TSAT (TestSat-Lite) (original) (raw)
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TSAT [Taylor University]
TSAT (TestSat-Lite) is a nanosatellite designed and built by engineering students at Taylor University in Upland. It is built on a double CubeSat form factor.
TSAT is a dual mission using the GlobalStar satellite communication modem to demonstrate a reliable and global nanosat network and a Space Weather bus design consisting of a langmuir plasma probe, 3-axis magnetometer, and 3 ultraviolet photodiodes.
In February 2012, TSAT was down-selected for a launch opportunity through the NASA ELaNa program. It has completed final pre-launch tests and was delivered to NASA for launch in early 2014.
TSAT was launched on 18 April 2014 as a secondary payload on a Falcon-9 v1.1 rocket on the ELaNa-5 mission. It reentered the earth atmosphere on 28 May 2014.
The GlobalStar communication experiments are continued on the GEARRS satellites.
Nation: | USA |
---|---|
Type / Application: | Technology |
Operator: | Taylor University |
Contractors: | Taylor University |
Equipment: | |
Configuration: | CubeSat (2U) |
Propulsion: | None |
Power: | Solar cells, batteries |
Lifetime: | |
Mass: | 2 kg |
Orbit: | 301 km × 332 km, 51.65� |
Satellite | COSPAR | Date | LS | Launch Vehicle | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
TSAT (TestSat-Lite) | 2014-022C | 18.04.2014 | CC SLC-40 | Falcon-9 v1.1 | with Dragon CRS-3, OPALS, HDEV, ALL-STAR/THEIA, KickSat 1, SporeSat 1, PhoneSat 2.5 |