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{ "url": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/list/[email protected]/email/NNP76266OLEMT2545Z7O6RSFGEJBRWDD/?format=api", "mailinglist": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/list/[email protected]/?format=api", "message_id": "CADDbS5D5ZgxTbPoJ2HnSh1MO579Lwshpb_SO2ZzwNL6F6=QbEA@mail.gmail.com", "message_id_hash": "NNP76266OLEMT2545Z7O6RSFGEJBRWDD", "thread": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/list/[email protected]/thread/NNP76266OLEMT2545Z7O6RSFGEJBRWDD/?format=api", "sender": { "address": "k0jm.mark (a) gmail.com", "mailman_id": "4fa2bb5eca934ca4b14c4ede20ff0c9a", "emails": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/sender/4fa2bb5eca934ca4b14c4ede20ff0c9a/emails/?format=api" }, "sender_name": "Mark Johns, K0JM", "subject": "[ANS] ANS-226 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins for Aug. 14", "date": "2022-08-14T00:00:00Z", "parent": null, "children": [], "votes": { "likes": 0, "dislikes": 0, "status": "neutral" }, "content": "AMSAT NEWS SERVICE\nANS-226\n\nThe AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and\ninformation service of AMSAT, The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation.\nANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space including reports\non the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur Radio operators who\nshare an active interest in designing, building, launching and\ncommunicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio satellites.\n\nThe news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur Radio\nin Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.\n\nPlease send any amateur satellite news or reports to: ans-editor [at] amsat.org\n\nYou can sign up for free e-mail delivery of the AMSAT News Service\nBulletins via the ANS List; to join this list see:\nhttps://mailman.amsat.org/postorius/lists/ans.amsat.org/\n\nIn this edition:\n\n* 40th AMSAT Space Symposium and Annual General Meeting, Oct. 21-22\n* India's New Rocket Fails To Put Satellites In Right Orbit In Debut Launch\n* Russia Successfully Launches KAI 1 Repeater Along With Iranian Satellite\n* Wireless Institute of Australia Supporting Binar Satellites\n* Simultaneous Operations of APRS and Voice Repeater Now a Reality on ISS\n* Changes to AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for August 11\n* Press Coverage of Eight-Year-Old’s ISS Ham Radio Contact\n* ARISS News\n* Upcoming Satellite Operations\n* Hamfests, Conventions, Maker Faires, and Other Events\n* Satellite Shorts From All Over\n\n\nANS-226 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins\n\nTo: All RADIO AMATEURS\nFrom: Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation\n712 H Street NE, Suite 1653\nWashington, DC 20002\n\nDATE 2022 Aug 14\n\n\n40th AMSAT Space Symposium and Annual General Meeting, Oct. 21-22\n\nThe 40th AMSAT Space Symposium and Annual General Meeting will take\nplace in Bloomington, Minn. on Oct. 21-22, 2022. Highlights of all\nscheduled events include:\n\n– AMSAT Board of Directors Meeting, October 20-21\n– 40th AMSAT Space Symposium and Annual General Meeting, October 21-22\n– Friday Night Social and Auction, October 21\n– AMSAT Banquet and Reception, October 22\n– AMSAT Ambassador Breakfast, October 23\n\nA preliminary schedule is available on the AMSAT Member Portal,\nlaunch.amsat.org, under the Events tab.\n\nCrowne Plaza is located adjacent to the Minneapolis / St. Paul\nInternational Airport and provides complimentary, scheduled shuttle to\nand from the airport. Nearby attractions include Mall of America with\nNickelodeon Universe Theme park, Target Field, and the Minnesota Zoo.\n\nYou can make hotel reservations by calling the hotel directly at (952)\n854-9000. The group code is ASG (Amateur Satellite Group). Hotel\nreservations can also be made online at the following link:\nhttps://tinyurl.com/ANS-219-Symposium-Rooms.