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May 2016
- 3 participants
- 6 discussions
AMSAT NEWS SERVICE
ANS-150
The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-
mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space
including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur
Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,
launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio
satellites.
The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur
Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.
Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:
ans-editor at amsat.org.
In this edition:
* Fox-1Cliff and Fox-1D Launch No Earlier Than July 28, 2016
* 2016 AMSAT-NA Board of Directors Nominations Notice
* AMSAT's Bob Carpenter W3OTC Inducted into CQ Hall of Fame
* AMSAT Demonstration Station at the Dayton Hamvention Recap
* A Tiny Satellite of Your Very Own
* New VHF, UHF, uW Handbook Available for Download
* Amateur Satellite Launch from India
* UWE-3 Status Report
* Tomsk-TPU-120 CubeSat Video
* Es’Hail-2 Geostationary P4-A Transponder Frequencies
* ÑUSAT-1 SSB/CW Transponder Satellite
* ESA Announces Winning Radio Amateurs
* Symposium to Address Interference-free Satellite Services
* DCC Call for Papers
* AMSAT Events
* ARISS News
* Satellite Shorts From All Over
SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-150.01
ANS-150 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins
AMSAT News Service Bulletin 150.01
>From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD.
DATE May 29, 2016
To All RADIO AMATEURS
BID: $ANS-150.01
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Fox-1Cliff and Fox-1D Launch No Earlier Than July 28, 2016
This week AMSAT Vice-President Engineering, Jerry Buxton, N0JY, announced
at the Dayton Hamvention AMSAT Forum on Saturday that the launch for
Fox-1Cliff and Fox-1D is now NET (No Earlier Than) July 28, 2016.
Fox-1Cliff and Fox-1D will be integrated onto the Spaceflight Sherpa
platform for its maiden flight aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 launch from
Vandenberg Air Force Base.
http://www.amsat.org/?p=5219
Not a member of AMSAT yet?
You're invited to join on-line at:
http://store.amsat.org/catalog/index.php?cPath=32
Please consider making a donation to support the Fox-1 series of cubesats
using the links on the front page
http://www.amsat.org.
[ANS thanks AMSAT Vice-President Engineering, Jerry Buxton, N0JY, for the
above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
2016 AMSAT-NA Board of Directors Nominations Notice
It's time to submit nominations for the upcoming AMSAT-NA Board of
Directors election. Three director's terms expire this year: Tom
Clark, K3IO, JoAnne Maenpaa, K9JKM, and Lou McFadin, W5DID. In
addition, up to two Alternates may be elected for one year terms.
A valid nomination requires either one Member Society or five current
individual members in good standing to nominate an AMSAT-NA member for
Director. Written nominations, consisting of the nominee's name and
call, and the nominating individual's names, calls and individual
signatures should be mailed to: AMSAT-NA, 10605 Concord St, #304
Kensington, MD 20895-2526.
In addition to traditional submissions of written nominations, which
is the preferred method, the intent to nominate someone may be made by
electronic means. These include e-mail, Fax, or electronic image of a
petition. Electronic petitions should be sent to MARTHA at AMSAT.ORG
or Faxed to (301)822-4371.
No matter what means is used, petitions MUST arrive no later than June
15th at the AMSAT-NA office. If the nomination is a traditional
written nomination, no other action is required. If it is other than
this, i.e. electronic, a verifying traditional written petition MUST
be received at the AMSAT-NA office at the above address within 7 days
following the close of nominations on June 15th.
ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS WITHOUT THIS SECOND, WRITTEN VERIFICATION ARE
NOT VALID UNDER THE EXISTING AMSAT-NA BYLAWS.
[ANS thanks AMSAT-NA Secretary, Paul Stoetzer, N8HM, for the above
information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
AMSAT's Bob Carpenter W3OTC Inducted into CQ Hall of Fame
Bob Carpenter, W3OTC, a longtime devoted AMAST volunteer became a Silent Key
Friday, January 8th. Bill Tynan, W3XO, wrote a memorial item in ANS-024
http://amsat.org/pipermail/ans/2016/000893.html
AMSAT has received the news that Bob has been inducted into the CQ Hall of
Fame.
CQ ANNOUNCES 2016 HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES (Press Release, Date May 20th):
CQ magazine today announced its 2016 Hall of Fame inductees, including
only the second non-amateurs elected to the CQ DX Hall of Fame, two new
inductees to the CQ Contest Hall of Fame and 21 new members of the CQ
Amateur Radio Hall of Fame.
The CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame honors those individuals, whether
licensed hams or not, who have made significant contributions to amateur
radio; and those amateurs who have made significant contributions either
to amateur radio, to their professional careers or to some other aspect
of life on our planet. The 2016 inductees (listed alphabetically) are:
Bob Arnold, N2JEU (SK) - Co-developer (with Keith Lamonica, W7DXX,
see below) of the first internet-controlled remote base
Grant Bingeman, KM5RG (SK) - Developed "method of moments" antenna
modeling software for AM broadcast stations and 160-meter
amateur antennas
Bob Carpenter, W3OTC (SK) - Pioneer of meteor scatter and FM stereo
broadcast technology; longtime AMSAT volunteer
David Dary, W5ZAX - Journalist, author, journalism educator - former
correspondent for CBS and NBC News, journalism professor
at University of Kansas and University of Oklahoma, author
of over 20 books on the American West
Matt Ettus, N2MJI - Software defined radio pioneer; developed first
Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) with GNU radio
software support
Terry Fox, WB4FJI - Packet radio pioneer; primary developer of AX.25
amateur packet protocol
Elmer "Bud" Frohardt, Jr., W9DY (SK) -- The original "Elmer" for whom
ham radio mentors are named (courtesy of a 1971 QST "How's
DX?" column by Rod Newkirk, W9BRD/VA3ZBB)
Fred Gissoni, K4JLX (SK) - Adaptive technology pioneer; co-developer
of the Porta-Braille and Pocket-Braille note-taking devices
for the visually impaired, as well as many other devices
Ken Kellerman, K2AOE - Radioastronomer; pioneer of radio interferometry;
co-developer of very long baseline interferometry (VLBI),
which permits multiple telescopes to function as a single
instrument
Keith Lamonica, W7DXX - Co-developer (with the late Bob Arnold, N2JEU)
of the first internet-controlled remote base
George Mitchell, K6ZE (SK) - Member of the Tuskegee Airmen in World
War II and 2007 recipient of the Congressional Gold Medal
for his wartime service
Les Mitchell, G3BHK (SK) - Founder of Jamboree on the Air (JOTA), annual
event to introduce amateur radio to scouts and guides around
the world
William Moerner, WN6I - Co-recipient of the 2014 Nobel Prize in chemistry
for his work in high-resolution microscopy
Leigh Orf, KG4ULP - Co-developer of tornado simulator using computer
modeling to simulate conditions under which tornadoes form
Joe Rudi, NK7U - Former Major League baseball player; 3-time All-Star
Wes Schum, W9DYV (SK) - Co-founder of Central Electronics, developed
first commercially-manufactured amateur radio SSB transmitter
Garry Shandling, ex-KQ6KA/KD6OY (SK) - Well-known comedian, actor, writer
and television personality
Mason Southwirth, ex-W1VLH (SK) - Head of ARRL International Geophysical
Year (IGY) Propagation Research Project in 1958-59; conducted
additional propagation research at Stanford University
Boris Stepanov, RU3AX (ex-UW3AX) - Leading Russian amateur, deputy editor
of Russian Radio magazine; pioneer of computerized contest
logging and log-checking; developed prototype for World
Radiosport Team Championships (WRTC); first to propose "glass
cockpit" for ham transceiver, combining frequency readout
and spectrum scope on front panel display
Rufus Turner, W3LF (SK) - Believed to be the first African-American radio
amateur in the U.S.; helped develop 1N34A diode; wrote 1949
article in Radio-Electronics magazine on how to "Build a
Transistor"
Perry Williams, W1UED (SK) - Longtime ARRL Washington Coordinator and
League archivist; convinced Congress to approve vanity call-
sign program and not to impose a license application fee on
amateurs; persuaded FCC to retain large amateur microwave al-
locations and to create primary amateur allocation at 2.4 GHz
[ANS thanks CQ Magazine for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
AMSAT Demonstration Station at the Dayton Hamvention Recap
This was my first year running the AMSAT demonstration station at the
Dayton Hamvention after Keith Pugh, W5IU, had run it for many years.
After volunteering at the demo station the past couple of years, I
knew what to expect: a poor horizon to the north (due to the arena),
high levels of RF (including lids running FM simplex inside the
satellite subband on 2m), and lots of fun demoing satellite operation
to curious newcomers as well as meeting many satellite operators I've
worked on the satellites in person.
The core of the demo station was similar to past years. I brought my
pair of Yaesu FT-817s (known fondly among many satellite operators as
a Yaesu FT-1634) as well as a Windows 10 tablet and a FUNcube Dongle
Pro+. The antenna was an Arrow II 146/437-10BP and I also brought a
cheap Optera camera tripod. In addition, John Papay, K8YSE, brought
his Icom IC-910H, laptop, and Arrow antenna on a speaker stand with a
mount that allowed a smooth way to change polarity throughout the
pass. With this mix of equipment, we were able to demonstrate several
methods of satellite operating: computer controlled Doppler tuning of
a transceiver designed for satellite operating, manual Doppler tuning
with a pair of VHF/UHF all-mode transceivers, and use of an SDR
receiver with a VHF/UHF all-mode receiver for full-duplex operating on
linear transponders.
The demo area was up and running by the time the outdoor areas of the
Hamvention opened at 8:00am on Friday morning. Our first pass was an
XW-2A pass at 8:17am, with K8YSE operating his IC-910H and KD8CAO
running the antenna. The demos were generally a two man operation with
one operator at the radio and one serving as the antenna rotor. After
this pass, we listened to the 70cm PSK31 signal from NO-84 and a few
packet bursts from the ISS using the FUNcube Dongle Pro+ and Windows
10 tablet before a pair of AO-85 passes and an XW-2F pass operated by
K8YSE.
By special request, the AO-73 transponder was activated a day area and
was available for Friday morning's demos. I operated the 10:51am pass
with my pair of Yaesu FT-817s. A video of this pass is available on
the AMSAT North America Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/7828379515/permalink/10154235785829516/
Later, I operated an SO-50 and FO-29 pass with that pair of FT-817s as
well, but had to fight strong desense. After those two passes, I
grabbed a diplexer I had brought and placed it on the 2m transmit side
(to filter out the third harmonic from the transmitter) and
experienced no further desense problems with my setup. PY5LF captured
part of the SO-50 pass on video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wVPb1a9NqxQ
K8YSE then operated the rest of the FO-29, AO-7, and SO-50 passes
that afternoon.
On Saturday morning, we opened with listening (and decoding a bit) to
the PSK31 beacon on NO-84. Unfortunately, we did not have HF transmit
capability. The signal from NO-84's PSK31 transponder is very good and
I highly recommend anyone who can transmit on 10m at 25-50 watts and
receive a 70cm FM signal give it a try.
After working an XW-2F pass with the pair of FT-817s, I decided to
give the SDR receiver a try and made one QSO each on XW-2C and XW-2A
using the SDR as a downlink receiver. This was the first time I had
tried doing this and it was fun, though I definitely need some more
practice with it! I also tried the SDR receiver on AO-73 and FO-29 and
made a couple of QSOs.
Shortly after the ARRL Youth Forum ended around noon, a large crowd
began to arrive at the demo area. Nine-year old Hope Lea, KM4IPF, who
had given a talk at the Youth Forum operated a pass of SO-50 around
12:19pm and made many QSOs from coast-to-coast. A video of this pass
is available from the AMSAT North America Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/james.g.lea/videos/10154297928734363/
After the SO-50 pass, we made several QSOs on FO-29 and then listened
to the SPROUT digitalker. The SPROUT digitalker is generally active on
Saturday passes. A video of this pass is available here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FRNZkMb5yM
K8YSE then operated the Saturday afternoon passes of FO-29, AO-7, and
AO-85 with his Icom IC-910H setup. Highlights included several of us
passing around the microphone to work Paulo, PV8DX, in Brazil.
We got an early start on Sunday morning, operating a pass of AO-85 to
the northeast using my dual FT-817 setup just prior to 8:00am.
Although I was the only person in the demo area, I made three QSOs on
AO-85, holding the antenna myself and leaning over the table to
operate the radio. After this, I operated a pass of XW-2F around
8:30am. For the 8:44am XW-2A pass, ARRL Media & Public Relations
Manager Sean Kutzko, KX9X, took the microphone and made several QSOs
on that pass while I pointed the antenna. Although I did have a tripod
for the antenna, I was simply using the stock camera tripod mount and
had no way to adjust polarity. Since polarity is so critical while
operating satellites, the operators who pointed the antenna while
using my Arrow generally took the antenna off the tripod and held it
in their hand for quick polarity adjustments. K8YSE's speaker stand
mount demonstrated a good way to mount an Arrow antenna on a tripod
while retaining adequate control over polarity.
The next pass after this was a low western pass of XW-2C where I made
several QSOs. At 9:37am, we operated a pass of AO-85 and made QSOs
from coast-to-coast. A video of AMSAT VP of Operations Drew
Glasbrenner, KO4MA, at the microphone is available at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xrmzym39X5E
I would note that we were using a pair of FT-817s, barefoot, on that
pass and were able to make several QSOs with just 5 watts, mostly full
quieting. Though AO-85 can often take a bit more power to get in to,
QSOs using 5 watts and an Arrow antenna are very possible.
Passes of SO-50, AO-73, and FO-29 rounded out the demos for the
Hamvention and we were QRT at 12:12pm on Sunday, but not before
working MI6GTY in Northern Ireland on FO-29. It was nice to get Europe
in the log from the Dayton Hamvention demo station and it was our last
QSO of the 2016 Hamvention.
