJ3Sat, Thomas Jefferson High School: http://www.tjhsst.edu/students/activities/tj3sat/
- DragonSat-1, Drexel University, Philadelphia
- PhoneSat, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.: http://www.phonesat.org/
- COPPER, St. Louis University, St. Louis: http://astrolab.slu.edu/AstroLab/SLU-01__COPPER.html
- ChargerSat-1, University of Alabama Huntsville: http://space.uah.edu/chargersat1
- SwampSat, University of Florida, Gainesville: http://www.swampsat.com/
- Ho`oponopono-2, University of Hawaii, Honolulu: http://cubesat.eng.hawaii.edu/nanosat6/hooponopono.html
- KySat-2, University of Kentucky, Lexington: http://kysat2.engr.uky.edu/
- CAPE-2, The University of Louisiana at Lafayette: http://www.ulcape.org/
- Trailblazer, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque: http://cosmiac.org/trailblazer.html
- Vermont Lunar CubeSat, Vermont Technical College, Randolph Center, Vt.: http://cubesatlab.org/
Images (mentioned), video, Text, Credits: NASA / NASA TV.
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