\n\nSymposium tickets and banquet reservations may be purchased on the\nAMSAT Member Portal. Log into https://launch.amsat.org/ and clock on\nthe Events tab.\n\nWe at AMSAT, are excited to be able to host an in-person Symposium\nthis year. We hope that you can join us in celebrating Amateur Radio\nin Space.\n\n[ANS thanks AMSAT for the above information.]\n\n+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+\n The 2022 AMSAT President's Club coins have arrived!\n To commemorate the 50th anniversary of its launch on\n October 15, 1972, this year's coin features\n an image of AMSAT-OSCAR 6.\n Join the AMSAT President's Club today and help\n Keep Amateur Radio in Space!\n https://www.amsat.org/join-the-amsat-presidents-club/\n+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+\n\nIndia's New Rocket Fails To Put Satellites In Right Orbit In Debut Launch\n\nIndia's new rocket launched for the first time on Saturday night (Aug.\n6) but failed to deliver its satellite payloads into their intended\norbit due to a sensor issue.\n\nThe 112-foot-tall (34 meters) Small Satellite Launch Vehicle (SSLV)\nlifted off from Satish Dhawan Space Centre on India's southeastern\ncoast on Saturday at 11:48 p.m. EDT (0348 GMT and 9:18 a.m. India\nStandard Time on Sunday, Aug. 7) with two satellites onboard.\n\nThe main payload on Saturday's test mission was EOS-02, a 300-pound\n(135 kilograms) experimental Earth-observation satellite.\n\nThe second satellite was an 18-pound (8 kg) cubesat called AzaadiSAT.\nThis little spacecraft was loaded with 75 different payloads, which\nwere built by female students across India to perform a variety of\n\"femto-experiments.\"\n\n\"The payloads include a UHF-VHF transponder working in ham radio\nfrequency to enable voice and data transmission for amateur radio\noperators, a solid state PIN diode-based radiation counter to measure\nthe ionizing radiation in its orbit, a long-range transponder and a\nselfie camera,\" ISRO officials wrote in the mission description.\n\nInstead of placing the satellites in a circular orbit 221 miles (356\nkilometers) above Earth, the rocket left them in an orbit that ranged\nfrom 221 miles to as close as 47 miles (76 km). That orbit was not\nstable, and the satellites have \"already come down, and they are not\nusable,\" ISRO Chairman S. Somanath said in a video statement after the\nlaunch.\n\n[ANS thanks Space.com for the above information]\n\n---------------------------------------------------------------------\n\nRussia Successfully Launches KAI 1 Repeater Along With Iranian Satellite\n\nA Russian rocket on Tuesday successfully launched an Iranian satellite\ninto orbit, along with a Russian amateur cubesat.\n\nThe Soyuz rocket lifted off as scheduled at 05:52 GMT Tuesday, Aug. 9\nfrom the Russia-leased Baikonur launch facility in Kazakhstan. About\nnine minutes after the launch, it placed the Iranian satellite called\nKhayyam into orbit. It’s named after Omar Khayyam, a Persian scientist\nwho lived in the 11th and 12th centuries.\n\nAlso aboard were 16 Russian cubesats, including the 3U cubesat KAI 1,\naka KNITU-KAI, NILAKT DOSAAF LLC, ANO DPO \"KIRO.\" Its callsign will be\nRS26S. It carries a 145/435 MHz repeater, panoramic cameras and\na temperature meter based on a fiber Bragg grating. Currently no\nfurther details are available.\n\nAmong the other cubesats scheduled for this launch were ten Russian\nsatellites in the SXC3 series, transmitting telemetry on amateur\nfrequencies. A list of these satellites and their frequencies may be\nfound at https://sputnix.ru/en/satellites-sputnix/for-radioamateurs\n\n[ANS thanks N2YO.com, Nico Janssen, PA0DLO, and Nader Omer, HZ1NH, for\nthe above information]\n\n+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+\n\n Need new satellite antennas? Purchase Arrows, Alaskan Arrows,\n and M2 LEO-Packs from the AMSAT Store. When you purchase through\n AMSAT, a portion of the proceeds goes towards\n Keeping Amateur Radio in Space.