The AMSAT demo station has been a fun place to spend a majority of the
last three Dayton Hamventions and I would encourage all satellite
operators and those curious about satellite operation to visit the
station outside of Ball Arena (near the ARRL and AMSAT booth areas)
next May. Volunteers and guest operators are always sought!
A few pictures are posted on the AMSAT North America Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/7828379515/permalink/10154235785829516/
(The AMSAT North America Facebook group is very active - in fact,
traffic has likely surpassed the traffic on the AMSAT-BB. If you are
not a member, I would encourage you to check it out
https://www.facebook.com/groups/7828379515/?qsefr=1)
Thanks to the following for volunteering at the demo station (and
apologies if I missed anyone):
Mark Hammond, N8MH
Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA
John Papay, K8YSE
Doug Papay, KD8CAO
Art Payne, VE3GNF
Wyatt Dirks, AC0RA
Michael Kirkhart, KD8QBA
John Brier, KG4AKV
Jeff Griffin, KB2M
Hope Lea, KM4IPF
Sean Kutzko, KX9X
Thanks to the following for providing equipment for the demo station:
Mike Young, WB8CXO (Batteries)
Keith Pugh, W5IU (DC power distribution)
Washington, DC
P. S. I did not keep logs at the demo station, though I will remember
if I worked you! If you need a card or LoTW upload for EM79, please
let me know.
-Paul, N8HM
[ANS thanks to AMSAT-NA Secretary, Paul Stoetzer, N8HM and his team
for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
A Tiny Satellite of Your Very Own
They're not just for rocket scientists anymore
Satellites used to be the exclusive playthings of rich governments and
wealthy
corporations. But increasingly, as space becomes more democratized, these
sophisticated technologies are coming within reach of ordinary people. Just
like drones before them, miniature satellites are beginning to fundamentally
transform our conceptions of who gets to do what up above our heads.
As a recent report from the National Academy of Sciences highlights, these
satellites hold tremendous potential for making satellite-based science more
accessible than ever before. However, as the cost of getting your own
satellite
in orbit plummets, the risks of irresponsible use grow.
The question here is no longer “Can we?” but “Should we?” What are the
potential downsides of having a slice of space densely populated by
equipment
built by people not traditionally labeled as “professionals”? And what would
the responsible and beneficial development and use of this technology
actually
look like?
Some of the answers may come from a nonprofit organization that has been
building and launching amateur satellites for nearly 50 years.
Just a few inches across and ready for orbit.
The technology we’re talking about
Having your own personal satellite launched into orbit might sound like an
idea straight out of science fiction. But over the past few decades a unique
class of satellites has been created that fits the bill: CubeSats.
The “Cube” here simply refers to the satellite’s shape. The most common
CubeSat (the so-called “1U” satellite) is a 10 cm (roughly 4 inches)
cube, so
small that a single CubeSat could easily be mistaken for a paperweight
on your
desk. These mini, modular satellites can fit in a launch vehicle’s formerly
“wasted space.” Multiples can be deployed in combination for more complex
missions than could be achieved by one CubeSat alone.
Within their compact bodies these minute satellites are able to house
sensors
and communications receivers/transmitters that enable operators to study the
Earth from space, as well as space around the Earth.
They’re primarily designed for Low Earth Orbit (LEO) – an easily accessible
region of space from around 200 to 800 miles above the Earth, where human-
tended missions like the Hubble Space Telescope and the International Space
Station (ISS) hang out. But they can attain more distant orbits; NASA
plans for
most of its future Earth-escaping payloads (to the moon and Mars
especially) to
carry CubeSats.
Because they’re so small and light, it costs much less to get a CubeSat into
Earth orbit than a traditional communication or GPS satellite. For
instance, a
research group here at Arizona State University recently claimed their
developmental “femtosats” (especially small CubeSats) could cost as
little as
US$3,000 to put in orbit. This decrease in cost is allowing researchers,
hobbyists and even elementary school groups to put simple instruments
into LEO,
by piggybacking onto rocket launches, or even having them deployed from
the ISS.
The first CubeSat was created in the early 2000s, as a way of enabling
CalPoly
and Stanford graduate students to design, build, test and operate a
spacecraft
with similar capabilities to the USSR’s Sputnik.
Since then, NASA, the National Reconnaissance Office and even Boeing
have all
launched and operated CubeSats. There are more than 130 currently
operational
in orbit. The NASA Educational Launch of Nano Satellite (ELaNa) program,
which
offers free launches for educational groups and science missions, is now
open
to U.S. nonprofit corporations as well.
Clearly, satellites are not just for rocket scientists anymore.
Thinking inside the box
The National Academy of Sciences report emphasizes CubeSats' importance in
scientific discovery and the training of future space scientists and
engineers.
Yet it also acknowledges that widespread deployment of LEO CubeSats
isn’t risk-
free.
The greatest concern the authors raise is space debris – pieces of
“junk” that
orbit the earth, with the potential to cause serious damage if they collide
with operational units, including the ISS.
Currently, there aren’t many CubeSats and they’re tracked closely. Yet
as LEO
opens up to more amateur satellites, they may pose an increasing threat.
As the
report authors point out, even near-misses might lead to the “creation of an
onerous regulatory framework and affect the future disposition of science
CubeSats.”
More broadly, the report authors focus on factors that might impede greater
use of CubeSat technologies. These include regulations around
earth-space radio
communications, possible impacts of International Traffic in Arms
Regulations
(which govern import and export of defense-related articles and services
in the
U.S.), and potential issues around extra-terrestrial contamination.
But what about the rest of us? How can we be sure that hobbyists and others
aren’t launching their own “spy” satellites, or (intentionally or not)
placing
polluting technologies into LEO, or even deploying low-cost CubeSat networks
that could be hijacked and used nefariously?
As CubeSat researchers are quick to point out, these are far-fetched
scenarios. But they suggest that now’s the time to ponder unexpected and
unintended possible consequences of more people than ever having access to
their own small slice of space. In an era when you can simply buy a
CubeSat kit
off the shelf, how can we trust the satellites over our heads were developed
with good intentions by people who knew what they were doing?
Some “expert amateurs” in the satellite game could provide some inspiration
for how to proceed responsibly.
Guidance from experienced amateurs
In 1969, the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT) was created in
order
to foster ham radio enthusiasts' participation in space research and
communication. It continued the efforts, begun in 1961, by Project OSCAR – a
U.S.-based group that built and launched the very first nongovernmental
satellite just four years after Sputnik.
As an organization of volunteers, AMSAT was putting “amateur” satellites in
orbit decades before the current CubeSat craze. And over time, its
members have
learned a thing or two about responsibility.
Here, open-source development has been a central principle. Within the
organization, AMSAT has a philosophy of open sourcing everything – making
technical data on all aspects of their satellites fully available to
everyone
in the organization, and when possible, the public. According to a member of
the team responsible for FOX 1-A, AMSAT’s first CubeSat:
This means that it would be incredibly difficult to sneak something by us …
there’s no way to smuggle explosives or an energy emitter into an amateur
satellite when everyone has access to the designs and implementation.
However, they’re more cautious about sharing info with nonmembers, as the
organization guards against others developing the ability to hijack and take
control of their satellites.
This form of “self-governance” is possible within long-standing amateur
organizations that, over time, are able to build a sense of
responsibility to
community members, as well as society more generally.
How does responsible development evolve?
But what happens when new players emerge, who don’t have deep roots
within the
existing culture?
Hobbyist and student “new kids on the block” are gaining access to
technologies without being part of a longstanding amateur establishment.
They
are still constrained by funders, launch providers and a tapestry of
regulations – all of which rein in what CubeSat developers can and
cannot do.
But there is a danger they’re ill-equipped to think through potential
unintended consequences.
What these unintended consequences might be is admittedly far from clear.
Certainly, CubeSat developers would argue it’s hard to imagine these tiny
satellites causing substantial physical harm. Yet we know innovators can be
remarkably creative with taking technologies in unexpected directions.
Think of
something as seemingly benign as the cellphone – we have microfinance
and text-
based social networking at one end of the spectrum, improvised explosive
devices at the other.
This is where a culture of social responsibility around CubeSats becomes
important – not simply for ensuring that physical risks are minimized
(and good
practices are adhered to), but also to engage with a much larger
community in
anticipating and managing less obvious consequences of the technology.
This is not an easy task. Yet the evidence from AMSAT and other areas of
technology development suggest that responsible amateur communities can
and do
emerge around novel technologies.
For instance, see the diy-bio community, where hobbyists work in advanced
community biotech labs. Their growing community commitment to safety and
responsibility is highlighting how amateurs can embrace responsibility in
research and innovation. A similar commitment is seen within open-source
software and hardware communities, such as the members of the Linux
Foundation.
The challenge here, of course, is ensuring that what an amateur community
considers to be responsible, actually is. Here’s where there needs to be
a much
wider public conversation that extends beyond government agencies and
scientific communities to include students, hobbyists, and anyone who may
potentially stand to be affected by the use of CubeSat technology.
See the Houston Chronicle website for further readings:
http://www.houstonchronicle.com/local/gray-matters/article/Your-own-persona…
satellite-7947152.php?t=756e94597b438d9cbb
[ANS thanks Elizabeth Garbee and Andrew Maynard from Arizona State
University
for the above information
---------------------------------------------------------------------
New VHF, UHF, uW Handbook Available for Download
Version 7.5 of the IARU Region 1 VHF Handbook is now available for
download.
The key Amateur Satellite section is on pages 123-131. There are also
chapters on Band Planning, Contests, Propagation Research, Operating
Procedures. Page 116 defines which way to thread a helical beam antenna.
http://www.iaru-r1.org/index.php/documents/Documents/VHF/Handbook-7.50.pdf/
[ANS thanks Trevor, M5AKA for the above information]
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Amateur Satellite Launch from India
Mineo Wakita JE9PEL reports on the Indian ISRO PSLV-C34 amateur radio
satellite launch planned for June 10, 2016 at 0355 UT into a 500 km
98 degree inclination orbit.
Main Payload, Cartosat-2C, Earth Observing
PSLV-XL(C-34), Satish Dharwan Space Centre, Sriharikota, India
Satellite Uplink Downlink Beacon Mode
------------ ------- -------- ------- ---------------
BEESAT-4 . 435.950 435.950 4800bps GMSK,CW
BIROS . 437.525 . 4800bps GMSK
LAPAN-A3 . . . Non-Amateur
Max Valier . 145.860 145.960 CW
Sathyabamasat . 145.980 . 2400bps BPSK
Swayam COEP . 437.025 437.025 1200bps BPSK,CW
Venta-1 . . 437.325 CW
------------ ------- -------- ------- ---------------
http://www.ne.jp/asahi/hamradio/je9pel/be4lapan.htm
Among the satellites being launched is Swayam-1 developed by students at
the
College of Engineering Pune (COEP). It will provide a text messaging
facility using the COEPSAT protocol.
see
http://amsatindia.org/coep-satellite-swayam-project/
http://www.coep.org.in/csat/track-swayam/
UPDATE: Yono YD0NXX reports the Indonesian built LAPAN-A3
does not have an amateur radio payload.
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
UWE-3 Status Report
On May 21, 2016 the CubeSat UWE-3 celebrated 2.5 years in space without any
significant failures.
Batteries, EPS, OBC and ADCS are fine, nevertheless we were confronted
with a
minor problem with one of the radios UWE-3 autonomously recovered from.
Since
then UWE-3 is in a very stable condition again.
Some weeks ago we have re-initiated operations with UWE-3 on an interim
basis. The goal is to test new magnetic control algorithms in space.
Therefore we operate the satellite on the 436.395200 MHz frequency and
perform
data downloads from time to time. In the figure below the satellite’s
rotation
rate w is shown for one of the experiments. The goal was to establish a
rotation about the satellite’s X-axis at 10 deg/s while the Y/Z-axes
should be at 0 deg/s. In general the desired rotation rate could be achieved
but with major deviations from the setpoint. With the intention of
optimizing
the relevant control laws we will continue with these experiments within the
next days and weeks.
During our experiments we received an outstanding support from the radio
community from all over the world we are very thankful for. The received
packets were instantaneous injected into our algorithms and delivered an
important contribution to our research work. We would like to express our
special thanks to DK3WN, PE0SAT, DL8MCO, EU1XX, ON4HF, Rainer, JA5BLZ,
JA6PL,
CU2JX, LU4EOU, JA1GDE, SP7THR, G7GQW, YC3BVG, JF1EUY, JE9PEL, JE1CVL,
JO1PTD,
ZL4JL, EA7ADI, K4KDR, JA0CAW, JH4XSY, PA2EON, SM0TGU. THANK YOU!
Yours sincerely,
UWE-3 Team
UWE-3 was launched with FUNcube-1 on November 21, 2013. Latest UWE-3 news at
http://www7.informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de/forschung/space_exploration/projects
/uwe_3/uwe_3_news/
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Tomsk-TPU-120 CubeSat Video
The Russian space agency Roscosmos has released a video of the Tomsk-TPU-120
CubeSat commemorative transmission from the International Space Station.
The satellite was developed by students at the Tomsk Polytechnic
University to
test new space materials technology and is the world’s first space
vehicle with
a 3D-printed structure. It was launched from Baikonur to the ISS on
March 31,
2016 in a Progress-MS-2 cargo vessel. It will be deployed by hand during a
future Russian spacewalk (EVA), which is why unlike other CubeSats this
one has
a handle. The call sign of the satellite is RS4S.
Tomsk-TPU-120 CubeSat Callsign RS4SIn May 2016 the Tomsk Polytechnic
University celebrated its 120th anniversary. As part of the celebrations
on May
10/11 the Tomsk-TPU-120 was activated in the ISS and transmitted a
greeting to
Earth inhabitants, recorded by students of the university in 10 languages:
Russian, English, German, French, Chinese, Arabic, Tatar, Indian, Kazakh and
Portuguese.
