📄 Extracted Text (2,672 words)
A survey of nanosatellites by The Economist below. A big GEO satellite can weigh > 5,000 kg.
The goal with GOOG's WorldVu is 100 kg about the same as Skybox.
Many things like Oculus Rift VR headsets benefit from the peace dividend which is low cost
electronics manufactured at scale for handsets.
onomist.cominews/technology-quarterly/21603240-sma I l-sat el lites-lak ing-
il piLVS, \VW, .CC
advantaw-smartphones-and-other-consumemechnologies
Small satellites: Taking advantage of smartphones and other consumer technologies, tiny
satellites are changing the space business
Jun 7th 2014
ALTHOUGH widely used, satellites are expensive to build and to launch. That began to change
last year. On November 19th Orbital Sciences, an American company, launched a rocket from
the Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia. It carried 29 satellites aloft and released them into low-
Earth orbit, a record for a single mission. Thirty hours later, Kosmotras, a Russian joint-venture,
carried 32 satellites into a similar orbit. Then, in January 2014, Orbital Sciences carried 33
satellites up to the International Space Station (ISS), where they were cast off a month later.
Many of these 94 satellites were built in a standard format known as a CubeSat, a 10cm (4 inch)
cube weighing 1.3kg (2.91b) or less. Some comprised units of two or three cubes. After a decade
of fits and starts, during which some 75 CubeSats were launched, satellites of this scale and
other small satellites are moving from being experimental kit to delivering useful scientific data
and commercial services.
In the next five years or so some 1,000 nanosats, as small satellites of 1-10kg are called, are
expected to be launched. Some will be smaller than a CubeSat; others bigger and heavier. Some
are like a matryoshka doll: the Russian launch included a satellite that launched eight smaller
ones, including four PocketQubes (a 5cm cube format). One of these smaller satellites,
developed in Peru, released its own tiny bird.
There will be upsets along the way. In April, as part of a mission by SpaceX, an American
company, to resupply the 1SS, a small mothership was placed in orbit carrying 104 "sprites"
(pictured below). Not much larger than a postage stamp, these contain all the basic elements of a
satellite, such as a radio, aerials, a solar cell and instruments. Developed as part of a crowd-
funded project called KickSat at Cornell University, each sprite cost just $25 in parts. Their
launch was free, courtesy of NASA, the American space agency. The sprites were designed to
remain in orbit for a few weeks collecting data before burning up on re-entry. Unfortunately, due
to a fault with a timer, the mothership failed to release them before it burned up on re-entry. A
second mission is now being planned.
Despite that setback, the way ahead for satellite technology is clear. "You can now, with a single
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chip, create most of the capabilities that you would have found in Sputnik, but, of course, orders
of magnitude faster," says Mason Peck, a former chief technologist at NASA and now a
professor at Cornell University.
The most ambitious project to date is a flock of 28 nanosats, each one three CubeSats in size (ie,
30cm long). These were carried to the ISS in January and released in batches (pictured at the
beginning of this article) through a sort of satellite shooter developed by NanoRacks, an
American company. These nanosats came from Planet Labs, a firm based in San Francisco. The
satellites now take pictures as they scan the Earth more frequently than traditional ones and at a
fraction of the cost, albeit at a lower resolution.
Planet Labs, funded modestly with $65m of private investment, says its nanosats provide much
of the performance of a conventional satellite for a fraction of the cost. That reflects a lot of
antiquated technology in the space business, much of which can be bettered by the latest off-the-
shelf equipment, says Will Marshall, Planet Labs' boss. There are other cost-savin measures.
Satellites are usual] built in elaborate clean rooms, but
The company expects to put another 100
nanosats into orbit in the next 12 to 18 months.
A few miles away, in another modest San Francisco office, Nanosatisfi is working on its
ArduSats. These arc open-source platforms and two have already gone up. They will contain an
array of sensors and can carry out various missions, such as locating things. More than 250,000
ships, for instance, now broadcast an automatic identification signal than carries about 50
nautical miles. A fleet of small satellites in low orbit could pick up these signals and provide
frequent updates about the ships' positions without the vessels having to use costly dedicated
satellite uplinks. Such a system might have been able to track Malaysian Airlines flight MH370,
which went missing in March.
Farther south in Mountain View, Skybox captures high-resolution imaging data from its first
satellite in orbit as it prepares another 23 to launch in the coming years. Some things, though,
can be shrunk only so far and larger satellites arc needed for a telesco to obtain the hi er
resolutions required for the firm's analysis.
fairly common size for small satellites, the firm proved its concept to investors using CubeSats.
