ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„sā€™ satellite will hitch a ride on a rocket

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The University of Louisiana at ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ is one of four universities in the United States whose miniature, student-built satellites will get a free launch into orbit.

United Launch Alliance, a launch service provider, will take the schoolsā€™ CubeSats on future Atlas V rocket missions. A team of reviewers also chose to transport small satellites from the University of Texas at El Paso, Purdue University and the University of Michigan. Selection criteria included schoolsā€™ mission objectives and ability to meet technical requirements.

A CubeSat can weigh up to 2.9 pounds. Itā€™s used to perform scientific research and explore new space technologies.

Dr. Paul Darby, an assistant professor in UL ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ā€™s Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, said the Universityā€™s CubeSat will gather data about matter expelled from the sun during solar flares and other sun-related activity, which are called coronal mass ejections.

UL ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ā€™s satellite will be launched into a highly elliptical orbit; its altitude will range from about 125 miles to 21,700 miles. That path will provide a chance to study effects of coronal mass ejections ā€œon the Earthā€™s magnetic field, emitted light spectra, and the Earthā€™s radiation belts at a continuum of distances away from our planet,ā€ Darby said.

He estimates it would cost about $100,000 to launch the Universityā€™s satellite if it had not been able to book a ride on an Atlas IV mission. The Louisiana Coronal Mass Ejection Correlation Experiment Satellite is scheduled to go into orbit in late fall of 2018.

Darby and Dr. Andy Hollerman, a UL ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ physics professor, are co-investigators of the CubeSat project. They are seeking about $50,000 for expenses related to a student teamā€™s design and construction of the satellite.

United Launch Allianceā€™s rideshare program, CubeCorp, ā€œencourages hands-on science, technology, engineering and math experience to motivate, educate and develop the next generation of rocket scientists and space entrepreneurs,ā€ according to its website.

The company has successfully launched over 100 conventional satellites and 55 CubeSats. Itā€™s a partnership between Lockheed Martin and Boeing Co.

UL ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ students were the first students at a Louisiana university to design, build and launch a working satellite. CAPE1 was sent into orbit from a site in the Republic of Kazakhstan in 2007.

 

Photo: This picosatellite built by UL ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ students was sent into orbit in 2007.