Author Topic: NASA Seeks Amateur Radio Operators' Aid to Listen for NanoSail-D  (Read 10159 times)

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Offline KC6ZGG

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If the deployment is successful, NanoSail-D will stay in low-Earth orbit between 70 and 120 days, depending on atmospheric conditions.
by Staff Writers
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jan 20, 2011

On Wednesday, Jan. 19 at 11:30 a.m. EST, engineers at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., confirmed that the NanoSail-D nanosatellite ejected from Fast Affordable Scientific and Technology Satellite, FASTSAT.

The ejection event occurred spontaneously and was identified this morning when engineers at the center analyzed onboard FASTSAT telemetry. The ejection of NanoSail-D also has been confirmed by ground-based satellite tracking assets.

Amateur ham operators are asked to listen for the signal to verify NanoSail-D is operating. This information should be sent to the NanoSail-D dashboard at: http://nanosaild.engr.scu.edu/dashboard.htm. The NanoSail-D beacon signal can be found at 437.270 MHz.

The NanoSail-D science team is hopeful the nanosatellite is healthy and can complete its solar sail mission. After ejection, a timer within NanoSail-D begins a three-day countdown as the satellite orbits the Earth.

Once the timer reaches zero, four booms will quickly deploy and the NanoSail-D sail will start to unfold to a 100-square-foot polymer sail. Within five seconds the sail fully unfurls.

"This is great news for our team. We're anxious to hear the beacon which tells us that NanoSail-D is healthy and operating as planned," said Dean Alhorn, NanoSail-D principal investigator and aerospace engineer at the Marshall Center.

"The science team is hopeful to see that NanoSail-D is operational and will be able to unfurl its solar sail."

On Dec. 6,, 2010, NASA triggered the planned ejection of NanoSail-D from FASTSAT. At that time, the team confirmed that the door successfully opened and data indicated a successful ejection. Upon further analysis, no evidence of NanoSail-D was identified in low-Earth orbit, leading the team to believe NanoSail-D remained inside FASTSAT.

The FASTSAT mission has continued to operate as planned with the five other scientific experiments operating nominally.

"We knew that the door opened and it was possible that NanoSail-D could eject on its own," said Mark Boudreaux, FASTSAT project manager at the Marshall Center. "What a pleasant surprise this morning when our flight operations team confirmed that NanoSail-D is now a free flyer."

If the deployment is successful, NanoSail-D will stay in low-Earth orbit between 70 and 120 days, depending on atmospheric conditions. NanoSail-D is designed to demonstrate deployment of a compact solar sail boom system that could lead to further development of this alternative solar sail propulsion technology and FASTSAT's ability to eject a nano-satellite from a micro-satellite - while avoiding re-contact with the FASTSAT satellite bus.

Offline lagomorphmom

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Before trying to pick it up on the air, check the dashboard link above to see where it is.

Offline Toolman

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I looked for other links for it's keplerian Elements and found nothing. If the link on the website is correct, there is very little chance we would hear the beacon from the west coast. They said it was low earth orbit so it's going to be moving pretty fast with very little window of opportunity, 5-10min at best. With maybe 15 degrees of elevation at the most. Even with a az el programmed rotor and cross band yagi I don't think it's doable. They don't mention if it's a GEO Sync orbit either.

 If someone can post the kep site I'll give it a try with my big 440 phased yagi stack.

Offline Toolman

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Rats, It's transmitting Packet code and I haven't used packet in years. I thought it may be a CW code.... oh well.... back to work.

Offline Bob C

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If someone can post the kep site I'll give it a try with my big 440 phased yagi stack.
http://www.heavens-above.com/PassSummary.aspx?satid=90027&lat=0&lng=0&loc=Unspecified&alt=0&tz=CET

(You'll have to set your lat/long on that website, if you want it to show you YOUR visible passes. Kep data in the "Info" tab)

Offline Toolman

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Thanks Bob... but I don't use packet anymore and don't have the interface hardware so I would not be able to read the information it's sending. One could probably hear the data bursts though.

Offline lagomorphmom

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Looks like it will be making a pass directly over in a short while according to the active map.