NASA SuitSat

SirUlli

Senior member
Jan 13, 2003
828
0
0
Using a simple police scanner or ham radio, you can listen to a disembodied spacesuit circling Earth.

January 26, 2006: One of the strangest satellites in the history of the space age is about to go into orbit. Launch date: Feb. 3rd. That's when astronauts onboard the International Space Station (ISS) will hurl an empty spacesuit overboard.
...

Full Story

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2006/26jan_suitsat.htm

and

THIS IS SUITSAT-1 RS0RS!!

These words will echo from space in the near future, inspiring students, exciting ham radio operators and touching the world.

Sir Ulli
 

Assimilator1

Elite Member
Nov 4, 1999
24,151
516
126
lol ,thanks Ulli

Pitty I don't have a reciever that goes that high.......maybe my old 'airband' reciever could go that high ,I haven't the faintest idea where it is though!
 

SirUlli

Senior member
Jan 13, 2003
828
0
0
Originally posted by: Assimilator1
lol ,thanks Ulli

Pitty I don't have a reciever that goes that high.......maybe my old 'airband' reciever could go that high ,I haven't the faintest idea where it is though!

i think that networkman has the right equipment for ths...

Sir Ulli

 

networkman

Lifer
Apr 23, 2000
10,436
1
0
Originally posted by: SirUlli
Originally posted by: Assimilator1
lol ,thanks Ulli

Pitty I don't have a reciever that goes that high.......maybe my old 'airband' reciever could go that high ,I haven't the faintest idea where it is though!

i think that networkman has the right equipment for ths...

Sir Ulli

At the moment, my receiver is in the shop for an upgrade but my mentor has his receivers ready to go, so we'll be able to pick up "SuitSat" without any problem at all.

On that same note, we're in the process of soldering together some new receiver kits and antennas for a project to detect lightning concentrations in the spring storms. A couple guys from NASA and a local weather station have expressed interest in seeing what data we collect.



 

Spacehead

Lifer
Jun 2, 2002
13,067
9,858
136
SUITSAT IS SILENT: Space is cold--apparently too cold for SuitSat's batteries. The Earth-orbiting spacesuit stopped transmitting shortly after it was thrown overboard from the International Space Station on Feb. 3rd. Probable cause: lack of power.

SuitSat will continue to orbit Earth for weeks, spiraling slowly into the atmosphere. Stay tuned for information about seeing SuitSat in the night sky.
More info here(with a cool picture of a Green Flash sunset)
 

SirUlli

Senior member
Jan 13, 2003
828
0
0
For Immediate Release---

Silver Spring, Maryland
4 February 2006 at 22:00 UTC

Paraphrasing Mark Twain....the demise of SuitSat-1 is high exaggerated!!

It is now nearly 24 hours since the successful deployment of the SuitSat-1 experiment. These past 24 hours have been a wild ride of emotions...tremendous highs...deep lows when people reported no signals and said SuitSat-1 was dead and now....some optimism.

It is absolutely clear that SuitSat-1 is alive. It was successfully turned on by the ISS crew prior to deploy and the timing, micro-controller functions and audio appear to be operating nominally. The prime issue appears to be an extremely weak signal.

I have heard several recordings and have monitored two passes today. When the signal is above the noise level, you can clearly hear partials of the student voices, the station ID and the SSTV signal. One of the complicating factors in reception is the very deep fades that occur due to the spin of SuitSat.

Based on the information we know thus far, one can narrow down the issue to the antenna, the feedline, the transmitter output power and/or any of the connections in between. Through your help, we would like to narrow down the issue further and also gather some internal telemetry from the Suit. If the transmitter is running at full power, we would expect the Suit to end operations in the next few days to a week. If it is not, then it will operate much longer. Since we do not know how long this experiment will last, we ask for those with powerful receive stations to listen for Suitsat---especially during direct overhead passes when the Suit is closest to your area. If you can record these passes and send the audio to us, it would be most appreciated. We will continue to be optimistic that this issue will right itself before the batteries are depleted. So please KEEP LISTENING!

Based on what we have learned, we would like to provide the following guidelines to save you time and facilitate gathering information.
1) You need as high a gain antenna as possible with mast mounted pre-amps. An arrow is the minimal set...it provides very brief snipets of the communications. HTs and scanners won't cut it.
2) I would not waste your time on passes below 40 degrees elevation. SuitSat is too far from your station to receive a reliable signal. We have found that closest approach provides several seconds of SuitSat communication with 22 element yagis.
3) The "gold" we are looking for right now is the telemetry information and how long the vehicle stays operational. So if you hear any of the telemetry, please let us know.

We are also working to get the voice repeater set up on ISS to downlink SuitSat audio on 437.80 in the event that the ISS Kenwood radio can receive the SuitSat transmissions. The repeater may be operational as early as mid-day Sunday. Please do NOT transmit on 145.99, voice or packet, until we have confirmed that SuitSat is no longer transmitting. These transmissions interfere with our ability to hear SuitSat.

While the transmission part of the SuitSat experiment has not been stellar, SuitSat-1 has been tremendously successful in several areas. Some of these successes include:

-We have captured the imagination of students and the general public worldwide through this unique experiment
-The media attention to the SuitSat project represents one of the biggest ever for amateur radio
-We have had well over 2 million internet hits on www.suitsat.org today
-Our student's creative artwork, signatures and voices have been carried in space and are on-board the spacesuit---the students are now space travelers as the Suit rotates and orbits the Earth
-Carried in the spacesuit CD are pictures of Roy Neal, K6DUE, and Thomas Kieselbach, DL2MDE, two of our colleagues who have contributed to the ARISS program and have since passed away
-We successfully deployed an amateur radio satellite in a Spacesuit from the ISS, demonstrating to the space agencies that this can be safely done.
-This ARISS international team was able to fabricate, test and deliver a safe ham radio system to the ISS team 3 weeks after the international space agencies agreed to allow SuitSat to happen. This was a tremendous feat in of itself.

SuitSat-1/Radioskaf is a space pioneering effort. Pioneering efforts are challenging. Risk is high. But the future payoff is tremendous. As you have seen, we have not had total success. But we have captured the imagination of the students and the general public. And we have already learned a lot from this activity. This will help us and others grow from this experience.

Keep your spirits up and let's continue to be optimistic. And please keep monitoring!!

73, Frank H. Bauer, KA3HDO
ARISS International Chairman
AMSAT-NA VP for Human Spaceflight Programs

taken from here

http://wdrblog.de/raumfahrt/#kommentar4990-link

Sir Ulli
 

Assimilator1

Elite Member
Nov 4, 1999
24,151
516
126
I heard on the BBC the other day that it died after about 2days ,pitty but like they said they've certainly had some successes with it
 
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