TubeSat Personal Satellite

Science
TubeSat Personal Satellite

TubeSat makes space your personal laboratory. You build a satellite the size of a large soup can, get it launched into a 310km Earth orbit moving 17,000 miles an hour, and talk to it via ham radio a few times a day for 1โ€“3 months. Smile as you reflect on your new skills in surface-mount soldering, amateur radio (youโ€™ll need a license), spacecraft control, solar power, and, yes, rocket science.

Even with a kit, building a satellite requires significant time and skill-building. Youโ€™ll need to order (or make) two-layer PCBs, and master reflow soldering to attach the fragile solar cells. But the manual is clear, you donโ€™t need much math or science, and an online community shares techniques. Iโ€™m adding an ion engine to my TubeSat, which brings high-voltage electronics, micro-machining, and calculus into the mix.

The kit and launch cost $8,000 for academics and citizen scientists. (A larger CubeSat kit is $19,125, and Arduino versions of both are in development.) Success isnโ€™t guaranteed โ€” rockets fail, space radiation breaks electronics, and launch stresses can shake a satellite apart. (Test yours in a near-space balloon first.)

My TubeSat launches in spring 2012, and one thingโ€™s for sure: when itโ€™s all done, and the satellite burns up, Iโ€™ll never look at a shooting star the same way again.

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