\n https://amsat.org/product-category/hardware/\n\n+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+\n\nWireless Institute of Australia Supporting Binar Satellites\n\nThe Board of the Wireless Institute of Australia has supported the\nBinar-1 small satellite/CubeSat mission which was launched from the\nISS by Curtin University.\n\nBinar-1 is a 1U CubeSat currently in low-Earth orbit (LEO) and was a\ntechnical demonstrator of in-house developed hardware that aimed to\nbecome a repeatable platform for research and educational purposes.\n\nThis year the Board of the WIA agreed to support the upcoming mission\n2 that will see satellites: Binar-2, Binar-3 and Binar-4 be deployed\nfrom the ISS in the same way as Binar-1 into LEO. A subsequent mission\n3 will follow about a year later with three more CubeSats (Binar-5,6\nand 7) to also be delivered into Low Earth Orbit.\n\nPart of the Binar mission is to try to make it easier for young,\nenthusiastic students to learn more about and how to use amateur radio\nin a way which directly relates to STEM. We believe that this specific\nuse of amateur radio is a fantastic crossover opportunity for\neducation and encouragement of STEM. Previously young students were\nconstrained by resources, and current progtam wants to provide a\nplatform where students - both high-school and university - can learn\nabout amateur radio, spacecraft, their operations, and science\nexperiments flying onboard the spacecraft.\n\nThe satellites in Launch 2 will be Binar-2, 3, 4 will have a multiband\nradio, capable of operating in the amateur band. The radio frequencies\nare allocated in the 70cm Amateur Satellite Radio band and, as\nrequired by local and international regulatory bodies (ACMA, ITU,\nIARU), will be coordinated through the IARU (International Amateur\nRadio Union) with the support of the Wireless Institute of Australia\nas the national association for Amateur Radio in Australia .\n\nThe main purpose of the usage of the amateur-satellite band allocation\nonboard the Satellites in Launches 2 and 3 is to provide a platform to\neducate high school and university students on satellite technology.\n\n[ANS thanks Southgate ARC for the above information]\n\n---------------------------------------------------------------------\n\nSimultaneous Operations of APRS and Voice Repeater Now a Reality on ISS\n\nARISS is pleased to announce that starting yesterday, August 11,\nsimultaneous operations of the ARISS Voice Repeater and digital APRS\ncommunications on the International Space Station (ISS) is now a\nreality. Current ARISS operations include voice repeater\ntransmissions with the JVC Kenwood D710GA in the Columbus module and\nAPRS packet operation from an identical radio in the Service Module\n(Zvezda). Packet operations are on 145.825 MHz.\n\nThe ARISS Russia and USA teams have been working for several weeks to\nprepare the Service Module radio for APRS operations. ARISS Russia\nteam member Sergey Samburov, RV3DR, led the effort, working with\nRussian mission controllers and the on-board ISS cosmonauts to\nconfigure the Service Module radio for APRS ops. On August 11, final\ncheckouts were completed and the APRS packet mode was switched on for\namateur radio use.\n\nARISS-International Chair Frank Bauer, KA3HDO states, “Simultaneous\noperation of APRS and the voice repeater on ISS is transformative for\nARISS and represents a key element of our ARISS 2.0 initiative,\nproviding interactive capabilities 24/7 that inspire, engage and\neducate youth and lifelong learners—especially life-long learning in\nham radio operations.” Bauer continues, “Our heartfelt thanks to\nSergey Samburov, RV3DR, for making this crucial ARISS 2.0 initiative\nbecome a reality.”