E1P’s First Day!!!

The Delta II Rocket Carrying E1P-2 Launches From Vandenburg Air Force Base. Image Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

The first day of E1P’s journey was more than a success! We managed to receive 38 packets from our little satellite that could!

All state of health levels were nominal, and the signal was loud and clear every pass. We were able to get satellite orientation information by looking at solar array currents, and able to judge how well the batteries were charging based on the array currents being negative, and the battery voltages being as healthy as we’ve ever seen them. Temperatures were staying between 14-20 degrees Celsius, as we had designed for. Sunday, October 30th, at 1:44 pm, E1P will be at an 84 degree elevation over Bozeman, putting our satellite almost directly over head.

Sunday when you look up in the afternoon, give a wave to Montana’s first satellite, and the symbol of what MSU students, and SSEL is capable of!

Below: A picture taken of the launch with a long exposure. The photo shows the southern trajectory out of Vandenburg Airforce Base. Also, links to relevant footage covering the launch, starting with the pre-launch press release, with an overview of E1P’s mission from SSEL’s primary investigator, Dave Klumpar.

Press Release
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcjM2GhMD-E

The launch
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MRuhvybx4w

Announcement of our Deployment!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7Wvh9OOeng

Launch arc from the Delta II carrying E1P-2. Image Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

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First Events of E1P-U2 Launch

First Events
Credit: SSEL

On Friday, October 28th the second Explorer 1 [Prime] CubeSat (E1P-U2) will launch out of Vandenberg Air Force Base at 3:48am Mountain time. E1P-U2, a flight spare replica of the first E1P satellite, will be hitching a ride aboard a Delta II rocket carrying the NPOESS Preparatory Project (NPP) satellite, a next generation climate science mission.

SSEL personnel and trained volunteers will be manning the Space Operations Center (Cobleigh 422) during launch and over the coming months. The image above shows the first 8 orbits of E1P-U2 and some of the first mission events: “0″ marks deployment of the MSU’s CubeSat from the PPOD (98 minutes after launch) and 60 minutes later the antenna’s will deploy (Ant Fire), E1P’s beacon or “heartbeat” will then start broadcasting every 15 seconds.

SSEL is currently coordinating with ground stations in Vigo Spain (Vigo), Poker Flat Alaska (PF_AK), Albuquerque New Mexico (ALB_NM), and San Luis Opisbo California (SLO). These ground stations will be some of the first to receive E1P-U2′s heartbeat and relay that information back to the Space Operations Center here at MSU.

At 11:30am (MDT) SSEL will start tracking E1P and initiate a “science data dump” that will transmit all stored data from orbits 1 through 4 to on-campus databases. This data can then be compared with corroborating stations for integrity.

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MSU’s twin satellite to launch Oct. 28 on NASA rocket

Source: Evelyn Boswell, MSU News Service

BOZEMAN – The twin of a Montana State University student-built satellite that was launched in the spring but failed to reach orbit as a result of an anomaly with the TAURUS-XL rocket is scheduled to be launched Friday, Oct. 28, on another NASA rocket.

This miniature research satellite – also called Explorer-1 [Prime] in honor of the first successful U.S. satellite – is set to launch between 3:48 and 3:57 a.m. Mountain time on a Delta II rocket from the Vandenberg Air Force Base in Santa Maria, Calif. MSU students and faculty members plan to watch from the Air Force base, as well as from MSU’s Space Operations Center in Cobleigh Hall, said Dave Klumpar, director of MSU’s Space Science and Engineering Laboratory.

Live streaming video of the launch will be available at http://spaceflightnow.com/delta/d357/status.html

MSU’s satellite will ride in a container with two other satellites, one from the University of Michigan and one from Auburn University, Klumpar said. All three satellites are aluminum cubes weighing no more than 2.2 pounds and measuring about four inches per side. That standardized size allows university-built satellites, called “CubeSats,” to fit into an enclosed container called a P-POD.

“MSU’s SSEL has the unique distinction of being the only university to fly a CubeSat on both of NASA’s Educational Launch of Nanosatellite (ELaNa) missions,” Klumpar said. “No other university in the world has flown university-built small satellites on two NASA orbital launches.”

Also on the rocket will be a NASA satellite that represents a critical first step in building the next generation of U.S. polar-orbiting climate and weather monitoring spacecraft. The satellite is a bridge between NASA’s Earth Observing System satellites and the upcoming Joint Polar Satellite Systems satellites.

