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AeroAstro’s S-Band Transmitter Successfully Gains
Flight Heritage on the MOST Satellite
Ashburn,
VA – August 8, 2003
AeroAstro,
Inc., a leading provider of small satellites and related technology
products, today announced the successful on-orbit operation
of its miniaturized S-Band Transmitter product. Two of these
compact, lightweight transmitters are being used for primary
downlink capability aboard the Canadian Space Agency (CSA)
MOST (Microvariability and Oscillations of STars) satellite,
launched on June 30, 2003. AeroAstro’s transmitters
have been functioning as designed since launch, meeting all
specifications. This event establishes first flight heritage
for this inexpensive transmitter.
AeroAstro’s
S-Band Transmitter product is designed to provide an affordable
and reliable data downlink from nanosatellites and microsatellites,
compatible with virtually any satellite bus system. The transmitter’s
small size, measuring only 3” x 2” x 1”
(76 mm x 51 mm x 25 mm) with a total mass of 180 grams, as
well as its highly competitive cost makes it an ideal solution
for satellites tightly constrained by mass, volume and budget.
The transmitter is priced at less than $65k, with opportunities
for additional cost savings (price varies based on requirements
and level of customization). The output frequency of the transmitter
is programmable anywhere in the commercial S-Band range (2200
– 2300 MHz), and the output power is adjustable from
10 to 500 mW, with an optional high power amplifier (HPA)
that enables up to 5 W. The transmitter will work with data
rates ranging from 2 kpbs up to 1 Mbps, or up to 10 Mbps with
the optional HPA.
Dr.
Rick Fleeter, AeroAstro’s CEO, said, “AeroAstro
exists to make the benefits of space more widely available
and more useful – by lowering cost, shortening schedules
and making space simpler to access. For many clients, that
means that we build end-to-end space system solutions, including
a spacecraft and ground stations. But we are pleased to have
the opportunity to help others, like the MOST team, innovate
their own space systems. Our growing line of modular products,
including the radios flown aboard MOST, are designed to simplify
the job of getting the spacecraft built, to shorten the development
schedule, and to lower cost without sacrifice of performance.”
The
transmitter has a straightforward design for ease of integration
and use. Its only interfaces are DC power and data. It requires
no external clock – data is simply buffered and filtered
to remove noise and processed to produce a BPSK output signal.
QPSK can also be accommodated. It can be easily integrated
with AeroAstro’s S-Band Receiver, HPA, and DC/DC block
for a complete satellite communications solution, or it can
stand alone with other radio subsystem components.
In
mid-2001, AeroAstro was approached by the University of Toronto
Institute for Aerospace Studies (UTIAS) Space Flight Laboratory
(SFL) – the provider of several key subsystems for the
MOST satellite, including the telemetry and command subsystem
– to determine if it was possible to provide two flight-ready
S-Band transmitters on a short timescale. Each of the transmitters
was to operate on a different frequency, providing system
redundancy for the mission. AeroAstro accepted the contract
in July 2001 and delivered two flight transmitters only three
months later, in early October of that same year. Thermal
vacuum and vibration testing followed at the UTIAS facilities,
and final flight acceptance of the transmitters was granted
in May 2002.
The
MOST project is a co-operative scientific partnership to create
the world’s smallest astronomical space telescope, capable
of measuring the ages of stars in our galaxy and helping to
unlock mysteries of the universe. The tiny satellite, weighing
only 60 kilograms, carries a high precision telescope no bigger
in diameter than a pie plate. The device measures the oscillation
in light intensity of stars in order to determine their composition
as well as age. The MOST project was sponsored by CSA’s
Space Science Branch, and Toronto-based Dynacon Enterprises
Limited was the lead contractor for the project. Other key
partners in the project include: UTIAS/SFL, the University
of British Columbia, the Centre for Research in Earth and
Space Technology (CRESTech), and the Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation (AMSAT).
AeroAstro,
Inc. is a leader in innovative micro and nanospacecraft applications
– including science, remote sensing, and communications
– that open the space frontier to a larger and more
varied customer base. AeroAstro is now leading the way to
a new age of commercial space with flexible tools that enable
users to benefit from unprecedented access to space technology.
AeroAstro manufactures low-cost satellite systems and components,
used in its own spacecraft and for spacecraft development
in the US and abroad. NASA, the Air Force, and commercial
and university customers have all employed AeroAstro throughout
its 15-year history.
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