Armadillo
Armadillo
Armadillo
Armadillo
Satellite name Armadillo (Attitude Related Maneuvers And Debris Instrument in Low (L) Orbit)
Spacecraft type CubeSat
Units or mass 3U
Status Reentry 2022-08-23. Was operational (Beaconed but ground station software issues delayed commanding to January 2022 as per SmallSat 2022 paper)
Launched 2019-06-25
NORAD ID 44352
Deployer P-POD (Poly-Picosatellite Orbital Deployer)
Launcher Falcon Heavy
Organisation The University of Texas at Austin
Institution University
Entity type Academic / Education
Nation US
Partners Baylor University
Oneliner

Characterize in-situ sub-millimeter level dust and debris particles in LEO.

Description

Characterize in-situ sub-millimeter level dust and debris particles in LEO by sensing impacts at varying times, directions and locations. Demonstrate ionospheric radio-occultation within a single CubeSat volume (10 cm x 10 cm x 10 cm) using a software-defined dual frequency GPS receiver. Train students in best systems engineering practices by executing a complete spacecraft life cycle from concept design to mission operations. Precise attitude control for nanosatellites, a cold-gas micropropulsion system and a miniaturized dust/debris detector.

Sources [1] [2] [3]
Photo sources [1] [2] [3]
Keywords Propulsion

Last modified: 2023-06-03

Feel free to connect at any time.

Created by Erik Kulu

Email: erik.kulu@nanosats.eu
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/erikkulu

Social Platforms

LinkedIn: Nanosats
Twitter: @nanosatellites

Sister Websites

NewSpace Index: newspace.im
Factories in Space: factoriesinspace.com

Copyright © 2014 - 2024 Erik Kulu