17 Mar
2009
17 Mar
'09
10:28 a.m.
I was reading about the newly launched GOCE satellite and the fact that its mission will end when its 40kg tank empties - that of course may be a long time coming but as it has an S band transmitter, could this not be tweaked for us once the mission is complete?
And thinking further, for these satellites could amateur radio gear be carried so that it could be activated once the main mission is complete? Doing this over a number of years would provide a ready made supply of new birds over a period of time.
I suppose logistics and cost will be the factor but its an idea and would give us at least something!
--
David
KG4ZLB
www.kg4zlb.com
Hans Johnson wrote:
> Furthermore, from what I understand, international agreements (or at least
> implicit agreements) now require the operators to vent any remaining fuel.
> This is to prevent the satellite from exploding at some point in the future
> due to either the (rather caustic) fuel corroding through the fuel tank, or
> a debris/micrometeorite hit.
>
> Once this is complete, the operators will then permanently shut down the
> satellite so that there is no chance of it interfering with the operational
> fleet. The last thing they want is a semi-active satellite drifting past an
> operational satellite (at least from the POV of the earth station) and
> potentially confusing tracking antennas, or otherwise interfering with
> revenue traffic.
>
> As far as shifting them to amateur frequencies, I doubt it's physically
> possible. In order to get the Tx/Rx isolation they need, the satellites
> will be using cavity filters, so unless you're very close to their passband,
> there's no hope. Heck, in my day job, we have to use different filters if
> we want to operate in extended ku-band filters.
>
> Regards,
>
> Hans Johnson
> VA7HAS
>
> On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 3:52 PM, Wayne Estes w9ae@charter.net wrote:
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