Worldwide Satellite Magazine January 2014 Satmagazine

Worldwide Satellite Magazine January 2014 Satmagazine

Worldwide Satellite Magazine January 2014 SatMagazine Hosted Payloads Small Satellites Success In The Making Spaceflight Clyde Space NASA + DoD ORS-3 Mission Planet Labs (upcoming “flock” launch) Skybox Imaging ExactEarth Plus: Heyman + Sadtler Cover Image: SHERPA™ —Hosted Payload and In Space Transportation Solution. Image courtesy of Spaceflight. SatMagazine January 2014 Publishing Operations Senior Contributors This Issue’s Authors Silvano Payne, Publisher + Writer Mike Antonovich, ATEME Anne Marie Beckerle Hartley G. Lesser, Editorial Director Tony Bardo, Hughes Curt Blake Richard Dutchik Twyman Clements Pattie Waldt, Executive Editor Chris Forrester, Broadgate Publications Jos Heyman Jill Durfee, Sales Director, Editorial Assistant Karl Fuchs, iDirect Government Services Aaron Hoover Simon Payne, Development Director Bob Gough, Carrick Communications Adam Kemp Jos Heyman, TIROS Space Information Hartley Lesser Donald McGee, Production Manager David Leichner, Gilat Satellite Networks Philip Miller Dan Makinster, Technical Advisor Giles Peeters, Track24 Defence Bert Sadtler Bert Sadtler, Boxwood Executive Search Professor Wayne Shroma Kelli Trifonovitch Pattie Waldt InfoBeam Karen Wentworth European Space Agency—A Billion Pixels For The Stars, 4 Bolivia + China: TKSat-1 Away, 10 NAB + JD Events—Showmanship, 10 NASA + Orbital These Cubes Don’t Melt Under Fire, 12 Features Advertiser Index New Launch Options For Small Satellite Companies, 18 Advantech Wireless, 5 Harris Corporation, 3 By Curt Blake, Spaceflight Inc Arabsat Satellite, 11 MITEQ Inc., 39 Arianespace, cover (1) Nat’l Assoc. of Broadcasters (NAB), 52 Small Satellites—Making Their Way, 20 Asia Broadcast Satellite, 13 NewSat Limited, 7 Clyde Space, 22 AvL Technologies, 21 Novotronik, 17 ORS-3 Mission (NASA + DoD), 23 Comtech EF Data, 49 Singapore Exhibition Services, 35 University of Hawai’i at Manoa—Ho’oponopono-2, 23 CPI Satcom Products, 19 Teledyne Paradise Datacom, 9 University of Kentucky—KySat-2, 24 Dubai World Trade Centre, 43 W. B. Walton Enterprises, 15 University of Alabama—ChargerSat-1, 25 Global Link Productions Inc., 41 University of Florida—SwampSat, 26 University of New Mexico—Trailblazer, 27 Thomas Jefferson High School—TJ3SAT, 28 Drexel University + U.S. Naval Academy—DragonSat, 29 University of Louisiana at Lafayette—CAPE-2, 30 NASA Ames Research Center—PhoneSat 2.4, 30 Published 11 times a year by Saint Louis University—COPPER, 32 SatNews Publishers Vermont Technical College—Vermont Lunar CubeSat, 33 800 Siesta Way Millennium Space Systems, 34 Sonoma, CA 95476 USA Planet Labs,36 Phone: (707) 939-9306 SkyBox Imaging, 38 Fax: (707) 838-9235 Small Satellite Conference, 39 © 2013 SatNews Publishers We reserve the right to edit all submitted materials to meet our Careers: The Road To The Future— content guidelines, as well as for grammar or to move articles to an What Are Your Adjustments For 2014?, 40 alternative issue to accommodate publication space requirements, By Bert Sadtler, Senior Contributor or removed due to space restrictions. Submission of content does not constitute acceptance of said material by SatNews Publishers. The LEOs + MEOs That Wouldn’t, Couldn’t + Didn’t…, 44 Edited materials may, or may not, be returned to author and/or By Jos Heyman, Senior Contributor company for review prior to publication. The views expressed in SatNews Publishers’ various publications do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of SatNews Publishers. All rights reserved. All As The Earth Turns…, 50 included imagery is courtesy of, and copyright to, the respective By Philip Miller, exactEarth companies and/or named individuals. 2 SatMagazine—January 2014 InfoBeam European Space Agency—A Billion Pixels For The Stars The launch of Gaia. Photo courtesy of Arianespace and ESA. The European Space Agency’s A second firing of the Fregat Gaia draws on the best in space Gaia will also use a ‘photographic’ Gaia spacecraft has launched 11 minutes later took Gaia into technology and will carry ultra- sensor of unprecedented with a billion pixel camera its transfer orbit, followed by modern instruments, including accuracy. The precision of the aboard as well as the capability separation from the upper stage the most sensitive telescope measurements taken by Gaia’s of 3D mapping and will also 42 minutes after liftoff. ever made. optical instruments will be test Einstein’s Theory as to the extremely high. influence of dark matter. Ground telemetry and attitude This cutting-edge equipment control were established by draws on unique expertise For instance, Gaia would be Gaia will also be on the hunt for controllers at ESA’s operations developed by Astrium in the capable of picking out a strand exoplanets as will also measure center in Darmstadt, Germany, field of silicon carbide (SiC) of hair from a distance of 700 the bending of light rays, due to and the spacecraft began telescopes, such as that used kilometres—the equivalent of gravitational effects. activating its systems. for the space telescope on the altitude of Earth observation ESA’s Herschel mission, as satellites—by using its huge The scientific satellite Gaia, The sunshield, which keeps well as for all the instruments focal plane made up of 106 designed and built by Astrium Gaia at its working temperature made by Astrium for Earth CCD detectors gathering 1 has been successfully launched and carries solar cells to power observation missions. billion pixels. from Kourou, French Guiana the satellite, was deployed in a aboard a Soyuz. 