The greeting message was transmitted once a minute on 437.025 MHz FM. One of
the Kenwood transceivers on the ISS provided a cross-band relay, re-
transmitting the signal on 145.800 MHz FM.
The video, recorded in the Russian ISS Service Module, shows the CubeSat and
the amateur radio station. The video is in Russian.
Watch
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnYIjgGU4vQ
The next Russian spacewalk appears to be EVA-43 which is expected to take
place in early 2017
http://spaceflight101.com/iss/iss-calendar/
World’s First 3D-printed Satellite
http://tpu.ru/en/news-events/760/
Dmitry R4UAB operates a WebSDR which you can use to receive the
transmissions
when the ISS is over Russia
http://websdr.r4uab.ru/
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Es’Hail-2 Geostationary P4-A Transponder Frequencies
The launch of the Es’Hail-2 satellite into a geostationary orbit at 25.5
degrees East is planned for December 2016. The coverage area of the amateur
radio Narrowband (NB) and Wideband (WB) transponders should extend from
Brazil
to Thailand.
Es’hail 2 will carry two “Phase 4” amateur radio non-inverting transponders
operating in the 2400 MHz and 10450 MHz bands. A 250 kHz bandwidth linear
transponder intended for conventional analogue operations and an 8 MHz
bandwidth transponder for experimental digital modulation schemes and DVB
amateur television.
Narrowband Linear transponder
2400.050 - 2400.300 MHz Uplink
10489.550 - 10489.800 MHz Downlink
Wideband digital transponder
2401.500 - 2409.500 MHz Uplink
10491.000 - 10499.000 MHz Downlink
Equipment requirements:
X-Band 10 GHz Downlink:
– 89 cm dishes in rainy areas at EOC like Brazil or Thailand
– 60 cm around coverage peak
– 75 cm dishes at peak -2dB
– NB: linear vertical polarisation
– WB: linear horizontal polarisation
S-Band 2.4 GHz NB-Uplink:
– narrow band modes like SSB, CW
– 5W nominal Uplink power (22.5 dBi antenna gain, 75cm dish)
– RHCP polarisation
S-Band 2.4 GHz WB-Uplink (DATV):
– wide band modes, DVB-S2
– peak EIRP of 53 dBW (2.4m dish and 100W) required
– RHCP polarisation
Presentation on Es’hail by Peter Guelzow DB2OS, President of AMSAT-DL,
at the
2013 AMSAT-UK Colloquium
http://www.batc.tv/streams/amsat1306
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK and AMSAT-DL for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ÑUSAT-1 SSB/CW Transponder Satellite
The launch of ÑUSAT-1, the second AMSAT ARGENTINA amateur satellite on
May 30,
will mark an extraordinary event for our Institution and fostering of
hope for
satellite community.
As we quoted when the announcement of the launching of this experiment,
Amsat
Argentina has been working for several years to keep alive the dream of many
Argentine amateurs to get back into Space with their own satellite as a
follow-
on of the legendary 1990’s LUSAT-1, reaping the benefits of Technological
advancement of our days.
We believe technical activities and developments of experiments in near
space
share the same goals: preserving the human group, enhancing their
capabilities
as well as disseminate and guiding the education and development of the
activity, meanwhile contributing to Space available resources.
Our agreement with Satellogic Enterprises, which already launched three low
orbit satellites: Captain Beto, Manolito y Tita, two of which transmit
telemetry and data currently in UHF identifying themselves with callsign
LU7AA,
allowed us to ride a linear analog amateur radio transponder and
corresponding
antenna aboard one of their next satellite, ÑUSAT-1
AMSAT-LU provides simultaneously, support for this mission and the ÑUSAT-2
mission, by operating one of the control stations at Tortuguitas, Prov. Of
Bs.As.
The experiment Amsat-LU developed, evolved from original design of our
colleague and partner William, PE1RAH, while electronic adaptation,
mechanical
and software was made by the LU Satellite Experiment group, mounted on a
10 x
10 centimeters radiating plate, in which components of the power supply
as well
as a duplexer and dual band antenna where also incorporated.
This set was installed on the Ñusat-1 bus, which supplies power and becomes
part of several other experiments this satellite will make.
The transponder receives UHF which is broadcasted in VHF, has a bandwidth of
30 kHz. with an output power of 250 mW.
435.935 ~ 435.965 are LSB/CW uplink passband
145.965 ~ 145.935 are USB/CW downlink passband
145.900 Basic CW Telemetry
The launch will be from a Chinese launcher in a polar orbit at 500 km.
height,
with inclination of 97 degrees from Equator.
see
http://www.amsat.org.ar
https://www.facebook.com/Amsat.LU
http://lusex.org.ar
http://amsat.org.ar/pass.htm
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK and AMSAT-Argentia for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ESA Announces Winning Radio Amateurs
On April 21, 2016, ESA’s Education Office set a challenge for the worldwide
radio amateur community to start listening out for three new orbiting
CubeSats.
The results have now been released.
ESA’s Education Office published the transmission frequencies of the
student-
built satellites that were about to be launched as part of the Fly Your
Satellite! Program, and invited the radio amateur community to listen
out for
them.
The first three radio amateurs to send a recorded signal from AAUSAT4,
e-st@r-
II or OUFTI-1 would receive a prize from ESA’s Education Office. Hundreds of
radio amateurs from around the world joined in the friendly competition.
The CubeSats started sending signals after their release from the Soyuz
VS-14
rocket and the triggering of their automatic activation sequence.
Participants
from Russia, USA, Poland, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Brazil, Italy,
Denmark,
and more tuned their receivers and listened.
Thanks to skill and patience on the ground, the winners come from
Russia, the
United States of America, Germany, and the Netherlands.
Contact with the first CubeSat came at 00:53:51 UT on April 26, 2016, within
an hour of its separation from the launcher. Dmitri Paschkow R4UAB, Russia,
heard the signal from OUFTI-1 using two receiving stations, in Kemerovo and
Ruzaevka. Upon hearing OUFTI-1, he communicated the news immediately. “I
understand that the students are worried [to hear from their satellite] and
decided to please them!” says Paschkow.
Just over an hour after the first signal from OUFTI-1 was recorded, the next
CubeSat checked in.
AAUSAT-4 was heard over California, US, by Justin Foley KI6EPH of California
Polytechnic State University. He had a personal interest in the mission
because
some of his colleagues had developed the P-POD deployer that was used to
eject
the CubeSats into orbit.
He was ready at the receiver from the moment of deployment but heard nothing
on that first pass, probably because the activation sequence had not yet
completed. The signal came through on the second pass, arriving at 02:02 UT.
“It was extremely exciting to see signals from the newly launched satellite,
and witness the beginning of a space mission”, says Foley.
Then the wait began for e-st@r-II. At 05:40:58 UT, something dimly lit the
screen of Mike Rupprecht DK3WN in Germany. But something was not quite
right.
It certainly looked like a signal from the last remaining CubeSat, but
why was
the message so faint? It galvanized the amateur radio community to look
harder.
Jan van Gils PE0SAT had to wait until May 2 at 16:38:05 UT to receive a
signal
from e-st@r-II that was strong enough to be decoded. Why e-st@r-II was only
transmitting weak signals is under investigation, but the most important
news
is that all three CubeSats are functioning and transmitting, and their
signals
can be decoded.
A special mention goes to a young radio amateur who scored a personal best.
Twelve year-old space enthusiast Matteo Micheletti from Belgium caught the
OUFTI-1 signal with a portable log periodic antenna and a portable receiver.
His triumph occurred on May 1, 2016 between 17:34 and 17:39 UT.
To mark their success, the radio amateur winners will each receive a Fly
Your
Satellite! Poster, a goodie bag and a scale 1:1 3D printed model of a
CubeSat
from ESA’s Education Office.
Read the full ESA story at http://www.esa.int/Education/CubeSats_-
_Fly_Your_Satellite/CubeSats_competition_winners
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK and ESA for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Symposium to Address Interference-free Satellite Services
Experts are planning to meet in Geneva, 13-14 June for a Symposium to
address interference-free satellite services.
Geneva, 4 May 2016 - The ITU International Satellite Communication Symposium
to be held in Geneva, 13-14 June, will explore measures to prevent and
combat interference in satellite communications. International experts will
examine the current situation and the latest technologies to detect,
identify, locate and mitigate harmful interference, which may severely
impact satellite services, including safety operations.
Discussions will also focus on International space law, protecting space
science services, radio astronomy, global navigation satellite services, and
cybersecurity as well as ensuring interference-free satellite broadcast
services.
A special session will be dedicated to innovation in satellite systems,
focusing on technical characteristics and benefits arising from new
generations of non-geostationary satellite orbit (non-GSO) constellations
and High Throughput Satellites (HTS).
What: ITU International Satellite Communication Symposium 2016
When: 13-14 June 2016
Where: ITU Tower Building, Popov Room
Why: To provide an overview of ongoing progress on regulations,
technologies and measures to prevent and combat interference in satellite
communications and to share experiences on the latest developments and
innovations.
Who: Experts from the satellite industry, operators, regulators and
broadcasters from around the world.
For more information, please contact:
Sanjay Acharya
Chief, Media Relations & Public Information, ITU
telephone +41 22 730 5046
tel +41 79 249 4861
email
sanjay.acharya(a)itu.int
Grace Petrin
Communication Officer
ITU Radio Communication Bureau
telephone +41 22 730 5810
tel +41 79 599 1428
email
brpromo(a)itu.int
see
http://www.itu.int/net/pressoffice/press_releases/2016/Advisory-06.aspx
[ANS thanks the ITU for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
DCC Call for Papers
Technical papers are solicited for presentation at the 35th Annual
ARRL/TAPR Digital Communications Conference, to be held September 16-18 in
St Petersburg, Florida. Papers will also be published in the Conference
Proceedings. Authors do not need to attend the conference to have their
papers included in the Proceedings. The submission deadline is July 31,
2016.
The ARRL/TAPR Digital Communications Conference is an international forum
for technically minded radio amateurs to meet and present new ideas and
techniques. Paper/presentation topic areas include -- but are not limited
to -- software defined radio (SDR), digital voice, digital satellite
communication, digital signal processing (DSP), HF digital modes, adapting
IEEE 802.11 systems for Amateur Radio, Global Positioning System (GPS),
Automatic Position Reporting System (APRS), Linux in Amateur Radio, AX.25
updates and Internet operability with Amateur Radio networks.
Submit papers to via e-mail to maty(a)arrl.org<mailto:maty@arrl.org>, or via
postal mail to: Maty Weinberg, KB1EIB, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT
06111. Papers will be published exactly as submitted, and authors will
retain all rights. Please do not email zip files as these will be rejected
by our servers.
73 . . . Steve Ford, WB8IMY
QST Editor in Chief and Publications Manager
ARRL -- the National Association for Amateur Radio
tel 860-594-0287
sford(a)arrl.org<mailto:sford@arrl.org>
[ANS thanks the ARRL, TAPR, and Steve Ford, WB8IMY for the above
information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
AMSAT Events
Information about AMSAT activities at other important events around
the country. Examples of these events are radio club meetings where
AMSAT Area Coordinators give presentations, demonstrations of working
amateur satellites, and hamfests with an AMSAT presence (a table with
AMSAT literature and merchandise, sometimes also with presentations,
forums, and/or demonstrations).
*Saturday, 4 June 2016 – White Mountain Hamfest in Show Low AZ
*Friday, Saturday, & Sunday 10-12 June 2016 – Ham-Com in Irving, TX
*Saturday, 11 June 2016 – Prescott Hamfest in Prescott AZ
*Wednesday, 6 July 2016 – Chehalis Valley Amateur Radio Society meeting
in Chehalis WA
*Saturday, 13 August 2016 – KL7KC Hamfest in Fairbanks AK
[ANS thanks AMSAT-NA for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ARISS News
Successful Contacts
Cradle of Aviation Museum and Education Center, Garden City, New York,
telebridge via W6SRJ
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be NA1SS
The scheduled astronaut is Jeff Williams KD5TVQ
Contact was successful: Mon 2016-05-23 12:57:05 UTC 43 deg
The ARISS contact with Jeff Williams by the students at Westbury Magnet
Academy at the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Garden City, New York
was successful. Jeff answered 19 questions before loss of signal.
Dan Dalby did a great job of operating at W6SR. The telebridge contact with
students at Cradle of Aviation Museum and Education Center, Garden City,
New York, USA was successful Mon 2016-05-23 12:57:05 UTC 43 deg.
Astronaut Jeff Williams KD5TVQ answered 19 questions for the students at
Westbury Magnet Academy who were on site at the Museum.
A local news channel filed this report: Students Take Call from
Astronaut on ISS
see NBC New York
http://www.nbcnewyork.com/on-air/as-seen-on/Students-Take-Call-from-Astrona…
-on-ISS_New-York-380581991.html?_osource=mobilesharebar
The Cradle of Aviation Museum and Education Center, located in Garden City,
New York, opened in 2002. The mission of the museum is to inspire students
with the spirit of discovery through the exploration of air and space
technologies, and to encourage them to consider careers in science,
technology, engineering and math. The museum is home to the Westbury Magnet
Academy at the Cradle of Aviation, the first magnet school to open on Long
Island. The Museum and Academy offer two summer STEM enrichment programs
for
students entering the seventh and ninth grades. The ARISS event will be an
invaluable tool to supplement classroom instruction and research.
Upcoming Contacts
* Venta School, Carp, ON, Canada, telebridge via IK1SLD
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be OR4ISS
The scheduled astronaut is Jeff Williams KD5TVQ
Contact is a go for: Mon 2016-05-30 19:01:25 UTC 32 deg
Venta Preparatory School is a small co-ed day and boarding school from
Junior Kindergarten to Grade 10, located just outside of Ottawa in Carp,
Ontario. We foster and continually enhance an environment where each
student can grow and achieve their highest potential.