"Being able to put something in space at very low cost allows you to demonstrate the
technology to get more money," says Dan Berkenstock, one of the company's founders.
The CubeSat specification came out of the academic world in the late 1990s. Bob Twiggs, then
at Stanford University and now at Morehead State University, was frustrated by long delays on a
large-satellite programme and set about thinking how much satellite capability might be
crammed into a much smaller craft that could be launched cheaply. Space launches usually
comprise one or more primary payloads and require ballast to balance the rocket. CubeSats,
reasoned Mr Twiggs, could take the place of some of this ballast, so long as they did not
jeopardise the main mission. The optimum size Mr Twiggs came up with was based on a box
used to display Beanie Babies. Later, with Jordi Puig-Suari of California Polytechnic State
University, it was turned into a full specification. Mr Twiggs also developed the 5cm
PocketQube, which has a maximum weight of 180 grammes.
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Small satellites benefit from the constant improvements in price and performance being achieved
by the consumer-electronics industry, particularly in smartphones. A typical phone is now likely
to contain an accelerometer to measure how fast it is moving, a magnetometer to detect
magnetic fields and provide a compass reading, a GPS receiver to pick up satellite data, multiple
radios, a gyroscope to measure its position, a barometer to detect pressure, two cameras and
much more.
Last year the world's first "phonesat" went into orbit. It was a Google Nexus One smartphone
incorporated into a three-unit CubeSat called STRaND-1. This was built by Surrey Satellite
Technology, a British firm that specialises in small satellites and which is part of the European
Airbus group. The idea was to test the components of the smartphone in a space environment.
The phone was loaded with a number of experimental apps for such things as taking
photographs and recording magnetic fields during orbit.
s my smartphone in there?
Smartphones and other consumer electronics provide a wealth of ready-made technologies that
can enable a CubeSat to perform many of the functions of a satellite a hundred times heavier and
much larger, but at substantially less cost. Including the launch, a nanosat of CubeSat dimensions
might cost $150,000-1m, rather than $200m-1 billion for a full-sized one.
Low cost and a tolerance of less-stringent standards allow multiple nanosats to be built faster.
This allows for a higher risk of failure. Nanosats have a relatively short life, which might be no
more than a year or two in low-Earth orbit before re-entering the atmosphere and burning up.
Planet Labs, for one, expects to replace some of its nanosats with new versions every year.
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Into space in a flash
In an industry in which preparing some missions has taken decades, the speed at which nanosats
can be developed and put into orbit makes the biggest in the space business take notice. NASA
has also found ways to leverage the consumer-electronics industry, says Bruce Yost of the space
agency's Ames Research Centre in California. His group (some former members of which
founded Planet Labs) has launched five phonesats and is now planning a small fleet of them to
experiment with communications between satellites.
Nanosat parts are readily available to researchers. One supplier, Pumpkin, operates from a
residential San Francisco neighbourhood. Andrew Kalman, its founder, started in 2000 selling
standard components that Mr Twiggs and his colleagues at Stanford needed. Pumpkin now sells
items ranging from brackets for a few hundred dollars up to complete systems for hundreds of
thousands of dollars. The company has also supplied America's National Reconnaissance Office
with 12 three-unit CubeSats to help the agency demonstrate the technology.
Although many satellites already circle the globe taking pictures, some of the images may not be
updated for days, months or even years. Commercial services can provide relatively rapid
satellite images on demand, a number of them taking pictures down to a resolution of 50cm (ie,
50cm x 50cm per pixel, the legal limit in America for commercial satellites, although military
ones can peer closer). But such satellites may cover only part of the globe each day. Once their
fleets are complete, Planet Labs will offer images with resolutions of between 500cm to 300cm
and Skybox, with its bigger minisatellites, 90cm. The companies will provide pictures that can be
updated in hours for a variety of scientific and commercial applications.
They could, for instance, be used to track environmental conditions, illegal tree-felling or
changes in the course of rivers—which, even in their initial deployment, Planet Labs has
discovered happen surprisingly often. The frequency of satellite passes opens up many new
possibilities, says Skybox's Mr Berkenstock. His firm can offer a stream of analysis, such as the
number of trees in a forest or the number of cars at various times of the day in parking lots
across America. Transport patterns can be followed, infrastructure monitored, the planting of
fields, plumes from smokestacks and ships in ports can all be observed. Overlaying more and
more data will provide much richer visualisation, adds Mr Berkenstock.
