First Results from INSPIRESAT-1

Amal Chandran, Thomas Woods, Richard Kohnert, Robert Sewell, Bennet Schwab, James Mason, Anant Kumar, Spencer Boyajian, Priyadarshnam, P. Raveendranath, Dhruva Datta, Joji Varghese, Mallikarjun Kompella, Aman Naveen, Aroshish Priyadarshan, Loren C. Chang, Chi Kuang Chao

研究成果: 雜誌貢獻會議論文同行評審

摘要

INSPIRESat-1 (IS-1) is the flagship mission under the INternational Satellite Program In Research and Education (INSPIRE). IS-1 launched on February 14 at 00:30 UTC to a sun synchronous dawn-dusk orbit onboard the Indian Space Research Organization's PSLV C52 mission. First contact was established with the spacecraft 45 minutes after launch. IS-1 has returned more than 10000 beacons in its first 10 days in orbit and the first science instruments were turned on by February 27th. The IS-1 carries two scientific instruments: The Compact Ionospheric Probe (CIP) developed at National Central University (NCU) for studying Earth's dynamic ionosphere and the Dual-zone Aperture X-ray Solar Spectrometer (DAXSS) developed at LASP for studying the highly-variable solar X-ray radiation. The IS-1 spacecraft was primarily developed at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado with significant contributions from the Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology (IIST), NCU of Taiwan and Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore. In this paper we will present details on spacecraft performance in a unique dawn dusk orbit which presents thermal challenges not encountered frequently by nano-satellite platforms. We also present preliminary science results from its two instruments. The spacecraft completed its primary six-month mission on August 14th 2022.

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期刊Proceedings of the International Astronautical Congress, IAC
2022-September
出版狀態已出版 - 2022
事件73rd International Astronautical Congress, IAC 2022 - Paris, France
持續時間: 18 9月 202222 9月 2022

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