John B. Stephensen wrote:
P3E is a HEO with the same engine as P3D and no benefactor funding a launch. It seems more reasonable to focus on projects that we can pay to launch or where someone has already donated the launch.
I believe that AMSAT should at least consider using the DoD Space Test Program (STP), which provides launches for satellites of interest to the federal government. In fact, the STP has already launched a number of amateur satellites. Of course, HEO launches will still be hard to come by. But, I think it is pretty clear that amateurs can't afford an HEO launch, so we ought to at least try to find someone else to pay for it.
But, in order to get the government to pay, we need to tell a story that the government is interested in. In my view, the federal government is most likely to fund at least two types of projects:
o Projects that develop the next generation of space scientists and engineers. (This is a large part of the reason NASA funds ARISS and SAREX activities. I think this is also why the Naval Academy stuff gets launched.)
o Research projects. Note that AO-40 actually flew a NASA GPS experiment that resulted in at least one journal article. Unfortunately, no one seems to want to talk about research experiments that have flown on, and often subsidized, amateur satellites (much less display this information prominently on the AMSAT Web pages).
Perhaps more importantly, I don't believe that the federal government is likely to fund us primarily to provide emergency communications. There are simply too many other alternatives available today: satellite phones, cellular-base-stations-on-a-truck, and lots of fixed and portable satellite ground stations.
If you have an interest in this topic, you might want to read my DoD Space Test Program paper. (Unlike most AMSAT Symposium presentations, it is available on the Internet. But, that is another difficult topic for AMSAT...)
But, to be able to successfully tell these stories, AMSAT needs to attract new classes of members, particularly today's and tomorrow's engineers, scientists, and technically curious. And, to attract these new classes of members, I believe that AMSAT will need to update some of its views. The Web is vitally important: it is probably the dominant portion of AMSAT's public face seen by prospective members and prospective funding agencies. For example, all the excellent material published in the Journal would benefit AMSAT much more if it was available on the Web.
By the way, the AFRL University Nanosatellite Program (UNP) Web site [!] says that 3,500 students have participated in the program over the last decade. Every one of these young people has a demonstrated interest in building satellites. AMSAT ought to consider every one of them a prospective member and volunteer.
(I also believe that many of these types of prospective members that AMSAT needs in order to be successful expect a voluntary organization like AMSAT to operate transparently, and for its directors and officers to be able to discuss the organization in public in a professional manner. Does anyone else think that it is ironic that discussions about the future of AMSAT are categorized under "troll"?)
-tjs