\n\nThe Columbus Module radio uses the callsign NA1SS and the new Service\nModule radio uses RS0ISS. Aside from the callsigns, the radios are\nidentical and packet operations are the same as before. You can use\nRS0ISS, ARISS, or APRSAT as the packet path. Also, both radios are\nexpected to be on full time, except during educational contacts, EVAs,\nand dockings or undockings.\n\nYou can find operational status and expected downtimes of the ISS\nradios at https://www.ariss.org/current-status-of-iss-stations.\n\n[ANS thanks Dave Jordan, AA4KN, ARISS PR, for the above information]\n\n+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+\n\n Want to fly the colors on your own grid expedition?\n Get your AMSAT car flag and other neat stuff\n from our Zazzle store!\n 25% of the purchase price of each product goes\n towards Keeping Amateur Radio in Space\n https://www.zazzle.com/amsat_gear\n\n+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+\n\nChanges to AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for August 11\n\nTwo Line Elements or TLEs, often referred to as Keplerian elements or\nkeps in the amateur community, are the inputs to the SGP4 standard\nmathematical model of spacecraft orbits used by most amateur tracking\nprograms. Weekly updates are completely adequate for most amateur\nsatellites. TLE bulletin files are updated Thursday evenings around\n2300 UTC, or more frequently if new high interest satellites are\nlaunched. More information may be found at\nhttps://www.amsat.org/keplerian-elements-resources/\n\nThe following satellites have decayed from orbit and have been removed\nfrom this week's AMSAT-NA TLE distribution:\n\nMaya-3 NORAD Cat ID 49273 (decayed form orbit on 8/3/2022 per Space-Track).\nMaya-4 NORAD Cat ID 49274 (decayed form orbit on 8/8/2022 per Space-Track).\n\n[ANS thanks Ray Hoad, WA5QGD, AMSAT Orbital Elements Manager, for the\nabove information]\n\n---------------------------------------------------------------------\n\nPress Coverage of Eight-Year-Old’s ISS Ham Radio Contact\n\nKent’s Isle of Thanet News reports on the amateur radio contact\nbetween 8-year-old Isabella Payne and NASA astronaut Kjell Lindgren\nKO5MOS on the International Space Station.\n\nIn the Isle of Thanet News, Kathy Bailes, writes:\n\nA Broadstairs eight-year-old has chatted with an astronaut aboard the\nInternational Space Station and a recording of the conversation will\nfeature on the NASA website.\n\nIsabella Payne spoke to Astronaut Kjell Lindgren as the ISS flew\noverhead last week.\n\nThe youngster was with dad Matthew Payne, M0LMK, who is a license\nholding amateur radio enthusiast and tutor. He and Isabella are both\nmembers of Hilderstone Radio Society.\n\nMatthew said: “Isabella has been a member of the radio club ever since\nshe was born and has been playing with the radio since she was six.\nBecause I have the full licence she can sit on my knee and use the\nradio to speak to people as long as I am controlling it. Everyone at\nthe club can do that. She has been involved in a few radio events,\nChildren On The Air events, and will hopefully go for her own licence\nsoon.\n\nRead full story by Kathy Bailes and listen to the recording on the\nIsle of Thanet News site at\nhttps://bit.ly/3vVAFNG or at\nhttps://twitter.com/IsleThanetNews/status/1557404614076530688\n\nMatthew Payne, M0LMK, tweeted:\n“Isabella has been having an email exchange with the @NASA #ISS team,\nyou know, as you do! She sent a photo for their publicity team and\nasked for it to be sent onto @astro_kjell. Here’s what she got in\nreturn…” https://twitter.com/m0lmk/status/1556976125359919105\n\nISS astronaut’s favourite ham radio contact\nhttps://amsat-uk.org/2022/08/03/iss-astronauts-favorite-ham-radio-contact/\n\n[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]\n\n--------------------------------------------------------------------\n\nARISS NEWS\n\nAmateurs and others around the world may listen in on contacts between\namateurs operating in schools and allowing students to interact with\nastronauts and cosmonauts aboard the International Space Station. The\ndownlink frequency on which to listen is 145.800 MHz worldwide.