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UCL's first satellite 'UCLSat' launched

29 June 2017

UCLSat

UCLSat, a satellite designed and built by UCL engineers and scientists, has been launched today from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in India as part of an international mission called QB50.

Originally conceived by the European Space Agency's Dr Ruedeger Reinhard, QB50 is a European Union-funded mission to support universities and schools from all over the world in designing, building and launching their own small, affordable satellites called CubeSats to collectively study the physics and chemistry of the middle and lower thermosphere of Earth for the first time.

"It's a really exciting mission from a scientific and engineering perspective, but it is also a fantastic opportunity for widening participation in space missions and making satellite technology affordable for developing countries. We hope it will inspire children globally to pursue a career in space science and engineering, and we hope people enjoy engaging with QB50 by tracking CubeSats orbiting overhead using radio receivers," said UCL project manager, Dr Robert Wicks (UCL Institute for Risk & Disaster Reduction).

UCL has been involved in QB50 since 2011 and in addition to working on UCLSat, UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory (UCL MSSL) engineers also produced hardware for 13 of the other satellites.

Professor Alan Smith, Director of UCL MSSL, said: "We made a strategic decision to invest in CubeSat technologies so that we might use them for front-line scientific research. With QB50, CubeSats come of age scientifically. Moreover, much about QB50 is innovative, including its payloads and its approach to development and operations, and UCL has been at the front of this innovation."

In total, 36 CubeSats are being launched - eight directly from the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle rocket launched today join the 28 that were released from the International Space Station in May. After launch, the CubeSats will disperse around Earth at a height of 375 - 500 km. They will be in orbit from between six months to two years while they run experiments before eventually falling back to Earth and burning up on entry.

Each CubeSat team will have a ground station collecting the data from the satellites, which will be analysed by scientists globally for a variety of research projects.

Dr Anasuya Aruliah
"Scientifically this is a unique experiment. For the first time we will have several months of simultaneous measurements of the thermosphere from many locations. We hope for detailed investigations of how solar flares and the solar wind influence the dynamics and chemistry of the upper atmosphere, and the risk to satellites and technology", explained Dr Anasuya Aruliah (UCL Astrophysics) who will be analysing the data collected from UCLSat.

Until now, Earth's thermosphere has only been studied in situ for minutes at a time using rockets. This is because the thermosphere is too near to the surface to send expensive satellites that would get pulled down by drag within six months, and it is too high for balloons and planes.

CubeSats, such as UCLSat, are an ideal solution as they are relatively cheap (a hundred thousand dollars compared to a few hundred million dollars of traditional space agency satellites) and are small enough to stay in orbit for up to two years. Together they will monitor the thermosphere over a range of altitudes. While in their decaying orbits, they will measure the chemical composition and particle and electron densities.

UCLSat carries one of the UCL MSSL-designed Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometers that will measure particles including oxygen and nitrogen. UCL scientists and engineers worked together to optimise its function and the value of the data it collects.

Dhiren Kataria (UCL MSSL), project lead responsible for the development and procurement of the scientific instruments for the mission, said: "Low resource miniaturised sensor systems are key to successful exploitation of CubeSats for science. We've successfully developed our instruments to fit within a fraction of the CubeSat volume but still have significantly advanced capabilities."

"To ensure UCLSat survives its journey to the thermosphere and operates once in orbit, we used specialist equipment on site at UCL MSSL to bake it, freeze it, shake it and shock it. This is an incredibly important step and we're pleased to say it passed all the tests before launch and we hope it remains operational for a number of years. Each CubeSat in the mission is slightly different and we're keen to see how they perform as it will help inform future satellite design," concluded Theophile Brochant de Villiers, Assembly, Integration and Test) Engineer on UCLSat (UCL MSSL).