If everything goes as planned, MSU’s Explorer-1 [Prime] will roar into the morning sky sometime during the allotted nine-minute window. Almost two hours later, after the sun has recharged the satellite’s batteries, the satellite will come alive over the south Atlantic near the bulge of Africa. An antenna that had been coiled inside the cube will spring out to transmit and receive signals.

The satellite was designed to emit a “heartbeat” every 15 seconds, Klumpar said. The signal will allow ham radio operators around the world to detect the satellite and report its progress to MSU. MSU students will monitor the satellite from campus, receiving their strongest signals around 11:45 a.m. and 11:45 p.m. daily for at least four months.

The Explorer-1 [Prime] will circle the Earth every 90 minutes in an “eccentric” orbit, which means that the orbit will be elliptical instead of circular, and the distance above Earth will be anywhere from 283 to 503 miles, Klumpar said.

The rocket carrying MSU’s satellite is much larger than the TAURUS XL rocket that carried the first Explorer-1 [Prime], Klumpar said. That doesn’t guarantee success, but Klumpar described the Delta II as a reliable workhorse. He said the Air Force, NASA and other agencies have used the rocket for at least three decades. A few mishaps have occurred, but the rocket has flown more than 100 times without incident.

“Knock on wood. Cross our fingers. It’s still the rocket biz, but we are hopeful,” Klumpar said. “We are very optimistic.”

The problem with the rocket carrying the first Explorer-1 [Prime] was that the fairing – a protective covering that works like a clamshell – failed to fall away. As a result, the rocket carried extra weight and couldn’t accelerate fast enough to reach orbit. Although MSU’s satellite was deployed from the rocket in space, at an altitude of more than 350 miles, the rocket had not reached sufficient velocity to achieve orbit. The rocket and all four satellites onboard ultimately crashed into the Antarctic Ocean or southern Pacific Ocean.

MSU’s satellite was never recovered, but its twin was already built and scheduled for flight. Students in the SSEL commonly build spares and backups, Klumpar said.

“When we started working on the Explorer-1 [Prime] many years ago, it was always the case that we would build a second unit in parallel with the first one,” Klumpar said. “It’s useful because if the first one had gone into orbit and an anomaly or strange behaviors had come up, we would have been able to use the twin down here to get a feel for what was going on there.”

In the past six months, the twin has gone through rigorous testing that “gives us confidence that it was as good as the first one,” Klumpar said. The current Explorer-1 [Prime] has been in California since Aug. 25. It was stored in a clean room at San Luis Obispo and double-bagged with nitrogen to keep out dust and moisture. The satellite headed to the Air Force base on Oct. 15 to be bolted to the rocket.

MSU built the Explorer-1 [Prime] to replicate the scientific mission of the Explorer-1 mission which was launched on Jan. 31, 1958, and detected the existence of a band of energetic charged particles held in place by the Earth’s magnetic field. The band was named the Van Allen Radiation Belt after the late James Van Allen, who directed the design and creation of instruments on Explorer-1.

Van Allen was head of the physics department when Klumpar was a master’s degree student at the University of Iowa. Years later, Van Allen spoke at Klumpar’s 40th high school class reunion, and Klumpar told him about MSU’s project. Van Allen suggested naming the satellite the Explorer-1 [Prime]. He later sent Klumpar some Geiger Tube radiation detectors from the Pioneer 10 mission, the first mission to leave the solar system.

One of the detectors rode in the Explorer-1 [Prime] satellite last spring to measure the intensity and variability of the electrons in the Van Allen belts. The intense radiation in the belts can damage space-borne objects and pose a danger to astronauts, making it imperative to understand its variability.

Another tube from Van Allen will ride in the satellite’s twin. The satellite will also carry solar cells for power, a radio receiver and transmitter, and a computer system to operate the entire device.

The satellite project is sponsored by the Montana Space Grant Consortium based at MSU. More than 125 undergraduate students have worked on the Explorer-1 [Prime] since the summer of 2006.

Dan Schwendtner, a former SSEL graduate research assistant and now a master’s degree student in mechanical engineering, said he expected to watch the upcoming launch from Bozeman. He made the vacuum system that tested Explorer-1 [Prime] and said it was the first time that any SSEL satellite had been tested in an SSEL vacuum system.

“It was important for me,” Schwendtner commented. “It was part of the culmination of four years of work.”

Evelyn Boswell, (406) 994-5135 or evelynb@montana.edu

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