* Bouze Island Elementary and Junior High School, Homeji, Japan,
direct via 8N3B
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be NA1SS
The scheduled astronaut is Timothy Peake KG5BVI
Contact is a go for: Sat 2016-06-04 08:31:09 UTC 74 deg
Bouze Island is one of the Ieshima small Islands which are located in the
Seto Inland sea of Hyogo Prefecture in Japan. There are about 1400 people
on the island and are part of the marine products industry. They live with
simplicity and are friendly. But the students of this Island have not had
a chance for scientific experience as part of their school education
because of their remote location. There are 140 persons in the elementary
school and 100 persons in the junior high school.
Watch
http://www.ariss.org/upcoming-contacts.html
for information about upcoming contacts as they are scheduled.
[ANS thanks ARISS, Dave, AA4KN, and Charlie, AJ9N for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Satellite Shorts From All Over
St. Paul Island Satellite Ops Word Getting Around
The DXer pages are picking up on the news of satellite operation from CY9C
St. Paul Island. This something of a blog and the May 23 update mentions
AMSAT often:
http://www.dxcoffee.com/eng/2016/cy9c-st-paul-island/
[ANS thanks JoAnne, K9JKM for the above information]
GK4LOH Received Over 3467km on 144 MHz by Reflection off ISS
A reflection from the structure of the International Space Station enabled a
144.175 MHz signal from Tim GK4LOH in Cornwall to cross the Atlantic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vii8DmG3ftc
The YouTube description reads: 02:40 UTC May 24th 2016 ISS Flypast.
Signal heard 2 minutes 45 into the recording and continues for over a
minute.
The CW transmitted message was “GK4LOH GK4LOH T T T T T T T T T T”
As soon as ISS set in GN37 I stepped outside the shack and watched as
the ISS
fly right over here:-) Recorded by Frank VO1HP using the remote receiver
beacon
VO1FN.
GK4LOH Blog
http://www.g4loh.com/
The RSGB VHF Manager John Regnault G4SWX has received a Canadian station on
144 MHz which on investigation was also found to be by ISS reflection, see
http://www.southgatearc.org/news/2014/july/uk_radio_ham_copies_canadian_144…
_signal.htm
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
/EX
In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the
President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining
donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-
tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT
Office.
Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership
at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students
enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-
dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.
Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership
information.
73,
This week's ANS Editor,
Joe Spier, K6WAO
k6wao at amsat dot org
1
0
AMSAT NEWS SERVICE
ANS-143
The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-
mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space
including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur
Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,
launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio
satellites.
The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur
Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.
Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:
ans-editor at amsat.org.
In this edition:
* Island on the Air Satellite Activation - Isle of Arran
* FoxTelem Release 1.04: New Graphs, Better Performance, and Upcoming
Launches
* Upcoming ARISS Contact with Cradle of Aviation Museum and Education Center
* CubeSats with Amateur Radio payloads deploy from ISS
* ULA Cubesat Launch Application Deadline Approaching
SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-143.01
ANS-143 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins
AMSAT News Service Bulletin 143.01
From AMSAT HQ Kensington, MD.
May 22, 2016
To All RADIO AMATEURS
BID: $ANS-143.01
Island on the Air Satellite Activation - Isle of Arran
EU-123. Members of the Camb-Hams will be active as GS3PYE/P from the Isle
of Arran on the west part of the island near Balliekine (IO75HO) between May
22-29th. Activity will be on the HF bands, 6/4/2m, and the satellites. The
location on the island favors the South/West/North as there's a hill to the
east, but hopefully that will not limit them.
Peter, 2E0SQL, reports: "We'll be taking along an ICOM IC-910, Wimo X-Quads,
Preamps and Yaesu G-5500 rotator all controlled by our favorite bit of
software SatPC32 for backup. I'll have my FT-817 and Arrow, but this kit
hasn't let us down yet for the last few trips."
They plan to operate on all satellites both FM/SSB/CW, if you want a CW QSO
you'll need to contact them as Peter will need to find a suitable CW
operator. Peter will try to post regular updates on Twitter either using his
own account @2e0sql or the groups account @g3pye and also posting updates on
their Web site at: http://dx.camb-hams.com
[ANS thanks Ohio/Penn DX Bulletin No. 1266 for the above information]
--------------------------------------------------------------------
FoxTelem Release 1.04: New Graphs, Better Performance, and Upcoming Launches
From FoxTelem developer Chris Thompson, G0KLA / AC2CZ:
This is a quick note to say that FoxTelem Version 1.04 is being
released. There
is a lot in this version so I have written some blog posts to summarize new
features. See below.
You can download FoxTelem for your platform from one of these links:
http://amsat.us/FoxTelem/windows/foxtelem_1.04f_windows.zip
http://amsat.us/FoxTelem/linux/foxtelem_1.04f_linux.tar.gz
http://amsat.us/FoxTelem/mac/FoxTelem_1.04f_mac.zip
Broadly speaking the changes fit into the following categories:
1. Full support for Fox-1Cliff, Fox-1D and RadFXSat including better
High Speed
decoding and a better find signal algorithm.
2. Additional analytical capabilities so you can plot one telemetry variable
against another. I hope this will inspire more people to analyze the
telemetry
from the spacecraft and post comments on what they see. I have put some
of my
own thoughts online here:
http://www.g0kla.com/workbench/2016-05-07.php
3. Enhanced tools to analyze your ground station with SkyPlots for satellite
measurements like Signal to Noise ratio and graphs for pass measurements.
Skyplots in particular need a bit of explanation, so I have written more
details
here: http://www.g0kla.com/foxtelem/skyplot.php
You can read a full list of the changes here on github:
https://github.com/ac2cz/FoxTelem/issues?q=
is%3Aissue+milestone%3A%22Release+1.04%22+is%3Aclosed
[ANS thanks Chris G0KLA/AC2CZ for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Upcoming ARISS Contact with Cradle of Aviation Museum and Education Center
An International Space Station school contact has been planned with
participants
at Cradle of Aviation Museum and Education Center, Garden City, New York
on 23
May. The event is scheduled to begin at approximately 12:57 UTC. It is
recommended that you start listening approximately 10 minutes before this
time.The duration of the contact is approximately 9 minutes and 30
seconds. The
contact will be a telebridge between NA1SS and W6SRJ. The contact should be
audible over the state of California and adjacent areas. Interested
parties are
invited to listen in on the 145.80 MHz downlink. The contact is expected
to be
conducted in English.
The Cradle of Aviation Museum and Education Center, located in Garden
City, New
York, opened in 2002. The mission of the museum is to inspire students
with the
spirit of discovery through the exploration of air and space
technologies, and
to encourage them to consider careers in science, technology,
engineering and
math. The museum is home to the Westbury Magnet Academy at the Cradle of
Aviation, the first magnet school to open on Long Island. The Museum and
Academy offer two summer STEM enrichment programs for students
entering the
seventh and ninth grades. The ARISS event will be an invaluable tool to
supplement classroom instruction and research.
[ANS thanks Dave, AA4KN, for the above information]
--------------------------------------------------------------------
CubeSats with Amateur Radio payloads deploy from ISS
Monday, May 16, 2016 saw the deployment of five CubeSats carrying
amateur radio
payloads.
UK astronaut Tim Peake KG5BVI / GB1SS deployed the first two satellites
MinXSS-1
and CADRE from the Japanese ISS Kibo module at 1005 UT. The Slow Scan
Television
(SSTV) satellite STMSat-1, built by Elementary students at Saint Thomas More
Cathedral School (STM), was deployed along with the pair of NODES
CubeSats built
by students at Santa Clara University at 1440 UT.
STM is thought to be the first Elementary school to build their own
satellite,
even Pre-Kindergarten, Kindergarten, and First Grade students were
involved in
the project. It is designed to transmit a Robot36 SSTV signal.
IARU Coordinated Frequencies:
http://amsat.org.uk/iaru
• STMSat-1 437.800 MHz FM SSTV Robot36
UPDATE May 18: STMSat-1 Twitter feed suggests listening 437.000 MHz FM
• MinXSS-1 437.345 MHz 9600 bps FSK
• CADRE 437.485 MHz 9600 bps FSK and 3.404 GHz
• NODES 437.100 MHz 1200 bps AX.25 and 2401.2-2431.2 MHz 115.2 kbps spread
spectrum FSK
STMSat-1
https://twitter.com/STMSAT11
https://www.facebook.com/stmsat1/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/491135804399695/
http://www.stmsat-1.org/
MinXSS CubeSat http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/minxss/
CADRE CubeSat http://exploration.engin.umich.edu/blog/?page_id=961
NODES mission dashboard http://nodes.engr.scu.edu/
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]
--------------------------------------------------------------------
ULA Cubesat Launch Application Deadline Approaching
If you are a U.S. College or University, please don't forget to submit an
application for a FREE LAUNCH opportunity to the ULA CubeSat Launch Program!
Applications are due no later than June 1st, 2016 by 5pm PST, which is
only a
week and a half away. Information about how to apply can be found at
http://www.ulalaunch.com/cubesats.aspx
[ANS thanks the Ryan Nugent for the above information]
--------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------
/EX
In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the
President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining
donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-
tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT
Office.
Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership
at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students
enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-
dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.
Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership
information.
73,
This week's ANS Editor,
Lee McLamb, KU4OS
ku4os at amsat dot org
1
0
AMSAT NEWS SERVICE SPECIAL BULLETIN - ARISS-US Kicks Off Major Fundraising Initiative with Challenge Coin Door Prize at 2016 Dayton Hamvention
by E.Mike McCardel 17 May '16
by E.Mike McCardel 17 May '16
17 May '16
AMSAT NEWS SERVICE SPECIAL BULLETIN
ANS-139.01
The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-
mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space
including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur
Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,
launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio
satellites.
The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur
Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.
Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:
ans-editor at amsat.org.
In this edition:
* ARISS-US Kicks Off Major Fundraising Initiative with Challenge
Coin Door Prize at 2016 Dayton Hamvention
SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-139.01
ANS-139 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins
AMSAT News Service Bulletin 139.01
>From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD.
[MONTH DAY, YEAR]
To All RADIO AMATEURS
BID: $ANS-139.01
ARISS-US Kicks Off Major Fundraising Initiative with Challenge Coin
Door Prize at 2016 Dayton Hamvention
The Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) Team
has donated two of its handsome ARISS Challenge Coins to the Dayton
Amateur Radio Association as a 2016 Hamvention door prize. The two
keepsake coins are positioned side by side in a beautiful display box
so that each side of the coin is seen from either direction. The
Challenge Coin Door Prize can be viewed at
http://tinyurl.com/ANS139-ARISSCoin
The commemorative ARISS Challenge Coin is the premium received by
donors who give $100 or more to ARISS. Dayton Hamvention General
Chairman Jim Tiderman, N8IDS, agreed to feature the ARISS keepsake
coin by holding a special prize drawing immediately following the
introduction of the winners of the 2016 Dayton Hamvention national
awards at 2 pm on Sunday.
The ARISS Team kicks off its 2016 fund-raising campaign at the
Dayton Hamvention to raise money for the very high cost of replacing
its aging radio system on the ISS and to help defray the cost of
continuing ARISS operations. This special Hamvention prize drawing is
the first step of the campaign.
ARISS International Chair Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, noted the importance
of this fundraising campaign: "ARISS is in need of critical upgrades
of our on-orbit equipment. The radio system in the Columbus module
is over 17 years old and underpowered. We need a 21st Century next
generation solution. This fundraising campaign will enable these
upgrades and, as a result, significantly improve ARISS operations and
provide the funding necessary to better support our stakeholders and
the amateur radio community."
Those wanting to support the ARISS fundraising campaign can donate
to ARISS online via the AMSAT Website, www.amsat.org (select the
"ARISS Donate" button) or the ARISS web page, www.ariss.org (select
the "Donate" tab). ARISS representatives will also be at the AMSAT
Booth during the Hamvention with Challenge Coins ready for people
ready to donate $100 or more.
Be sure to go to the Hara Arena at the Dayton Hamvention on Sunday,
May 22, 2016 at 2 pm for the major door prize drawings … and good
luck!
About ARISS
Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) is a
cooperative venture of international amateur radio societies and the
space agencies that support the International Space Station (ISS). In
the United States, sponsors are the Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation (AMSAT), the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), and the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The primary
goal of ARISS is to promote exploration of science, technology,
engineering, and mathematics (STEM) topics by organizing scheduled
contacts via amateur radio between crew members aboard the ISS and
students in classrooms or informal education venues. With the help
of experienced amateur radio volunteers, ISS crews speak directly
with large audiences in a variety of public forums. Before and
during these radio contacts, students, teachers, parents, and
communities learn about space, space technologies, and amateur radio.
For more information, go to: www.ariss.org, www.amsat.org , and
www.arrl.org .
Also, join us on Facebook: Amateur Radio on the International Space
Station (ARISS) / Follow us on Twitter: ARISS_status
Contact:
David Jordan, AA4KN
ARISS PR
aa4kn(a)amsat.org
[ANS thanks ARISS and David AA4KN for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
/EX
In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the
President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining
donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-
tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT
Office.
Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership
at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students
enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-
dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.
Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership
information.
73,
This Special's ANS Editor,
EMike McCardel, AA8EM former KC8YLD
kc8yld at amsat dot org
1
0
AMSAT NEWS SERVICE
ANS-136
The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-
mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space
including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur
Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,
launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio
satellites.
The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur
Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.
Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:
ans-editor at amsat.org.
