Quantcast
Home arrow Science & Tech arrow Students test new 'space mail' delivery system
Thursday, 20 November 2008
 

TrekUnited Newsletter

Email
Confirm email
I prefer to receive
emails in HTML format

Click Here to Unsubscribe

View Newsletter Archive

Related Articles


 
 
 
Welcome Guest ( Register | Login )

  There are many great features available to you once you register at TrekUnited, including:
  • Richer content, access to many features that are disabled for guests like commenting on our news articles.
  • Create your own blog, or personal gallery.
  • Access to a great community, where you can interect with like minded individuals.
  • Access to our chat room, and guest chats.
  • Access to our network of sites, including Galactica.com.
  • Access to our submit news feature, members can try their hand at online journalism.
  • It's simple, it's easy and it's free
 



Students test new 'space mail' delivery system
Written by Derek Kessler on Friday, 14 September 2007
Rocket LaunchSpace.com: Sending scientific payloads into space is expensive business, and advanced rocket systems to return them to Earth don't help the price tags. On Friday Sept. 14, however, the Young Engineers Satellite 2 (YES2) will test an inexpensive "space mail" delivery system using a pendulum-like deployment to swing a lightweight payload back to Earth.

YES2, which will piggyback on a Foton-M3 capsule, is scheduled to launch into space at 7:00 a.m. EDT (1100 GMT) aboard a Soyuz-U rocket from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan. In addition to the student-built satellite, 40 experiments will be conducted aboard the main Foton capsule, including one with live geckos and newts.
   
YES2 is a spire-like payload is made of three main components: A red ball-like payload called Fotino; a support system called MASS; and a spring-loaded mechanism called FLOYD. Ground controllers will activate the package during Foton's final days in orbit.

"This will be moment the YES2 team has been waiting for," said Roger Walker, a YES2 project manager with the European Space Agency (ESA). "We hope to achieve a number of objectives: the deployment of the 30-kilometer (18.6-mile) tether, the successful de-orbit of the lightweight re-entry capsule using the tether rather than a rocket engine, and the survival of the capsule all the way to the ground."

The magic moment will start when spring-loaded FLOYD ejects Fotino and MASS on a tether made of Dyneema, the world's strongest man-made fiber. As MASS keeps the tether taut, gravity will swing the two-piece package toward the Earth like a pendulum on a string.

When Fotino reaches a "zero" point, MASS will cut the tether and drop Fotino directly towards the planet's surface. YES2's team of 450 students from across the globe hope their 12-pound (5.5 kilogram) device, five years in the making, will safely parachute to the arid steppes of Kazakhstan after reentry.

"If all goes well, we should have confirmation of landing," Walker said. Should the mechanism work, it could prove to be one of the most inexpensive systems to return an orbiting payload to the surface--a design that may be a boon to International Space Station experiments needing to reach eartbound scientists on a tight budget.

The ball-and-tether "space mail" delivery system, however, won't be the only payload reaching space about 171 miles (275 kilometers) above the Earth.

The Foton capsule will also carry 40 experiments weighing in at 882 pounds (400 kilograms). Scientists will use the results to explore fluid physics, biology, crystal growth, radiation exposure and exobiology in space.

NASA, which has some experiments aboard the ESA-led mission, is using the flight to test animal biology during Foton's 12-day orbit. One experiment will monitor the effects of microgravity on newts and geckos in aluminum containers.

Scientists at NASA's Ames Research Center, in Moffett Field, Calif., developed eight one-inch-deep (2.54-centimeter) aluminum boxes to house the animals, along with small video cameras, lights and water pumps.

"NASA's long-term goal is to use simple, easily maintained species to determine the biological responses to the rigors of spaceflight, including the virtual absence of gravity," said Kenneth Souza, a project scientist at NASA Ames, said of the experiment.

Discuss: TrekUnited Forum



Did you enjoy this article? Please bookmark it onto:
Reddit!Del.icio.us!Spurl!Wists!Simpy!Newsvine!Blinklist!Furl!Fark!Blogmarks!Yahoo!Smarking!Netvouz!Shadows!RawSugar!Ma.gnolia!FeedMeLinks!BlinkBits!Tailrank!linkaGoGo!Add this social bookmarking functionality to your website! title=
PDF Print E-mail
 
< Prev   Next >

"So you're all astronauts, on some kind of... Star Trek."

 

 
 

 

 
     
 

© 2008 TrekUnited - Uniting Star Trek Fans
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.
Template Design By: RoosterVision