\n\nCambridge Public Library and Idea Exchange, Cambridge, ON, Canada,\ndirect via VE3SWA. The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be\nNA1SS. The scheduled crewmember is Kjell Lindgren, KO5MOS. Contact is\ngo for: Thursday, 2022-08-18 at 17:45:15 UTC 66 degrees elevation.\n\nKjell Lindgren KO5MOS continues to be making general contacts on the\ncross-band repeater. He is using NA1SS. If any crewmember is so\ninclined, all they have to do is pick up the microphone, raise the\nvolume up, and talk on the crossband repeater. So give a listen, you\njust never know.\n\nBoth the crossband FM voice repeater and the APRS digipeater are now\nin simultaneous operation. See article above.\n\nThe latest information on the operation mode can be found at\nhttps://www.ariss.org/current-status-of-iss-stations.html\n\nThe latest list of frequencies in use can be found at\nhttps://www.ariss.org/contact-the-iss.html\n\n[ANS thanks Charlie Sufana, AJ9N, one of the ARISS operation team\nmentors for the above information]\n\n+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+\n\n AMSAT, along with our ARISS partners, is developing an Amateur\n Radio package, including two-way communication capability, to\n be carried on-board Gateway in lunar orbit.\n\n Support AMSAT's projects today at https://www.amsat.org/donate/\n\n+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+\n\nUpcoming Satellite Operations\n\nN8MR will be in EN57 with frequent roves to EN56 and EN67 Aug 6-13.\nListening for EU, Car, SA CA. Prefer linear sats, FM sats poss. Sked\ndepends on wx, etc.\n\nWY7AA is headed to DN53 and will be camping there from 8/10 –\n8/15’ish. He will be in the bottom of a canyon, so Sats will be tough,\nbut he will try when he can. Primarily K-4536 #POTA No cell service,\nsend a Winlink note if you want. DN52 will be the week after.\n\nAA6MU: CN81 August 9-31, Linears and FM.\n\nW7BMD: will be vacationing in FN41/FN51 land, so intermittently\navailable for FM birds QSOs August 8-12.\n\nAD7DB: Activating DM24, DM25 and DM35, Aug 20,21,22, FM passes.\nKingman and Mohave Valley AZ area. Holiday style but I’ll try to post\nahead of them.\n\nEA4NF, Phillippe. August 1-3th and 13-16th, EL94 & EL95, FM and\nLiners, will confirm in LOTW as KE4NF. Hit him up on Twitter\n@EA4NF_Sat for details.\n\nKI7QEK: Will I’m taking a family vacation in British Columbia and\nAlberta from August 27-September 3, and planning to bring FM and\nlinear gear. “Holiday style” so no promises on passes, but I will be\npassing through these grids: DN09, DO00, DO01, DO11, DO20 & DO21\n\n[ANS thanks Paul Overn, KE0PBR, AMSAT rover page manager, for the\nabove information]\n\n---------------------------------------------------------------------\n\nHamfests, Conventions, Maker Faires, and Other Events\n\nAMSAT Ambassadors provide presentations, demonstrate communicating\nthrough amateur satellites, and host information tables at club\nmeetings, hamfests, conventions, maker faires, and other events.\n\n2022 HamXposition, and ARRL New England and Hudson Division Convention\n(hamxposition.org)\nSaturday and Sunday August 27 and 28, Marlborough, MA (Flea Market and\nsome classes and workshops on Friday)\nAMSAT will have a booth with info, demos, and items for sale.