In this edition:
* STMSat-1 SSTV CubeSat to deploy from ISS May 16
* 2016 AMSAT-NA Board of Directors Nominations Notice
* AMSAT/TAPR Banquet at the Dayton Hamvention
^TUESDAY MAY 17th SIGN UP DEADLINE^
* Dayton AMSAT Demonstration Plans
* ÑuSat-1 to Carry AMSAT Argentina Linear Transponder
* ARISS at Dayton Hamvention
* CY9C DXpedition to St. Paul Island Announces Satellite Operation
* Top 10 Reasons to Come to Dayton HAMVENTION
* Saturday AMSAT Dayton Forum
* AMSAT Thursday Dinner and Beverages at Tickets Pub and Eatery
* ARISS News
SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-136.01
ANS-136 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins
AMSAT News Service Bulletin 136.01
>From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD.
[MONTH DAY, YEAR]
To All RADIO AMATEURS
BID: $ANS-136.01
STMSat-1 SSTV CubeSat to deploy from ISS May 16
A Slow Scan TV (SSTV) CubeSat developed by students at Saint Thomas
More Cathedral School (STM) in Arlington, VA, is set to be deployed
from the International Space Station between 1400 and 1500 UT on May
16. For latest date/time check
https://twitter.com/STMSAT11.
STM is thought to be the first Elementary school to build their own
satellite, even Pre-Kindergarten, Kindergarten, and First Grade
students were involved in the project.
The satellite, a 1U CubeSat called STMSat-1, will transmit a SSTV
Robot36 mode signal on 437.800 MHz.
Middle School Students took the initiative to begin exploring how to
receive data from the CubeSat and formed a Ham Radio Club. There,
they learned the basics of operating a ham radio station and explored
Slow Scan Television as an option for receiving images once the
satellite is deployed.
How Did 400 Grade School Students Built A Nano-Satellite?
http://tinyurl.com/ANS136-NanoSat
Watch the CBS This Morning show report on the satellite
http://tinyurl.com/ANS136-CBS-MorningShow
STMSat-1
https://twitter.com/STMSAT11
https://www.facebook.com/stmsat1/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/491135804399695/
http://www.stmsat-1.org/
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
2016 AMSAT-NA Board of Directors Nominations Notice
It's time to submit nominations for the upcoming AMSAT-NA Board of
Directors election. Three director's terms expire this year: Tom
Clark, K3IO, JoAnne Maenpaa, K9JKM, and Lou McFadin, W5DID. In
addition, up to two Alternates may be elected for one year terms.
A valid nomination requires either one Member Society or five current
individual members in good standing to nominate an AMSAT-NA member for
Director. Written nominations, consisting of the nominee's name and
call, and the nominating individual's names, calls and individual
signatures should be mailed to: AMSAT-NA, 10605 Concord St, #304
Kensington, MD 20895-2526.
In addition to traditional submissions of written nominations, which
is the preferred method, the intent to nominate someone may be made by
electronic means. These include e-mail, Fax, or electronic image of a
petition. Electronic petitions should be sent to MARTHA at AMSAT.ORG
or Faxed to (301)822-4371.
No matter what means is used, petitions MUST arrive no later than June
15th at the AMSAT-NA office. If the nomination is a traditional
written nomination, no other action is required. If it is other than
this, i.e. electronic, a verifying traditional written petition MUST
be received at the AMSAT-NA office at the above address within 7 days
following the close of nominations on June 15th.
ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS WITHOUT THIS SECOND, WRITTEN VERIFICATION ARE
NOT VALID UNDER THE EXISTING AMSAT-NA BYLAWS.
Paul Stoetzer, N8HM
AMSAT-NA Secretary
[ANS thanks Paul N8HM for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
AMSAT/TAPR Banquet at the Dayton Hamvention
The tenth annual joint AMSAT/TAPR Banquet will be held on Friday
evening, May 20th. This dinner is one of the main AMSAT activities
during the Hamvention. Tickets ($35 each) may be purchased from the
AMSAT store at www.amsat.org.
THE BANQUET TICKET PURCHASE DEADLINE IS TUESDAY, MAY 17th.
The Banquet will take place at the Kohler Presidential Banquet
Center, 4572 Presidential Way, Kettering, OH 45429 (just south of
Dayton). Doors open at 6:30 p.m. for a cash bar with the buffet
dinner served at 7:00 p.m.
AMSAT and TAPR alternate the task of providing a speaker for the
banquet. It is AMSAT¹s responsibility this year.
Michelle Thompson, W5NYV, will present "It¹s just software, right?"
She will survey the AMSAT Ground Terminal: Who, what, when, where,
why, and how we¹re designing open source radio solutions for the next
generation of AMSAT payloads.
Michelle is AMSAT¹s Team Leader for the design and execution of the
AMSAT Ground Terminal. The goal is to create a ³5 and Dime² (5 and
10 GHz) digital SDR transceiver that will support both voice and data
modes, for both general QSOs and emergency communication, for the
Phase 4B satellite and for future AMSAT projects. This is an effort
to design an inexpensive ground terminal for amateurs that would cost
tens of thousands of dollars commercially, for as much under $1,000
as we can get it.
A true renaissance woman, in addition to being an engineer and a
licensed amateur radio operator, Michelle has worked for Qualcomm,
attends Burning Man, and is a longtime DEFCON participant. She is
also the lead for Organ Donor (an AI pipe organ). Her Phase 4B Weekly
Ground Engineering Reports are fascinating reading.
Seating is limited to the number of meals we reserve with the Kohler
caterers based on the number of tickets sold by the deadline. Tickets
purchased online may be collected at the Books, Shirts & Memberships
corner of the AMSAT booth (445-446).
[ANS thanks Steve N9IP and the AMSAT Office for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Dayton AMSAT Demonstration Plans
AMSAT will again have a demo station at the Dayton Hamvention this
year. The station will be located outside the main entrance to Ball
Arena, near the AMSAT booth.
This year, the focus of many of the demonstrations will be on the use
of inexpensive software defined radio (SDR) equipment as a downlink
receiver. Using an SDR like a FUNcube Dongle Pro+, SDRPlay, or AirSpy
allows owners of common all-mode transceivers with VHF/UHF
functionality (such as the Yaesu FT-817, Yaesu FT-857, Icom
IC-706MKIIG, or Icom IC-7100) to add full duplex satellite capability
for use with linear transponder satellites at minimal cost. The
receiver used will consist of a FUNcube Dongle Pro+ with a low cost
10.1" Windows 10 tablet.
We may also use other radio combinations during the weekend.
Demos will take place during satellite passes from 8:00am (12:00 UTC)
until 5:00pm (21:00 UTC) on Friday and Saturday and from 8:00am until
12:00pm (16:00 UTC) on Sunday. Please keep in mind that the RF
environment at the Hamvention is challenging and the arena blocks low
elevations to the north and northwest. Due to these factors, we will
only be attempting passes with a peak elevation greater than 10
degrees. Please stop by for any satellite pass or at any other time if
you have questions about satellite operating.
A special demonstration on SO-50 will take place during the 12:19pm
(16:19 UTC) pass on Saturday May 21st. Nine year old Hope Lea, KM4IPF,
will operate that pass after completing her talk at the ARRL Youth
Forum.
If you are not attending the Hamvention, please call us if you hear
the AMSAT demo station on the air!
AMSAT DAYTON HAMVENTION DEMOS - 2016
TZ = UTC
N 39.820328 W 84.255224 ELEV. 296 M
MIN PEAK ELEV. = 10 DEG
GRID = EM79ut
* = Listen Only Pass - Telemetry, Doppler, Ant. Perf, etc.
WinAos QTH: -84.3/39.8 T#: 14019 Sat.: 12 [Standard]
----------------------------------------------------------
Day Objects AOS (U) LOS Period maxEl AZ
----------------------------------------------------------
20.05.2016 XW-2A 12:17 12:26 09 62 016 - 187
20.05.2016 ISS * 12:28 12:37 09 40 300 - 143
20.05.2016 NO-84 * 12:28 12:38 10 21 294 - 168
20.05.2016 AO-85 12:45 12:59 14 62 200 - 036
20.05.2016 XW-2F 12:52 13:01 09 19 351 - 224
20.05.2016 AO-85 14:26 14:40 14 23 249 - 025
20.05.2016 AO-73 14:51 15:02 11 56 018 - 185
20.05.2016 EO-79 * 15:04 15:14 10 14 119 - 004
20.05.2016 SO-50 15:53 16:06 13 50 332 - 137
20.05.2016 FO-29 16:01 16:17 16 18 111 - 358
20.05.2016 AO-73 16:28 16:36 08 11 343 - 242
20.05.2016 EO-79 * 16:39 16:50 11 49 180 - 343
20.05.2016 SPROUT * 16:50 16:59 09 14 039 - 152
20.05.2016 UKUBE-1 * 16:57 17:08 11 30 025 - 171
20.05.2016 SO-50 17:34 17:45 11 17 309 - 187
20.05.2016 FO-29 17:43 18:02 19 88 163 - 348
20.05.2016 AO-07 18:12 18:28 16 15 099 - 356
20.05.2016 SPROUT * 18:25 18:36 11 44 004 - 209
20.05.2016 UKUBE-1 * 18:33 18:44 11 22 357 - 225
20.05.2016 FO-29 19:31 19:46 15 16 219 - 331
20.05.2016 AO-07 20:01 20:22 21 67 150 - 346
WinAos QTH: -84.3/39.8 T#: 14020 Sat.: 12 [Standard]
----------------------------------------------------------
Day Objects AOS (U) LOS Period maxEl AZ
----------------------------------------------------------
21.05.2016 NO-84 * 12:04 12:14 10 22 295 - 167
21.05.2016 XW-2F 12:39 12:49 10 26 358 - 217
21.05.2016 AO-85 13:11 13:25 14 59 222 - 030
21.05.2016 XW-2C 13:12 13:20 08 11 345 - 238
21.05.2016 XW-2A 13:17 13:26 09 19 353 - 223
21.05.2016 SO-50 14:38 14:50 12 17 340 - 108
21.05.2016 AO-85 14:54 15:05 11 12 274 - 021
21.05.2016 AO-73 15:10 15:21 11 80 011 - 196
21.05.2016 EO-79 * 15:16 15:26 10 18 127 - 004
21.05.2016 SO-50 16:19 16:31 12 61 324 - 157
21.05.2016 FO-29 16:49 17:08 19 39 137 - 353
21.05.2016 EO-79 * 16:51 17:02 11 36 187 - 339
21.05.2016 SPROUT * 17:04 17:15 11 21 029 - 163
21.05.2016 UKUBE-1 * 17:14 17:26 12 45 020 - 182
21.05.2016 FO-29 18:34 18:53 19 42 189 - 342
21.05.2016 SPROUT * 18:40 18:51 11 30 360 - 217
21.05.2016 UKUBE-1 * 18:51 19:00 09 15 349 - 237
21.05.2016 AO-07 19:03 19:22 19 31 122 - 351
21.05.2016 AO-85 20:04 20:14 10 15 345 - 100
21.05.2016 AO-07 20:54 21:15 21 61 173 - 341
WinAos QTH: -84.3/39.8 T#: 14021 Sat.: 12 [Standard]
----------------------------------------------------------
Day Objects AOS (U) LOS Period maxEl AZ
----------------------------------------------------------
22.05.2016 ISS * 12:19 12:27 08 17 288 - 162
22.05.2016 XW-2F 12:27 12:37 10 36 001 - 210
22.05.2016 XW-2A 12:44 12:54 10 47 006 - 203
22.05.2016 XW-2C 13:00 13:09 09 16 350 - 229
22.05.2016 AO-85 13:37 13:51 14 29 242 - 026
22.05.2016 AO-73 13:53 14:02 09 12 037 - 147
22.05.2016 SO-50 15:04 15:16 12 35 337 - 128
22.05.2016 EO-79 * 15:28 15:39 11 24 135 - 359
22.05.2016 AO-73 15:29 15:40 11 48 005 - 206
22.05.2016 FO-29 15:56 16:12 16 17 110 - 359
[ANS thanks Paul N8HM for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ÑuSat-1 to Carry AMSAT Argentina Linear Transponder
Launch Scheduled for May 30, 2016.
The Argentinian earth observation satellite ÑuSat-1 will carry a
linear transponder built by AMSAT Argentina. The satellite is
scheduled to launch on a CZ-4B rocket from Taiyuan Satellite Launch
Center in China on May 30, 2016 into a 500 km sun-synchronous orbit
with an inclination of 97.5 degrees and a Local Time of the Ascending
Node (LTAN) of 10:30.
The AMSAT Argentina U/v inverting transponder, named LUSEX, wiil
have an uplink of 435.935 MHz to 435.965 MHz and a downlink of
145.935 MHz to 145.965 MHz. Total power output is 250 mW. There will
also be a CW beacon at 145.900 MHz with a power output of 70 mW.
For more information, see the AMSAT Argentina Facebook group.
https://www.facebook.com/Amsat.LU/
[ANS thanks AMSAT Argentina for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ARISS at Dayton Hamvention
If you will be attending Hamvention next week, be sure to stop by
the AMSAT area in the Ball Arena. We will have members of the ARISS
team on-hand at all times and some of our ISS hardware (radios and an
antenna) on display.
During the AMSAT Forum (Saturday, 11:15-1:30), Frank Bauer will be
presenting ARISS status and future plans.
Also on Saturday, from 2:30-3:00, we will have a face-to-face
meeting for anyone interested in ARISS. We’d like to see members of
the ARISS team there. We will meet outside near AMSAT’s Satellite
Demo area (outside the Ball Arena entrance) or, if it’s raining,
inside at the ARISS display.
[ANS thanks Dave W8ASS for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
CY9C DXpedition to St. Paul Island Announces Satellite Operation
The CY9C DXpedition to St. Paul Island, scheduled for August 19, 2016
– August 29, 2016, has announced that Lee Imber, WW2DX, has joined the
DXpedition team and will add satellite operations, as well as 2 meter
EME and 6 meter operations, to the DXpedition plans.