10-minute automatic sequence, Through their space programs, For its attitude control, the completed around 88 minutes Astrium and its partner Boostec spacecraft will use a cold gas Lift off occurred at 6:12:19 a.m., after launch. have created a successful new propulsion system with micro- local time, on December 19th, economic sector. thrusters, enabling it to remain 2013, aboard a Soyuz launch Europe’s most advanced space perfectly stable and point with vehicle under the control of telescope Gaia, built for the The SiC produced in the French the required extreme accuracy. Arianespace. This was Flight European Space Agency (ESA), Midi-Pyrénées region enables VS06 and was Arianespace’ sixth will produce a highly accurate 3D Astrium and its partners to Gaia will be located at one of mission using the Russian-built map of our galaxy, the Milky Way, produce exceptional optical the five Lagrangian points in the vehicle at French Guiana, known and discover and map objects far payloads for scientific missions Sun-Earth system, at the L2 point. as the European Spaceport. beyond its boundaries so as to and Earth Observation. improve our understanding of its The Lagrangian points in our The workhorse launcher origins and evolution. “Gaia is an unparalleled space solar system are points of performed a powered phase system: the precision of its gravitational balance where a of its three lower stages, and The Gaia mission is also instruments and its technical body such as a spacecraft orbits two burns of the autonomous expected to discover hundreds conception once again prove around the Sun at the same rate Fregat upper stage to deploy of thousands of unknown Astrium‘s unique expertise in as Earth, thereby remaining in Gaia, which had an estimated celestial objects, including extra- optical payloads,” said Eric a fixed position relative to the liftoff mass of 2,034kg and was solar planets and failed stars, Béranger, CEO of Astrium Earth-Sun line. released 41 minutes and 59 known as brown dwarfs. And Satellites. “Mastering these seconds after liftoff. within our solar system, Gaia exceptional technologies enables will be able to identify tens of us to maintain Astrium’s rank as thousands of asteroids. the world leader in the export of Earth observation satellites.” 4 SatMagazine—January 2014 InfoBeam European Space Agency—A Billion Pixels For The Stars (continued) Artistic impression of the Soyuz launcher carrying Gaia into orbit, showing the jettison of the fairing. Image credit: ESA—D. Ducros Located 1.5 million kilometers An elaborate file management from Earth, the L2 point is vital system allows flexible and for astronomy observation efficient data transfer through missions, which require high virtual channels organized in pointing stability. the downlink. The objectives of this new ESA Gaia is expected to find as many astronomy mission are ambitious: as 10,000 planets beyond our Chart a 3D map of about a Solar System and hundreds billion objects in our galaxy with of thousands of asteroids and a precision of 0.001 percent in comets within it. The mission will order to better understand the also reveal tens of thousands of mechanisms of galaxy formation. failed stars and supernovas, and will even test Einstein’s famous Gaia should also enable scientists theory of General Relativity. to have a more precise insight in the inner workings of the stars Once Gaia starts routine as well as to better assess the operations, around Easter Engineers from SENER and Astrium stow Gaia’s Deployable influence of dark matter. 2014, astronomers will have the Sunshield Assembly (DSA) against the spacecraft, in the challenge of dealing with a flood S1B cleanroom at the Centre Spatial Guyanais in Accuracy being one of its main of data. Kourou, French Guiana. features, Gaia will also be on the This photo is courtesy of ESA-CNES-Arianespace hunt for exoplanets as well as Even after being compressed by Optique Vidéo du CSG—JM Guillon measuring the bending of light software, the data produced by rays due to gravitational effects. the five-year mission will fill over 30,000 CD ROMs. With 40 million observations per day, the cumulative data flow This data will be transmitted ‘raw’ after five years of operation, even and will need processing after having been compressed by on Earth to turn it into a software, will fill the equivalent of calibrated set of measurements more than 200,000 DVDs. that can be freely used by the astronomical community.

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