\nBurns Fisher, WB1FJ will be presenting “What’s New At AMSAT”\n\n41st ARRL and TAPR Digital Communications Conference (DCC)\nSeptember 16–18, 2022\nHilton Charlotte Airport Hotel\nCharlotte, North Carolina\nhttps://tapr.org\n\n2022 Rocky Mountain ARRL Division Convention\nFriday, October 7th, 2022 to Sunday, October 9th, 2022\nEvent Center at Archer\n3921 Archer Pkwy\nCheyenne, Wyoming 82007\nhttps://wyhamcon.org/site\n\n2022 AMSAT-UK International Space Colloquium\nOctober 8–9, 2022\nKents Hill Park Conference Centre, Milton Keynes\nhttps://rsgb.org/main/about-us/rsgb-convention/\n\n40th Annual AMSAT Space Symposium and General Meeting\nOctober 21–22, 2022\nThe Crowne Plaza Suites, 3 Appletree Square, Bloomington, MN\nhttps://launch.amsat.org/event-4922878\n\n[ANS thanks Paul Overn, KE0PBR, AMSAT Events page manager, for the\nabove information]\n\n---------------------------------------------------------------------\n\nSatellite Shorts From All Over\n\n+ Filipino-made cube satellites Maya-3 and Maya-4 returned to Earth\nand ended their missions, the Space Technology and Applications\nMastery, Innovation and Advancement (STAMINA4Space) Program announced\non Tuesday. Maya-3 and Maya-4 reentered the Earth’s atmosphere on Aug.\n4 and Aug. 8, respectively. While in the orbit for 10 months, the two\ncube satellites carried a commercial off-the-shelf APRS-Digipeater\nPayload Demonstration, which employed packet radio technology to\ntransmit information over amateur radio. (ANS thanks CNN Philippines\nfor the above information)\n\n+ For the first time, Veraval Light House, situated at the south coast\nof Gujarat State from India, will be activated with the Special\nAmateur Radio Callsign AT3VLH. The Lighthouse is activated by active\nHam Radio Operator Rajesh Vagadia, VU2EXP, from Rajkot (Gujarat)\nIndia. It is SOLO operator activation to experiment learn & spread\nawareness with amateur radio spirit. The activation will take place 19\nto 22 August, 2022 utilizing 40m, 20m, 15m & 10m and FM Satellites.\n(ANS thanks Rajesh Vagadia, VU2EXP, for the above information)\n\n+ A NASA cubesat was removed from a recent rideshare launch\nopportunity on a U.S. Space Force mission because the spacecraft could\nnot meet guidelines for deorbiting at the end of its life. The GTOSat\nmission, developed by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, was\nmanifested to fly as a secondary payload on the Atlas 5 launch of the\nSBIRS GEO-6 missile-warning satellite. The SBIRS satellite was\nsuccessfully launched Aug. 4. However, GTOSat and a second,\nunidentified rideshare payload were not included on the launch. Space\nForce officials said in a prelaunch briefing that the satellites were\nnot compliant with orbital debris mitigation guidelines but did not\nelaborate. (ANS thanks SpaceNews for the above information)\n\n+ Three 1 kg cubesats, TUMNanosat, FUTABA and HSU-SAT 1 were deployed\nfrom the J-SSOD No. 22 deployer on the ISS Japanese robot arm at 0945\nUTC Aug 12. TUMNanosat has 9k6 GMSK AX25 downlink of beacons and\ntelemetry on 436.680 MHz. FUTABA downlinks with 20 wpm CW beacon and\n1k2 AFSK for FM telemetry and mission data on 437.375 MHz. More info\nfrom https://www.futaba.space/blank-3 HSU-SAT-1 has a downlink using\nCW, FM SSTV and 9k6 GMSK at 437.280 MHz. More information at\nhttps://bit.ly/3C3LFwa (ANS thanks AMSAT-UK and the IARU for the\nabove information)\n\n\n---------------------------------------------------------------------\n\nJoin AMSAT today at https://launch.amsat.org/\n\nIn addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership to:\n\n* Societies (a recognized group, clubs or organization).\n* Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership at\none-half the standard yearly rate.\n* Post-secondary school students enrolled in at least half time status\nshall be eligible for the student rate for a maximum of 6\npost-secondary years in this status.\n* Memberships are available for annual and lifetime terms.\n\nContact info [at] amsat.org for additional membership information.\n\n73 and remember to help Keep Amateur Radio in Space!\n\nThis week's ANS Editor, Mark Johns, K0JM\nk0jm at amsat dot org\n", "attachments": [] }