St. Paul Island is located in gridsquare FN97 in the Cabot Strait
between Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia and Cape Ray, Newfoundland and
is a separate entity on the ARRL DXCC list. It also counts as a
country for the AMSAT OSCAR Satellite Communications Achievement
Award, AMSAT OSCAR Sexagesimal Award, and AMSAT OSCAR Century Award.
Most of Europe and North America should be easily workable from this
location. St. Paul Island has not been activated on satellite since
July 1998.
For further information about the DXpedition, please see the CY9C
DXpedition website (http://www.cy9dxpedition.com/)
This operation and other planned amateur satellite grid/DX operations
are posted on the AMSAT Upcoming Satellite Operations page
(http://www.amsat.org/?page_id=3921)
[ANS thanks Paul N8HM for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Top 10 Reasons to Come to Dayton HAMVENTION
10. Rub shoulders with 25,000 of your best friends at the largest
hamfest in the United States, including all of the AMSAT Directors
and senior officers. See the latest equipment from Icom, Yaesu,
Kenwood, Flex, Alinco, M2, Arrow, and many other manufacturers of
amateur radio equipment and accessories. Take advantage of
discounted pricing you won't find anywhere else.
9. Find out how to organize a contact with the astronauts on the
International Space Station for your local school or youth group from
our Education and ARISS experts.
8. Pickup the latest AMSAT golf shirts, T-shirts, and hats. Get
your copy of the updated "Amateur Satellite Frequency Guide"
(laminated frequency chart) and Gould Smith's just revised "Getting
Started with Amateur Satellites" (book). We'll also have assembled
wide-band preamps and antennas that are great for portable
operation.
7. See demonstrations of SatPC32 and MacDoppler satellite tracking
software, and get your operational questions answered. Meet Don
Agro, author of MacDoppler (Friday & Saturday, 2-3 p.m.). See a
demonstration of the LVB Tracker, a computer interface to the Yaesu
azimuth-elevation rotors. Talk with Mike Young, who has built more
LVB Trackers than anyone else. Assembled LVB Trackers will be
available.
6. Hear a team presentation at the joint AMSAT/TAPR dinner on the
new AMSAT Ground Terminal (AGT). AGT is using Five and Dime (5 GHz
uplink, 10 GHz downlink) technology that is being developed for the
Phase 3E (P3E) HEO satellite, the Phase 4B (P4B) geosynchronous
satellite, and the Cube Quest Challenge (CQC) lunar mission. While
much of the P3E and P4B *satellite* development is classified, the
AGT is all open source and public information.
5. Hear the latest on the *five* Fox satellites, P3E, P4B, CQC, the
International Space Station, other current and future satellites,
education news, and an AMSAT update at the AMSAT Forum Saturday, from
11:15 to 1:30.
4. Get one-on-one guidance on setting up your satellite station and
making contacts at our "Beginner's Corner". Witness live
demonstrations of contacts through satellites AO-7, AO-73, AO-85, FO-
29, SO-50, XW-2A, XW-2C, and XW-2F using handheld antennas.
3. Meet and interact with some of the Engineering Team members
working on the Fox-1 satellites and our new Five and Dime AMSAT
ground terminal. Learn all of the public information and get
breaking news on the Virginia Tech plans for the Phase 3E and Phase
4B satellites.
2. Get satellite station and operating tips from some of the best
satellite operators in the country, including John Papay K8YSE (1,575
grids confirmed), Doug Papay KD8CAO (1,159 grids), Drew Glasbrenner
KO4MA (1,343 grids), Paul Stoetzer (450 grids), and Wyatt Dirks AC0RA
(938 grids).
1. Receive special premiums when you join or renew your AMSAT
membership at Dayton, including an updated "Amateur Satellite
Frequency Guide" (laminated frequency chart), and special pricing on
the SatPC32 satellite tracking software.
[ANS thanks Steve N9IP for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Saturday AMSAT Dayton Forum
The AMSAT forum will be Saturday morning from 11:15 a.m. through
1:30 p.m. in Forum Room 5. See the commercial vendor layout map in
the Hamvention program or the Hamvention website for the location of
Forum Room 5 (same as the last few years).
The following speakers will be presenting at the AMSAT Forum,
moderated by Mark Hammond, N8MH:
“AMSAT Status Report” Barry Baines, WD4ASW, AMSAT-NA President, will
highlight recent activities within AMSAT and discuss some of our
challenges, accomplishments, projects, and any late breaking news.
“AMSAT-NA Satellite Program” Jerry Buxton, N0JY, AMSAT-NA
Engineering Vice President, will review the upcoming launches of four
Fox spacecraft and exciting new engineering developments.
“AMSAT’s HEO and GSO Plans” Bob McGwier, N4HY, AMSAT-NA Director,
will discuss AMSAT-NA opportunities for High Earth Orbit and Geo-
Synchronous Orbit satellites.
“AMSAT Satellite Operations” Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, AMSAT-NA
Operations Vice President, will survey the current operational
amateur satellites, as well as those planned for launch in the next
year.
“ARISS Report 2016” Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, AMSAT-NA Vice President for
Human Spaceflight, will discuss ARISS developments & operation on the
International Space Station.
“Teaching STEM Using the Fox Satellites” Joe Spier, K6WAO, AMSAT-NA
Educational Relations Vice President, will explain how the Fox MEMS
gyroscopes, radiation experiments, and cameras will be used to teach
Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM).
[ANS thanks AMSAT Office for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
AMSAT Thursday Dinner and Beverages at Tickets Pub and Eatery
Dinner and beverages at Tickets Pub and Eatery
Thursday night, 1800-2000. The annual AMSAT “Dinner at Tickets”
party will be held Thursday, May 19, at 1800 EDT at the Tickets Pub &
Eatery. Everyone is invited regardless of whether or not they helped
with setup or plan to work in the booth.
You’ll find a great selection of Greek and American food and
excellent company! No program or speaker, just good conversation.
Food can be ordered from the menu; drinks (beer, wine, sodas and iced
tea) are available at the bar. Come as you are. Bring some friends
and have a great time the night before Hamvention®.
Tickets Pub and Eatery,
7 W. Main St.
Fairborn, OH 45324
(937) 878-9022
http://www.ticketspub.com/
[ANS thanks AMSAT Office for the above information]
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ARISS News
+ A Successful contact was made between The Kings School, Ottery St
Mary, Devon, UK and Astronaut Timothy Peake KG5BVI using Callsign
GB1SS. The contact began 2016-05-09 09:26 UTC and lasted about nine
and a half minutes. Contact was direct via GB1OSM.
ARISS Mentor was Ciaran MØXTD.
+ A Successful contact was made between H.A.L. School, Lucknow,
India and Astronaut Tim Kopra KE5UDN using Callsign NA1SS. The
contact began 2016-05-12 08:11 UTC and lasted about nine and a half
minutes. Contact was telebridge via K6DUE.
ARISS Mentor was Satoshi 7M3TJZ.
+ A Successful contact was made between AstroNuts Kids Space Club
Academy, David Dunlap Observatory, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada,
and Astronaut Timothy Peake KG5BVI using Callsign NA1SS. The contact
began 2016-05-14 17:37:12 UTC and lasted about nine and a half
minutes. Contact was telebridge via W6SRJ.
ARISS Mentor was Steve VE3TBD.
Upcoming ARISS Contact Schedule as of 2016-05-13 06:30 UTC
Quick list of scheduled contacts and events:
Essex Heights Primary School, Mount Waverley, Victoria, Australia,
telebridge via VK5ZAI
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be NA1SS
The scheduled astronaut is Jeff Williams KD5TVQ
Contact is a go for: Fri 2016-05-20 08:35:16 UTC
[ANS thanks ARISS, Charlie AJ9N and David AA4KN for the above
information]
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/EX
In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the
President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining
donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-
tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT
Office.
Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership
at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students
enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-
dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.
Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership
information.
73,
This week's ANS Editor,
EMike McCardel, AA8EM, former KC8YLD
kc8yld at amsat dot org
1
0
AMSAT NEWS SERVICE
ANS-129
The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-
mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space
including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur
Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,
launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio
satellites.
The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur
Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.
Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:
ans-editor at amsat.org.
In this edition:
* RadFxSat (Fox-1B) Launch Date
* Tomsk-TPU-120 Active On-board ISS May 10-11
* AMSAT at ARRL Nevada State Convention Last Weekend - report
* Contact Lost with SamSat-218D Nanosatellite
* Top 10 Reasons to Come to Dayton
* AMSAT at the Dayton Hamvention -- Last Call for Volunteers
* AIST-2D and SamSat-218D Satellites Launched
* No Need for Panic Regarding Synthetic Aperture Radars on
70 Centimeters, ARRL CTO Says
* AMSAT Events
* ARISS News
* Satellite Shorts From All Over
SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-129.01
ANS-129 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins
AMSAT News Service Bulletin 129.01
>From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD.
DATE May 8, 2016
To All RADIO AMATEURS
BID: $ANS-129.01
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RadFxSat (Fox-1B) Launch Date
This week AMSAT Vice-President Engineering, Jerry Buxton, N0JY, said that
January 20, 2017 is the planned launch date for the RadFxSat (Fox-1B)
cubesat. This cubesat will fly with the Vanderbilt University radiation
experiments.
RadFxSat (Fox-1B) pre-launch frequencies include:
Uplink: 435.250 MHz FM 67.0 Hz CTCSS tone
Downlink: 145.960 MHz FM
(Frequencies may vary slightly after launch; changes will be announced)
The latest versions of the Fox-1 Operating Guide can be found on AMSAT's
Station and Operating Hints page at:
http://www.amsat.org/?page_id=2144
AMSAT pioneered the concept of small satellites in low orbits. AMSAT's
Project Fox consists of a series of cubesats that will provide FM
transponders with a 70 cm uplink with a 2 meter downlink that will match the
ground performance of previous FM satellites.
AMSAT is dedicated to keeping amateur radio in space. Its membership
includes a worldwide group of radio hams who monitor amateur radio satellite
signals and use satellites for QSOs. They also design and build the
satellites, and control them once in orbit.
Not a member of AMSAT yet?
You're invited to join on-line at:
http://store.amsat.org/catalog/index.php?cPath=32
Please consider making a donation to support the Fox-1 series of cubesats
using the links on the front page
http://www.amsat.org.
[ANS thanks AMSAT Vice-President Engineering, Jerry Buxton, N0JY, for the
above information]
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Tomsk-TPU-120 Active On-board ISS May 10-11
As part of Tomsk Polytechnic University 120th anniversary celebrations on
May 10-11, Tomsk-TPU-120 will be activated in the ISS and will transmit a
greeting to Earth inhabitants, recorded by students of the University in
10 languages: Russian, English, German, French, Chinese, Arabic, Tatar,
Indian, Kazakh, and Portuguese.
The 3U CubeSat was launched from Baikonur to the ISS on March 31, 2016 in
a Progress-MS-2 cargo vessel. It will be deployed by hand during a future
Russian spacewalk (EVA), so it has a handle. The satellite was
developed by students at the Tomsk Polytechnic University to test new space
materials technology and will be the world’s first space vehicle with a
3D-printed structure.
The Tomsk-TPU-120 satellite on-board the ISS will be activated May 10 from
07:55 UTC and switched off on May 11 at 10:10 UTC.
The satellite has been connected to an external ISS antenna and will
transmit
messages of 20-30 seconds in 11 languages, then pause 1 minute on the
satellite's transmission frequency of 437.025 MHz. The ISS will
simulcast the
signal utilizing ARISS equipment on a frequency of 145.800 MHz.
Reception reports from both the ISS and from the Tomsk-TPU-120 satellite
are
requested from the international amateur radio community and should be sent
to Sergi at rv3dr(a)mail.ru
Amateurs are requested to refrain from transmitting on either frequency as
any transmissions would interfere with reception of the test transmissions.
[ANS thanks Sergi, RV3DR and ARISS for the above information]
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AMSAT at ARRL Nevada State Convention Last Weekend - report
AMSAT's long-time Area Coordinator in southern Nevada, Frank Kostelac
N7ZEV, along with his wife Linda KC7IIT, usually have a booth at these
events in Las Vegas and other locations in Nevada. With Linda working in a
variety of roles at the convention, Frank and I took care of the AMSAT
booth. Frank also had other convention-related tasks, and he was definitely
busy throughout the weekend. When I arrived at the convention Friday
afternoon, Frank had the booth ready to go. I set out some flyers, some
equipment, and spent most of the weekend around the booth.
The day before I arrived in Las Vegas, the region had a big rainstorm.
Another storm blew through southern Nevada on Saturday morning, which made
travel around Las Vegas a mess, and washed out my plans for demonstrations
at the convention. Instead of being outside in the rain, I had set up a
couple of tablets to run videos of past demonstrations, show off SatPC32,
and show what software-defined receivers can do. Frank and I talked almost
non-stop for the weekend. I posted photos from the convention throughout
the weekend on my @WD9EWK Twitter feed. If you want to see those photos,
but don't do Twitter, you can get to the photos with a web browser at:
http://twitter.com/WD9EWK/media
Just because there was rain that washed out the demonstrations I planned to
do at the convention, that didn't ruin plans for me to work satellites from
Nevada. I'll post a separate message describing my operating from around
Las Vegas and while driving to and from Las Vegas.
I have to thank Frank and Linda for letting me help with the AMSAT booth
over the weekend. I had asked Frank about this convention a while back, and
I am glad I made the trip. The NVCON organizers were all friendly, and the
crowds were good, despite the Saturday rain. There were a bunch of people
who came over from California, and a few from Arizona that I also saw. I
will seriously consider heading back to Las Vegas the next time this event
takes place up there.
