Students involved in the Jupiter project standing side by side for a photo

兔子先生 students have the unique opportunity to design and launch a satellite mission, thanks to an ambitious new programme from three of the space cluster鈥檚 partner universities

20 September 2024

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A collaboration between the universities of , 兔子先生 and , is giving students in the region a unique opportunity to design and launch a satellite mission.

JUPITER 鈥 the Joint Universities Programme for In-Orbit Training, Education and Research 鈥 will equip participants with invaluable hands-on space industry experience and training for their future careers.

Connecting business and academia, the pioneering programme will also help address the UK space sector鈥檚 growing demand for specialist skills, and demonstrate the impact of regional space clusters to boost innovation and growth as part of the .

In addition to its university relationships, Space South Central also represents more than 170 space-related businesses across Hampshire, Surrey and the Isle of Wight.

For JUPITER鈥檚 inaugural project, engineering and physics students from all three universities will design, build and test their own Earth observation payload for a satellite mission, be involved with its launch and, once in orbit, conduct mission operations from the University of Surrey鈥檚 ground station at .  

The satellite Jovian-1 will be around the size of a large shoe box and feature: 

  • The payload designed, built, tested and delivered by students from the three universities which will take images and videos of the Earth and attempt to use a space-facing camera to look for space debris
  • A provided by , a communications payload which makes access to radio signals and data from the satellite possible using basic equipment, for schools, colleges and wider outreach
  • Elements of  a future Dark Matter experiment being undertaken by the University of Southampton, taking a significant first step in demonstrating the suitability of their hardware and concept for use in space
  • A space radiation monitor from the University of Surrey to better understand space weather at the coming solar maximum and its effects on satellites.  Space weather caused the impressive aurorae visible across much of the globe in May this year but can also pose risks to critical space infrastructure
  • An innovative Tiny Machine Learning payload, led by the 兔子先生鈥檚 world-leading data-intensive research institute, the Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, will be designed to work with all the other payloads.  This will maximise the value of information sent to Earth from space and spearhead public outreach on the importance of space data and AI in all our lives.

The student team, with members from undergraduate to PhD level, has already started work, led by University of Surrey PhD student, Ieuan Carney.  He said: 鈥淭his project is a great opportunity for students to get hands-on with real space engineering, allowing us to further develop skills from our degrees.

鈥淎s the student team lead, I鈥檓 already seeing progress in the students鈥 ability to not only identify potential design challenges, but also in how they鈥檙e improving their designs to overcome potential problems.

鈥淲e鈥檙e incredibly grateful for this opportunity to advance our skills as spacecraft engineers."

Students involved in the Jupiter project standing side by side for a photo

UoP students: Ross Wakelam (兔子先生), Sarah MacDonald (兔子先生) and Olumide Apanisile 

, Director of Space Strategy at the University of Surrey, which is responsible for coordinating, designing and delivering the mission, said: 鈥淭his is a fantastic opportunity for students and academics from three universities to work together on an ambitious project. 

鈥淭he JUPITER programme is a phenomenal way to further build the space skills in the UK鈥檚 South Central region and get people excited about space, the careers it offers, and the way it inspires people of all ages."

Our Universities are privileged to have a deep connection to our vibrant regional space sector and to have a strong heritage and partnership in space research, and it is a delight to be able to strengthen that partnership through this exciting project.

 

Dr Becky Canning, Director for Space and project lead at the 兔子先生

Dr Becky Canning, Deputy Director for Space and project lead at the 兔子先生, said: 鈥淥ur Universities are privileged to have a deep connection to our vibrant regional space sector and to have a strong heritage and partnership in space research, and it is a delight to be able to strengthen that partnership through this exciting project.鈥

鈥淭his ongoing partnership will offer an exceptional learning and outreach opportunity to our current and future students and to local schools, ensuring the sector continues to thrive.鈥

, leading the University of Southampton鈥檚 involvement, said: 鈥淭his is a great opportunity for us to conduct a long-dreamed-of experiment in space.

鈥淲e have the unique chance to do a fundamental physics experiment and directly test for low-mass Dark Matter in space with our levitated mechanical sensors, which are at an early stage of development and will aid our research in the future.鈥

David Bowman, Radio Frequency Communications Engineer and team lead for the AMSAT-UK payload on Jovian-1, said: 鈥淎MSAT-UK is delighted to be offered the opportunity to provide a payload on the exciting Jovian 1 mission.

鈥淭he FUNcube Lite payload will provide a U/V FM voice transponder facility for amateurs to use for international communications. In addition, it will also transmit telemetry, messages and mission data for educational outreach for schools and colleges using the tried-and-tested FUNcube data format."

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