AubieSat-1
AubieSat-1 | |
Mission type | Technology |
---|---|
Operator | Auburn University |
COSPAR ID | 2011-061E |
SATCAT no. | 37854 |
Spacecraft properties | |
Manufacturer | Auburn University |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | October 28, 2011, 09:48:02 (2011-10-28UTC09:48:02Z) UTC[1] |
Rocket | Delta II 7920-10C |
Launch site | Vandenberg SLC-2W |
Contractor | United Launch Alliance |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Low Earth |
Perigee altitude | 452 kilometers (281 mi) |
Apogee altitude | 750 kilometers (470 mi) |
Inclination | 101.71 degrees |
Period | 96.58 minutes |
Epoch | July 6, 2014, 01:17:55 UTC[2] |
AubieSat-1 (OSCAR-71) is a CubeSat designed, built, and tested by undergraduate students at Auburn University. It was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base October 28, 2011 atop a Delta II rocket. This was a multi-payload mission with five other CubeSats, M-Cubed, DICE-1, DICE-2, Explorer-1_Prime and RAX-2.
Purpose
The purpose of AubieSat-1 was to accomplish several things:
- Establish Auburn University as a university capable of developing satellites.
- Provide workforce applicable experience for students.
- Study and compare the effects of solar cell coatings.
- Demonstrate a system bus that could be used at the baseline design for additional satellites later developed by the program.
References
External links
- AubieSat-1 Website
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- Kosmos 2470
- USA-225
- Johannes Kepler ATV
- STS-133 (Leonardo)
- Kosmos 2471
- Glory, Explorer-1 [Prime], KySat-1, Hermes
- USA-226
- USA-227
- Shijian XI-03
- STS-135 (Raffaello, PSSC-2)
- Tianlian I-02
- Globalstar M083, Globalstar M088, Globalstar M091, Globalstar M085, Globalstar M081, Globalstar M089
- GSAT-12
- SES-3, KazSat-2
- USA-232
- Spektr-R
- Compass-IGSO4
- Shijian XI-02
- Juno
- Astra 1N, BSAT-3c/JCSAT-110R
- Paksat-1R
- Hai Yang 2A
- Sich 2, NigeriaSat-2, NigeriaSat-X, RASAT, EduSAT, AprizeSat-5, AprizeSat-6, BPA-2
- Ekspress-AM4
- Shijian XI-04
- Progress M-12M
- GRAIL-A , GRAIL-B
- Zhongxing-1A
- Kosmos 2473
- Arabsat 5C, SES-2
- IGS Optical 4
- Atlantic Bird 7
- TacSat-4
- Tiangong-1
- QuetzSat 1
- Kosmos 2474 / GLONASS-M 742
- Intelsat 18
- Eutelsat 16A
- Megha-Tropiques, SRMSAT, VesselSat-1, Jugnu
- ViaSat-1
- Galileo-IOV FM1 , Galileo-IOV FM2
- NPP, AubieSat-1, DICE-1, DICE-2, M-Cubed, RAX-2
- Progress M-13M
- Shenzhou 8
- Kosmos 2475 , Kosmos 2476 , Kosmos 2477
- Fobos-Grunt , Yinghuo-1
- Yaogan 12 , Tian Xun-1
- Soyuz TMA-22
- Shiyan Weixing 4 , Chuang Xin 1C
- AsiaSat 7
- Mars Science Laboratory (Curiosity)
- Kosmos 2478
- Yaogan 13
- Compass-IGSO5
- Amos-5, Luch 5A
- IGS Radar 3
- Pléiades-HR 1A, SSOT, ELISA 1, ELISA 2, ELISA 3, ELISA 4
- NigComSat-1R
- Soyuz TMA-03M
- Ziyuan-1C
- Meridian 5
- Globalstar M080, Globalstar M082, Globalstar M084, Globalstar M086, Globalstar M090, Globalstar M092
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
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