[ANS thanks Patrick, WD9EWK/VA7EWK for the above information]
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Contact Lost with SamSat-218D Nanosatellite
The tiny nanosatellite SamSat-218, which was launched from the Vostochny
Cosmodrome on April 28, has failed to establish radio contact with mission
control, several Russian media outlets are reporting. According to Interfax
news agency, although the spacecraft was placed into orbit as planned, it is
sending only fragmentary signals to Earth.
“Currently, fragmentary Morse code signals are being heard coming from the
nanosatellite, against the background of the noise during the
satellite’s pass
over the receiving station,” Interfax said in a press release.
SamSat-218, built by the Samara State Aerospace University (SSAU), is a two-
unit CubeSat with a mass of only 8.8 pounds (4 kilograms) and an additional
empty one-unit compartment for aerodynamic stabilization. The tiny
spacecraft
was designed to demonstrate attitude stabilization by using aerodynamic
forces.
It was expected to develop algorithms necessary for nanosatellite
orientation
control.
The nanosatellite was launched along with the Mikhailo Lomonosov
(MVL-300) and
Aist-2D spacecraft atop a Soyuz-2.1a rocket from Vostochny on the
Cosmodrome’s
opening mission. The flight, lasting several hours, ended in the
separation of
the satellites from the launch vehicle. However, after SamSat-218 was placed
into orbit, it started to spin around rapidly and probably failed to
switch on.
“There are currently no sufficient grounds to believe the nanosatellite
established contact. There were fragmentary weak signals at the frequency of
145.870 MHz against a background of noises when the nanosatellite was in the
area of [radio visibility] of the ground control center, which can’t be with
confidence interpreted as signals from the satellite,” Igor Belokonov,
the head
of the SamSat-218 project told TASS.
The designers of the satellite are currently analyzing the data received in
order to understand the nature of the problem and look for possible
solutions.
According to Belokonov, the student mission control center of SSAU is
continuing with attempts to receive signals from the satellite during passes
above Samara.
The satellite is equipped with a radio beacon, which transmits the word
“SamSat-218”. Russia’s radio enthusiasts are also engaged in the
activities to
help establish contact with the satellite when it is in the area of the
antenna
systems’ coverage.
Read more at
http://www.spaceflightinsider.com/organizations/roscosmos/russia-loses-
contact-with-its-nanosatellite-launched-from-vostochny/
[ANS thanks Bernhard, VA6BMJ and Spaceflightinsider.com for the above
information]
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Top 10 Reasons to Come to Dayton
10. Rub shoulders with 25,000 of your best friends at the largest hamfest in
the United States, including all of the AMSAT Directors and senior
officers.
See the latest equipment from Icom, Yaesu, Kenwood, Flex, Alinco, M2, Arrow,
and many other manufacturers of amateur radio equipment and
accessories. Take
advantage of discounted pricing you won't find anywhere else.
9. Find out how to organize a contact with the astronauts on the
International
Space Station for your local school or youth group from our Education
and ARISS
experts.
8. Pickup the latest AMSAT golf shirts, T-shirts, and hats. Get your
copy of
the updated "Amateur Satellite Frequency Guide" (laminated frequency
chart) and
Gould Smith's just revised "Getting Started with Amateur Satellites"
(book).
We'll also have assembled wide-band preamps and antennas that are great for
portable operation.
7. See demonstrations of SatPC32 and MacDoppler satellite tracking software,
and get your operational questions answered. Meet Don Agro, author of
MacDoppler (Friday & Saturday, 2-3 p.m.). See a demonstration of the LVB
Tracker, a computer interface to the Yaesu azimuth-elevation rotors.
Talk with
Mike Young, who has built more LVB Trackers than anyone else. Assembled LVB
Trackers will be available.
6. Hear a team presentation at the joint AMSAT/TAPR dinner on the new AMSAT
Ground Terminal (AGT). AGT is using Five and Dime (5 GHz uplink, 10 GHz
downlink) technology that is being developed for the Phase 3E (P3E) HEO
satellite, the Phase 4B (P4B) geosynchronous satellite, and the Cube Quest
Challenge (CQC) lunar mission. While much of the P3E and P4B *satellite*
development is classified, the AGT is all open source and public
information.
5. Hear the latest on the *five* Fox satellites, P3E, P4B, CQC, the
International Space Station, other current and future satellites, education
news, and an AMSAT update at the AMSAT Forum Saturday, from 11:15 to 1:30.
4. Get one-on-one guidance on setting up your satellite station and making
contacts at our "Beginner's Corner". Witness live demonstrations of
contacts
through satellites AO-7, AO-73, AO-85, FO-29, SO-50, XW-2A, XW-2C, and XW-2F
using handheld antennas.
3. Meet and interact with some of the Engineering Team members working
on the
Fox-1 satellites and our new Five and Dime AMSAT ground terminal. Learn
all of
the public information and get breaking news on the Virginia Tech plans
for the
Phase 3E and Phase 4B satellites.
2. Get satellite station and operating tips from some of the best satellite
operators in the country, including John Papay K8YSE (1,575 grids
confirmed),
Doug Papay KD8CAO (1,159 grids), Drew Glasbrenner KO4MA (1,343 grids), Paul
Stoetzer (450 grids), and Wyatt Dirks AC0RA (938 grids).
1. Receive special premiums when you join or renew your AMSAT membership at
Dayton, including an updated "Amateur Satellite Frequency Guide" (laminated
frequency chart), and special pricing on the SatPC32 satellite tracking
software.
[ANS thanks Steve Belter, N9IP, Dayton Team Leader for the above
information]
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AMSAT at the Dayton Hamvention -- Last Call for Volunteers
The Dayton Hamvention is less than two weeks away, May 20-22!
If you’ve been waiting to volunteer until you’d firmed up your plans, we
need to hear from you ASAP!
If you're an experienced satellite operator, we can use you and your
experience. If you've never operated a satellite before, we can use your
help too. Whether you're available for only a couple of hours or if you
can spend the entire weekend with us, your help would be greatly
appreciated.
Please send an e-mail to Steve, n9ip(a)amsat.org if you can help. Thank you!
[ANS thanks Steve Belter, N9IP, Dayton Team Leader for the above
information]
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AIST-2D and SamSat-218D Satellites Launched
Two Russian satellites AIST-2D and SamSat-218D operating in the Amateur
bands were launched on April 28, 2016 at 02:01 UT on a Soyuz 2-1A launch
vehicle from the new Vostochny Cosmodrome located in the Amur Oblast. The
satellites were placed into a 471 km × 485 km orbit with a 97.3°
inclination.
AIST-2D weighs 500 kg and is a technology demonstration and scientific
research satellite developed at Samara Aerospace University.
The 3U CubeSat SamSat-218 was developed by students at the Samara State
University and weighs just 4 kg.
Frequency information from Dmitry R4UAB
http://r4uab.ru/?p=11842
AIST-2D / RS-48 Downlinks
• 435.3065 – 435.3235 MHz Telemetry Data
• 435.3565 – 435.3735 MHz Telemetry Data
• 433 – 438 MHz 200 watt Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)
• 8025 – 8393 MHz Remote Sensing Data
http://spaceflight101.com/soyuz-lomonosov/aist-2d/
SamSat-218D
• 145.870 MHz Morse CW beacon transmits “SamSat-218D” every 150 seconds
(or 30 seconds)
• 145.850 – 145.890 MHz TRXSSAU downlink
• 435.590 – 435.610 MHz TRXSSAU uplink
http://spaceflight101.com/soyuz-lomonosov/samsat-218d/
Russian post on SamSat-218D
http://zelenyikot.livejournal.com/94190.html
Google English translation
https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2
Fzelenyikot.livejournal.com%2F94190.html&sandbox=1
432-438 MHz was allocated to the Earth Exploration Satellite Service
(Active) at WRC-03
https://www.itu.int/dms_pubrec/itu-r/rec/sa/R-REC-SA.1260-1-200305-S!!PDF-E…
September 2003 issue of QST magazine has an article on page 44 by VE3PU on
satellite-based Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) in 432-438 MHz (ARRL members
only)
http://p1k.arrl.org/pubs_archive/104721
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]
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No Need for Panic Regarding Synthetic Aperture Radars on
70 Centimeters, ARRL CTO Says
A recent BBC news article regarding a synthetic aperture radar (SAR)
contract
award for operation within the 70 centimeter band has raised some concern
within the Amateur Radio community. The contract to Airbus Space would
involve
determining the density of Earth’s forests using a P-band (432-438 MHz) SAR.
That band segment was allocated for use by the Earth Exploration Satellite
(Active) Service at World Radiocommunication Conference 2003 (WRC-03). ARRL
Chief Technology Officer Brennan Price, N4QX, said SAR activity has not been
found to be a significant problem to Amateur Radio activity on the 70
centimeter band. Both EESS (Active) and Amateur Radio are secondary on
the band
in International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Regions 2 and 3 (Amateur
Radio
is co-primary with the Radiolocation Service in ITU Region 1), and Price
said
SAR operation is subject to significant constraints.
“The interference potential from one orbiting SAR to one fixed Amateur Radio
station is on the order of less than 1 minute over an orbital period of more
than 10 days,” Price said. “Practically speaking, nearby electrical
lines and
Part 15 devices are more likely to be bothersome.”
Price said news items in articles aimed at the general public are “often
notoriously short” on technical details. ITU-R Recommendation RS.1260-11 —
incorporated by reference in the ITU Radio Regulations and binding on EESS
(Active) stations — spells out the WRC-03 consensus on SARs operating at 70
centimeters. Among other things, RS.1260-1 states that EESS (Active)
instruments operation profile “shall be campaign-oriented, targeted to
specific
geographical areas and shall limit the instrument active time to the minimum
required to achieve the campaign objectives. Thus, the measurements
carried out
by the instrument do not require continuous operation of the instrument, and
intervals of months between successive measurements on the same area can be
expected.” The Recommendation further states that the operational duty
cycle of
an SAR in campaign mode will be 15 percent (typically 10 percent).
A Russian satellite, AIST-2D, launched on April 28, will conduct SAR
work as a
technology demonstration and scientific research satellite developed at
Samara
Aerospace University. Its 200 W SAR will operate in the 433-438 MHz band. It
will also transmit telemetry in the 70 centimeter band.
http://www.arrl.org/news/view/no-need-for-panic-regarding-synthetic-
aperture-radars-on-70-centimeters-arrl-cto-says
[ANS thanks the ARRL and Trevor, M5AKA for the above information]
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AMSAT Events
Information about AMSAT activities at other important events around
the country. Examples of these events are radio club meetings where
AMSAT Area Coordinators give presentations, demonstrations of working
amateur satellites, and hamfests with an AMSAT presence (a table with
AMSAT literature and merchandise, sometimes also with presentations,
forums, and/or demonstrations).
*Saturday, 14 May 2016 – Matanuska Amateur Radio Association Hamfest in
Wasilla AK
*Friday, Saturday, & Sunday, 20-22 May - HamVention at Harra Arena Dayton,
Ohio
*Saturday, 4 June 2016 – White Mountain Hamfest in Show Low AZ
*Saturday, 13 August 2016 – KL7KC Hamfest in Fairbanks AK
[ANS thanks AMSAT-NA for the above information]
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ARISS News
Successful Contacts
* A direct contact via GB1APS with students at Ashfield Primary School,
Otley, West Yorkshire, UK, was successful Thu 2016-05-05 08:08:09 UTC
46 deg. Astronaut Timothy Peake, KG5BVI answered 16 questions for an
audience of 200 students.
Ashfield Primary School is in Otley, West Yorkshire, a historic market town
to the north west of Leeds. The school has a fantastic semi-rural location
with extensive grounds encompassing a playground, school field, wildlife
area, magic garden and a specific outdoor area for Early Years. The school
is a community primary school with one form entry. We have 240 children
aged 3 to 11.
Ashfield is also the site for the North West Leeds Area Inclusions
Partnership’s Learning Support Center. The Orchard Center educates pupils
from the area who are experiencing difficulties which affect their
learning.
Our vision is that children, parents and carers, staff and governors work
actively together to ensure children receive a rich inspiring and engaging
education enabling each child to become lifelong learners, aspiring to high
standards of achievement in all areas of their life. As part of this rich
inspiring and engaging education, pupils run a stall at the annual Otley
Science Festival and recently hosted a space themed Science, Technology,
Engineering and Maths festival within the school. All Ashfield classes ran
stalls to inform, challenge and entertain each other. We had visitors from
all seven local schools, who designed informative exhibitions to share.
Exhibitors also came from Otley Amateur Radio Society, Leeds University,
The Radio Society of Great Britain, Bradford Astronomy Society and Eureka
Museum and worked with the children on STEM related topics. Dr Marty
Jopson
also created and presented a space related science show in the evening.”
* All Saints STEAM Academy (AS2A), Middletown, Rhode Island, direct via
N1ASA
The ISS callsign was NA1SS
The astronaut was Jeff Williams KD5TVQ
Contact was successful: Fri 2016-05-06 16:43:47 UTC
The contact went well, all 24 questions were answered and there was still
time for a “73 Round.”
An exceptional video is at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oTkq5btNW_U
Upcoming Contacts
* A direct contact via GB1OSM with students at The Kings School, Ottery St
Mary, Devon, UK, is scheduled for Mon 2016-05-09 09:26:30 UTC 62 deg The
scheduled astronaut is Timothy Peake KG5BVI. Watch for HamTV during this
contact.
The King’s School is an 11-18 comprehensive school with approximately 1150
students of which 230 are in the Sixth Form. It has a long and proud history
that can be traced back to a fourteenth century choir school which was
replaced
in 1545 by Henry VIII in 1545 with “The King’s School”.
Although The King’s School became an academy in 2011 we continue to work in
close partnership with Devon County Council and our fellow secondary
schools to
ensure that we offer the best educational opportunities possible. Our
inclusive
philosophy of “Achievement for All” encapsulates our belief that every
person
who enters The King’s School has unique skills and potential which we
believe
we have the creativity and ability to unlock.