Nor will all the nanosats be looking downwards. Sensors facing sideways and upwards from low-
Earth orbit will allow researchers to carry out a large number of experiments and to take
measurements that have previously been too costly to consider. This includes detecting solar and
cosmic radiation, interactions between magnetic fields and other forces which together make up
what is called space weather. Measuring and predicting space weather could be used to protect
billion-dollar satellites and prevent astronauts from receiving high doses of radiation. Many
satellites measure aspects of space weather, but they tend to do so only in certain directions. Part
of the failed KickSat experiment was to use the sprites to see if arrays of inexpensive devices
could constantly monitor such forces.
Nanosats may be inexpensive, but resisting gravity's inexorable ull comes with a rice tag.
Although there is no standard price list for a launch, b0 to put
00,000. Jeff
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Foust, an analyst at Futron, a consultancy, studies launch costs and says herarStainariall
WIANC ti0,000
These prices put nanosats in the reach not just of small firms, but also of start-ups and
researchers relying on academic grants. Some schools are also planning nanosat experiments.
Bulk-buying launches for heavier combined payloads can work out, per kilo, even cheaper. And
these costs could come down, too.
The firm's Falcon 9
rocket recently demonstrated a successful controlled descent of its booster stage, which would
allow it to be reused.
nterorbital's nano rocket
There is plenty of innovation in putting smaller payloads into space. Interorbital Systems, a
Californian company, recently carried out a successful suborbital test flight of a small rocket
(pictured right) designed to carry a I 45kg payload. The company has presold berths for dozens
of CubeSats at $13,000-38,000 per unit, as well as its own TubeSat format, which it offers to
academia as kit and launch for $8,000.
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NASA will test an air-launched system in 2016 with Generation Orbit, an Atlanta company. It
uses a Gulfstream G-IV executive jet to carry aloft a rocket which it fires off to put 45-50kg
a loads into low-Earth orbit.
ed rog
Neither Generation Orbit or Virgin Galactic may come down much on price, as both see a profit
to be made in offering regular launches, even weekly ones. Operators whose nanosats ride
shotgun as ballast in other missions do not have much control over when they launch or the
orbits they reach, says William Pomerantz, the head of special projects at Virgin Galactic. John
Olds, boss of Generation Orbit, says that as constellations of nanosats increase, placing them in a
precise orbit will be critical in keeping small-satellite networks operating.
The nanosat wars
Nanosats also face two other limiting factors: communications and propulsion. Those used for
academic work principally rely on amateur-radio frequencies, with basic equipment squeezed
into the CubeSat form. Transmission and reception are further hindered by the size of antennae
or dishes, both on the ground and on the satellites. Many academic projects set up their own
listening stations and recruit space buffs who can use inexpensive kit, but these work on an
informal basis. Companies tend to use licensed frequencies and plump for more expensive radio
gear to handle their data flows. More development in communications equipment and investment
in ground stations would improve things.
The other bugbear, propulsion, is harder to solve. Currently, launch operators can prevent
nanosats carrying hazardous propellants that might be used to power them to another orbit. Nor
have engineers had a reason to design tiny spaceship engines using safer fuel. But they do now.
Even a basic capability to push in one direction would allow nanosats to remain in orbit longer,
or allow a satellite that has been placed into low-Earth orbit, using an inexpensive launch
provider, to nudge itself to a higher geostationary orbit. And some might travel far beyond
Earth.
Benjamin Longmier of the University of Michigan and founder of Aether Industries, which
makes equipment for high-altitude research, has begun production of a nanosat propulsion
system based on his previous work at the Johnson Space Centre in Texas. This is a rocket that
uses ionised propellants accelerated by magnetic fields. He has been able to scale this down to
CubeSat size, using liquid water or solid iodine as the propellant. Dr Longmier says the system
could allow a constellation of satellites to remain in the correct position relative to one another,
move satellites to polar orbit from less-expensive launch insertions or increase an orbit.
Surrey Satellite Technology's STRaND-1 also contained a couple of experimental propulsion
systems. One is a re-entry device that ejects a mixture of water and alcohol to tip the nanosat out
of orbit at the end of its useful life. The other is an array of pulsed-plasma thrusters which heat
and evaporate a material to produce a charged gas to push the satellite along.
NASA has plans to offer a $5m prize using a six-unit CubeSat for groups to demonstrate ways
both to communicate across large distances and display the effective use of unconventional
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propellants. Jennifer Gustetic, in charge of NASA's prizes, says the winner will have to show
that their systems are survivable and can be operated far out into space. The programme is still
at an early stage, but it could involve transporting the CubeSats for release into orbit around the
Moon. But NASA has competition. Dr Longmier believes his technology can beat NASA to the
Moon without the use of an additional spacecraft to carry the CubeSats there. And James Cutler,
a satellite-propulsion expert now also at the University of Michigan, thinks he can propel small
birds even deeper into space. Let the nanosat wars begin.
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