- >>>>>>>Proficiat aan al de geslaagden voor de basisvergunning, ten gepaste tijde kunnen we een glas heffen op jullie succes!<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- Herstelling van een lampenradio faze 2: waarom is de weerstand van 2kOhm doorgebrand? Wat is de oorzaak? Hoe de fout opsporen? (Marcel & Jean - op de keukentafel!)
- De stofzuiger in de shack faze 2: hij werkt wel, maar zal niet blijven werken, hoe lossen we dit mysterie op? (Jan & Wilfried - shack)
- De hambeurze van Rosmalen komt eraan? Wat doen we met de onherstelbare verticale HF antenne van de club? Zoeken we daar een alternatief?
- Uitleg over een technisch experiment met de simultane lancering van 200 micro amateursatellieten op 16 maart aanstaande:
KickSat deploying the 200 Sprite satellites
Launch of two hundred 437MHz satellites
The largest ever launch of 437 MHz satellites is planned for March 16 at 0841 UT when 200 Sprite satellites will be launched on the SpaceX Falcon 9 CRS 3 mission
They will be deployed into a 325×315 km 51.5 degree inclination orbit. You should be able to watch the launch live on NASA TV at
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv
A Sprite is a tiny, 3.5 by 3.5 cm, single-board spacecraft that was developed by Zac Manchester KD2BHC. It has a microcontroller, radio, and solar cells and is capable of carrying single-chip sensors, such as thermometers, magnetometers, gyroscopes, and accelerometers.
The 200 Sprites are carried in a 3U CubeSat called KickSat. They are stacked atop a spring-loaded pusher and secured by a nichrome burn wire system.
On reaching orbit KickSat will perform a de-tumble maneuver and establish communication with Cornell University’s ground station. After check-out, the spacecraft will be put in a sun-pointing attitude and spun up to maintain that attitude.
A command signal from the ground station will then trigger the deployment and the Sprites will be released as free-flying spacecraft. After deployment, telemetry and sensor measurements from the individual Sprites will be received through Cornell’s ground station in Ithaca, NY, as well as several other amateur ground stations around the world.
Due to the low orbit Sprites will have a short lifetime before they re-enter the atmosphere and burn up. In the best-case scenario the orbital lifetime could be six weeks but realistically it may be considerably shorter depending on atmospheric conditions.
All Sprites operate on a single frequency of 437.240 MHz and use Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA). The transmitter runs 10 mW output of Minimum Shift Keying (MSK) modulated binary data with each data bit modulated as a 511 bit Pseudo-Random Number (PRN) sequence. The ITU emission designator is 50K0G1D.
The KickSat CubeSat has downlinks on 437.505 MHz and 2401-2436.2 MHz.
KickSat Sprite Ground Station by Andy Thomas G0SFJ
http://kicksat.wordpress.com/support/kic...d-station/
British Interplanetary Society: Sprite Technical Summary
http://www.bis-space.com/2013/03/09/9301...al-summary
KickSat project information
http://zacinaction.github.io/kicksat/
KickSat on KickStarter
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/zacinaction/
kicksat-your-personal-spacecraft-in-space/
Check this site for the latest CRS 3 launch date
http://spaceflightnow.com/tracking/
Idee? Laat maar weten hieronder!
73s ON5YK