We were graded Outstanding by OfSTED in 2011, and in the latest 2014 OfSTED
inspection we were again graded Outstanding but this time in every category.
The report endorsed the school’s belief that its ethos has a hugely positive
impact on student achievement.
We are extremely proud of our students and of the brilliant examination
results they achieve year on year. However, we are also incredibly proud of
the myriad of extra-curricular activities in which they are involved. This
richness of opportunity is central to what we believe develops our students
into well rounded young people. We are very much a community school, working
very closely with our hugely supportive parents, Governors, excellent
partner
primary schools, local business representatives and a wide range of other
agencies to provide opportunities for all.
* A telebridge contact via K6DUE with students at H.A.L. School, Lucknow,
India is scheduled for Thu 2016-05-12 08:11:20 UTC 79 deg. The scheduled
astronaut is Tim Kopra KE5UDN.
Nestled in cozy, lush green and safe sphere is the prestigious education hub
HAL School has inscribed a saga of success! Installed in 1974, the
school has
come a long way. The visionary founders dreamed of an ideal and prosperous
institution whose torch bearers and pupils would write a history of academic
excellence besides versatility in additional activities. Teachers burnt
midnight oil and left no stone unturned and the students responded with
equal
dedication and brought laurels. Being a member of HAL factory, school
frequently bore the responsibility of hosting memorable guests from
Russia and
celebrities like first Indian astronaut Wg.cdr Rakesh Sharma (Retd),
President
(Late) APJ Abdul Kalam etc.
The school not only organized but also participated in major events
organized
by HAL Factory year by year. The recent activity which has caught
momentum is
ARISS (Amateur Radio on the International Space Station) which is active all
the world over and now has come as a great opportunity for HAL School to
be the
first in state (Uttar Pradesh) to contact with International Space
Station and
eminent astronauts, participate in seminars, presentations and workshops and
associate themselves with radio academically. The School has been
involved in
many Amateur Radio activities like Amateur radio demonstration for students,
JOTA for Scouts & Guides etc. There were 6 students who took the Amateur
Radio
licenses during their studies in school.
Workshops by eminent counselors/experts/guest faculty/agencies from various
fields benefited the students in personality development and career
counseling/awareness/advice. Year by year the number of such sessions has
multiplied and continues till date. The concrete and farsighted plans and
strategies are being worked upon. Innovation, modification, changes and
publicity efforts are on to make better the things. The improved education,
basic facilities, performance of both teacher and taught, inclusion of
teachers
training/orientation programs are in pipe line for makeover of the school.
* A telebridge contact via W6SRJ with students at AstroNuts Kids Space Club
Academy, Duncan Observatory, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada, is
scheduled for
Sat 2016-05-14 17:37:12 UTC 33 deg. The scheduled astronaut is Timothy
Peake
KG5BVI.
The “Whats up in Space” Camp & STEM Contest was created by a 13 year-old,
Brett Bielecki and father Ray, 5 years ago in order to ignite the
curiosities
of hundreds of elementary school children to learn about “all things space”.
Our volunteer-based space camp is held at the world famous David Dunlap
Observatory in Richmond Hill Ontario where the children are engaged and
inspired by 20 volunteer space educators, multiple Skype guests and
educational
activities in a fun and educational setting. The children’s STEM contest
brings
together dozens of innovative future astronauts, scientists educators and
engineers in the spirit of competition. Our space camp was launched
because of
the high interest for space education by elementary school students, their
parents and teachers when they recognized the value of the “AstroNuts kids
space club."
Watch
http://www.ariss.org/upcoming-contacts.html
for information about upcoming contacts as they are scheduled.
[ANS thanks ARISS, Dave, AA4KN, and Charlie, AJ9N for the above information]
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Satellite Shorts From All Over
Biomass 432-438 MHz Synthetic Aperture Radar Satellite
BBC News report: UK wins satellite contract to 'weigh' Earth's forests with
P-Band 432-438 MHz Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36195562
BBC news story says P-Band 432-438 MHz Synthetic Aperture Radar has never
before been flown in space - this is not strictly true as AIST-2D launched
a few days ago carries one.
[ANS thanks Trevor, M5AKA for the above information]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
/EX
In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the
President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining
donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-
tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT
Office.
Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership
at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students
enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-
dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.
Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership
information.
73,
This week's ANS Editor,
Joe Spier, K6WAO
k6wao at amsat dot org
1
0
AMSAT NEWS SERVICE
ANS-122
The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-
mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space
including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur
Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,
launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio
satellites.
The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur
Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.
Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:
ans-editor at amsat.org.
In this edition:
* Three New CubeSats Now in Orbit
* Tomsk-TPU-120 CubeSat Celebrates University Anniversary
* Audio Recordings of FO-12 and AO-15 Requested
* ZACUBE-1 Beacon Preparations to be Presented at AMSAT SA Space Symposium
* Upcoming ARISS Contact Schedule
* Possible Satellite Activation CY9C St. Paul Island August 2016
* IARU Region 2 Call for EmComm Workshop Papers, Presentations
SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-122.01
ANS-122 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins
AMSAT News Service Bulletin 122.01
From AMSAT HQ Kensington, MD.
May 1, 2016
To All RADIO AMATEURS
BID: $ANS-122.01
Three New CubeSats Now in Orbit
Signals have been received from the three CubeSats launched April 25 on
Soyuz
flight VS14 from the Kourou spaceport in South America.
The three CubeSats were developed by student teams under the European Space
Agency (ESA) Education Office “Fly Your Satellite!” program, which is
aimed at
training the next generation of aerospace professionals. The satellites are
OUFTI-1, Université of Liège, Belgium; e-st@r-II, Polytechnic of Turin,
Italy;
AAUSAT-4, University of Aalborg, Denmark.
The signal from the e-st@r satellite 1200 bps beacon is very weak which may
indicate an antenna deployment issue or unexpectedly low transmit power. ESA
report the e-st@r team is working to consolidate the radio communication
link
with their satellite.
OUFTI-1 carries the first dedicated amateur D-Star satellite transponder,
further information and frequencies of all three CubeSats are at
https://amsat-uk.org/2016/04/05/d-star-satellite-to-launch-from-kourou/
Daniel Estévez EA4GPZ used a FUNcube Dongle Pro+ and a handheld Arrow
Satellite
antenna to receive a signal from AAUSAT-4, call sign OZ4CUB.
http://destevez.net/2016/04/first-signals-from-aausat-4/
OUFTI-1 reports http://www.dk3wn.info/p/?cat=321
e-st@r reports http://www.dk3wn.info/p/?cat=84
AAUSAT-4 reports http://www.dk3wn.info/p/?cat=8
[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]
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Tomsk-TPU-120 CubeSat Celebrates University Anniversary
The Russian Tomsk-TPU-120 CubeSat is different from other CubeSats – it
has a
handle!
The 3U CubeSat was launched from Baikonur to the ISS on March 31, 2016 in a
Progress-MS-2 cargo vessel. It will be deployed by hand during a future
Russian
spacewalk (EVA), which is why it has a handle.
The satellite was developed by students at the Tomsk Polytechnic
University to
test new space materials technology and will be the world’s first space
vehicle
with a 3D-printed structure.
In May 2016 Tomsk Polytechnic University celebrates its 120th
anniversary. As
part of the celebrations on May 10-11 Tomsk-TPU-120 will be activated in
the ISS
and will transmit a greeting to Earth inhabitants, recorded by students
of the
university in 10 languages: Russian, English, German, French, Chinese,
Arabic,
Tatar, Indian, Kazakh and Portuguese.
The greeting signal will be transmitted once a minute on 437.025 MHz FM.
One of
the Kenwood transceivers on the ISS will provide a simulcast of the
signal on 145.800 MHz FM.
Dmitry Pashkov R4UAB reports that on May 5 the Russian ISS crew will
charge the
satellite battery, connect the antenna and configure the Kenwood
transceiver for
simulcast operation, they will then make a test transmission.
Dmitry operates a WebSDR which you can use to receive the transmissions
when the
ISS is over Russia http://websdr.r4uab.ru/
The next Russian spacewalk appears to be EVA-43 which expected to take
place in
early 2017 http://spaceflight101.com/iss/iss-calendar/
Use Google translator to read original article by Dmitry Pashkov R4UAB
http://r4uab.ru/?p=11845
World’s First 3D-printed Satellite http://tpu.ru/en/news-events/760/
[ANS thanks Gunter's Space Page, R4UAB, and AMSAT-UK for the above
information]
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Audio Recordings of FO-12 and AO-15 Requested
Mathias, DD1US, maintains a homepage at www.dd1us.de Included is a section
called "Sounds from Space".
More than 1000 recordings of various satellite and space objects have been
collected and are available for listening.
Mathias is still searching for various recordings of Amateur Radio
Satellites,
especially for Fuji-OSCAR-12 and UoSAT-OSCAR-15. If you have old tapes or
cassettes with recordings of Ham Radio Satellites he will be happy to
digitize
them and add them to the archive.
[ANS thanks Mathias, DD1US, for the above information]
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ZACUBE-1 Beacon Preparations to be Presented at AMSAT SA Space Symposium
Students from the Cape Peninsula University of Technology will present a
paper
at the AMSAT SA Space Symposium on the high frequency beacon transmitter
developed to test a three element direction finding array constructed at
SANSA
Space Science in Hermanus to receive the 14 099 kHz HF beacon signal from
ZACUBE-1 and future ZACUBE-i space weather missions. A ground-based
transmitter
was developed for verification and calibration of this array. The signal
will be
used to verify the operation of the hardware and software used to
determine the
direction of arrival of the incoming signal. More about the symposium on
28 May
2016, details on the many papers to be presented and how to register for the
event can be found on www.amsatsa.org.za
[ANS thanks the SARL weekly news in English 2016-4-30 for the above
information]
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Upcoming ARISS Contact Schedule
Ashfield Primary School, Otley, West Yorkshire, UK, direct via GB1APS
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be GB1SS
The scheduled astronaut is Timothy Peake KG5BVI
Contact is a go for: Thu 2016-05-05 08:08:09 UTC 46 deg (***)
All Saints STEAM Academy (AS2A), Middletown, Rhode Island, direct via
N1ASA
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be TBD
The scheduled astronaut is Tim Kopra KE5UDN or Jeff Williams KD5TVQ
Contact is a go for: Fri 2016-05-06 16:43:47 UTC 56 deg (***)
[ANS thanks Charlie, AJ9N, for the above information]
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Possible Satellite Activation CY9C St. Paul Island August 2016
CY9C, ST. PAUL ISLAND DXPEDITION (August 19-29th). Randy, N0TG, reports
the following on April 16th: As was reported previously, we will have
two separate sites...separated approximately 1.5 miles.
Site 1 will be the Atlantic Cove site with 6 operators. We will try
to keep 4-5 radios running and more if 12/10m opens. Our plan is to
have a RTTY station active at all times. From this site 160 will be
given lots of attention with the Battle Creek Special antenna.
Site 2 - the Northeast Point separate island will be enhanced to include
4 -5 operators active at all times, thus the dxpedition in total can
potentially have 8-10 radios working most of the time. We are seriously
considering 6m EME and Satellite, however, we need to work out the
planning details. And, as always, budget matters are a significant
consideration as we expand operations. We appreciate the support by
many to date. The desire is to make this a very complete operation
that will offer fun and meeting needs for all interests.
The CY9C Web page is: http://www.CY9Dxpedition.com
[ANS thanks the Ohio/Penn DX Bulletin #1263 for the above information]
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IARU Region 2 Call for EmComm Workshop Papers, Presentations
International Amateur Radio Union Region 2 (IARU-R2) will hold an Emergency
Communications Workshop in Chile this fall, in conjunction with the 19th
IARU
Region 2 General Assembly. The conference committee is inviting papers and
presentations the event. The workshop on October 11 in Viña del Mar,
Chile, will
offer an opportunity for Region 2 emergency coordinators and other national-
level Amateur Radio emergency communication experts to network and to share
information on Amateur Radio emergency response as well as to augment the
capabilities of the region’s amateurs to react to large-scale, multinational
communication emergencies.
The event is open to radio amateurs in IARU Region 2 with high-level
expertise
in providing disaster and emergency communication. Attendees will be
responsible
for their travel and lodging costs. A block of rooms will be available
at the
O’Higgins Hotel in downtown Viña del Mar.
Link to Register online:
http://www.arrl.org/news/iaru-region-2-calls-for-emergency-communications-
workshop-papers-presentations
Call for Papers
Delegates representing IARU Region 2 member societies, national or
international
Amateur Radio emergency communication organizations, or
national/international-
level subject matter experts in Amateur Radio emergency communication are
invited to submit proposals and informational papers. Topics must be
related to
Amateur Radio emergency communication, disaster response, technology, or
operating standards.
Documents must be in electronic form (MS Word or Power Point). When
laying out
the document format, use A4 paper with at least 3-centimeter margins on all
sides. The title page should have a top margin of at least 6
centimeters. Do not
insert page headers or footers.
The deadline to submit is July 1. The IARU Region 2 Emergency Communications
Workshop Committee will select the most appropriate papers for
presentation. All
other submitted materials will be compiled for distribution to all
delegates and
will be posted on the Region 2 website for downloading.
Direct submissions in English to ecw(a)iaru-r2.org; direct submissions in
Spanish
to tce(a)iaru-r2.org.
The Emergency Communications Workshop will be held on Tuesday, October
11, at
the Hotel O’Higgins in Viña del Mar from 9 AM until 6 PM.
[ANS thanks the ARRL and IARU for the above information]
/EX
In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the
President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining
donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-
tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT
Office.
Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership
at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students
enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-
dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.
Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership
information.
73,
This week's ANS Editor,
Lee McLamb, KU4OS
ku4os at amsat dot org
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