National Space Conference

Torsdag d. 24. marts drog 4 studerende og en lektor fra Aarhus Universitet til DTU for at deltage i National Space Conference. Her hørte de en hel del om hvad fremtiden for Danmark i rummet bringer, hvilket var meget relevant for DISCOs arbejde. Blandt andet handlede et af panelerne om hvordan man kan bruge satellitter til at optimere vanding af marker. Dette bunder i nogle af de samme klima mål som vi også har.

De studerende var så heldige at overvære annonceringen af Andreas Mogensens næste mission, hvilket vi jo synes lyder super spændende! Da Andreas deltog var vi også så heldige at han havde lidt tid til at snakke med os, og så fik vi også taget et billede!

Sidst på dagen blev det sidste panel skippet til fordel for en rundtur på DTU Space, givet af selve institutlederen. Vi fik her mødt nogle medstuderende fra AAU! På rundvisningen så vi bl.a. deres kontrolrum, der får AUs kontrolrum til at blegne i sammenligning, vi fik set deres vakuumkamre, hvor de tester nogle af de ting de udvikler, og et af de rum, hvor de udvikler udstyr til fremtidige missioner. Dette var en enormt spændende tur, og vi følte os som VIP gæster!

Tusind tak til DTU for en spændende dag!

Workshop dag på ITU

English under the pictures

Mandag d. 14. marts var der workshop om jordstationer på ITU i København. Det var en spændende dag, med deltagere fra ITU, AU og SDU. Udover alt det faglige fik de studerende mulighed for endelig at mødes på tværs af universiteterne. Dette har været tiltrængt, da på trods af at programmet har været i gang i over et år, så har COVID-19 sat en stopper for meget fysik fremmøde.

Workshoppen gav mulighed for at arbejde på tværs af de forskellige universiteter og institutter, hvilket de studerende udnyttes til fulde. Hos alle de forskellige sessions i workshoppen stod de studerende sammen for at løse de udfordringer der opstod i løbet af dagen.

De forskellige sessions havde til formål at få de studerende til bedre at forstå hvordan man generelt kommunikerer med en satellit, hvordan antennerne bygges, og hvilket software der skal til selve kommunikationen. Der var mange praktiske elementer, da de studerende fik lov til selv at bygge en S-båndsparabol. Derudover var der noget lidt mere ‘kodetungt’, da de arbejdede både med pointing af en antenne og med at hente et signal ned, og afkode dette.

Alt i alt var det en super spændende og produktiv workshop.

Afslutning og opsamling

Monday the 14th of March students from the DISCO team had a workshop on the ITU, with the theme of groundstations. It was a really exiting day with participants from ITU, AU and SDU! Other than the scientific cases that was presented, was it also an opportunity for the students to chat and meet one another across universities. This was much-needed as even though the program has been running for over a year, the meeting in person has been limited by Covid-19.

During the workshop the opportunity to work together across universities and instituts arose, this was something the students enjoyed! The different sessions of the workshop called for cooperation, so the studentes solved the different assignment and problems together.

The different sessions had the goal for the students to better understand how to communicate with the satellites, how an antenna is build and what software is used for the communication. There were practical elements, such as building a S-band parabola antenna, but also more computational task, both when working with the pointing of the antenna and how to download a signal and decode the signal.

All in all it was a great day that the students and lecturers will look back at fondly.

Welcome to the DISCO project

DISCO = Danish Student Cubesat Project

Press release March 2021

Danish students will launch their own satellite next summer

The Danish Students CubeSat Program DISCO will, in collaboration with the Danish company Space Inventer, launch its first satellite with a Falcon-9 rocket from the Kennedy Space Center next summer. The satellite will include a number of smaller student experiments as well as serve as a communication station for radio amateurs around the world.

The DISCO program has been created by Aalborg University, Aarhus University, University of Southern Denmark, IT University, the House of Natural Science and the Danish Industry Foundation as well as a number of space companies including GomSpace and Space Inventor to give students the opportunity to work with science and space technology in a practical way.

New possibilities

The launch of the first satellite has now been ordered from the company Momentus to take place next summer with a Falcon-9 rocket. The satellite will be a so-called CubeSat of 10x10x10 cm and with a mass of 1 kg. The satellite will contain a series of small experiments that the students are currently working on defining. One of the ideas is to investigate the possibility of using the same frequency as a regular wireless network, i.e. 2.4 GHz, to communicate between satellites. This could allow some of the subsequent DISCO satellites to send much larger amounts of data down to Earth. The data could e.g. be a picture that shows the development in the use of the Arctic regions as the ice around Greenland disappears.

To be used for teaching in both the universities and in high schools

“It is quite wild that I now, as part of my studies, am sitting and developing a communication unit for a satellite that I will help launching already next year,” says Aleksander Brøndum Bille, who is currently doing a bachelor project at the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Aarhus University. In his bachelor project, Aleksander will make a prototype of the ground stations that will be lent to Danish high schools after launch and thus give Danish high school students the opportunity to talk to the DISCO satellites.

Mission patch competition

All satellite missions have a cool mission patch and so must DISCO. We are therefore giving away an Astro Pi kit for the coolest mission patch for the DISCO program. For inspiration try the google mission patch. Astro Pi is a small Raspberry Pi computer developed by The Raspberry Pi Foundation in collaboration with the European Space Agency ESA. The Astro Pi kit consists of a Raspberry Pi 3, a Sence HAT card with a number of built-in measuring instruments, a camera and a power supply. The Astro Pi Kit enables you to develop experiments as they could be performed on a CubeSat.

Proposals for a mission patch for the DISCO program must be uploaded to the DISCO Facebook page before April 1 to enter the competition. https://www.facebook.com/DanishStudentCubeSatProgram

For more information:

Christoffer Karoff (AU)

karoff_at_geo.au.dk