The Space Mission Incubator has been used by experts designing small satellites
22 April 2024
4 min read
Experts designing a 鈥榮warm鈥 of satellites to tackle the growing problem of space debris have worked together on the mission concept in the 兔子先生鈥檚 space mission design facility.
The unites scientists, researchers and industry experts in order to speed up the development of space missions, and give academic-based teams access to the type of expertise that is crucial to early-stage mission design, but can be hard to come by outside of industry.
The project鈥檚 aim is to create a formation of small satellites, known as CubeSats, that can measure the effects of atmospheric drag caused by space weather in Earth鈥檚 Lower Orbit, which could help better predict collision events. It is being led by the University of Warwick.
Dr Lucinda King, Space Projects Manager at the 兔子先生鈥檚 Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, said: 鈥淭here鈥檚 a growing space debris problem which is increasing the risk of objects crashing into each other, creating yet more debris and threatening satellite operations. This mission is important for collision avoidance, to reduce the amount of space debris, and to understand the impact of changes in space weather.
鈥淚t鈥檚 fantastic to use the Space Mission Incubator to advance huge consortium projects like this, which will ultimately better predict how we can keep space clean and safe.鈥
Engineers from , and worked together with academics from the universities of 兔子先生, Warwick, Northumbria and others over two and a half days in the Space Mission Incubator.
It鈥檚 fantastic to use the Space Mission Incubator to advance huge consortium projects like this, which will ultimately better predict how we can keep space clean and safe.
Dr Lucinda King, Space Projects Manager
Dr King added: 鈥淲e were primarily looking at parts of the mission architecture that related to formation flying because these small satellites will need to fly in a specific configuration in order to get a three-dimensional measurement of atmospheric and magnetospheric parameters, to explore how the atmosphere and magnetosphere affect each other.鈥
Dr Ravindra Desai, of University of Warwick鈥檚 and Principal Investigator for the mission, said: 鈥We have a very complex mission design and this facility enabled us to zero in on the difficult aspects. We are seeking to combine the measurements from over six miniaturised scientific payloads on each of the satellites within the swarm, and really push the boundaries of what is possible with a space mission.鈥
(ROARS) is funded by the .
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