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Sats caidos
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ZonaHam :: OTRAS BANDAS :: SATÉLITES
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Sats caidos
Ya sabemos qe hay un par de satelites ya fuera de servivio,el ARISS y el AO51 creo qe era,,,,entonces,porqe en la pagina de AMSAT siguen apareciendo como operativos??
anda qe si nos tenemos qe guiar de esas cosas lo llevamos claro.
73
anda qe si nos tenemos qe guiar de esas cosas lo llevamos claro.
73
ea4gdu- Socio
- Cantidad de envíos : 176
Edad : 43
Localización : madrid
Fecha de inscripción : 15/05/2011
Re: Sats caidos
Como veo que sabes inglés no te lo traduzco.
Sacado de http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/
"November 29, 2011
It is with a heavy heart I report that AO-51 has ceased transmission and is not responding to commands. The last telemetry data indicated that the third of six batteries was approaching failure to short, and observations indicate the voltage from three cells is insufficient to power the UHF transmitters. The IHU may continue to be operative. Initial tests with the S band transmitter were also not positive, although more attempts are in order. We have tried leaving the satellite in an expected state where if voltages climb high enough, the 435.150 transmitter may possibly be heard.
The command team will regularly attempt communications with the satellite over the coming months (and years). There is always the possibility that a cell will open and we could once again talk to our friend while illuminated. Thanks to all who helped fund, design, build, launch, command, and operate AO-51. It's 7 year mission has been extraordinary. Please support AMSAT's Fox-1 project, and other AMSAT projects worldwide with your time and money.
For the AO-51 Command Team,
73, Drew KO4MA
AMSAT-NA VP Operations"
____________
"ARISSat-1/KEDR Goes Silent
Reception reports indicate that ARISSat-1/KEDR has stopped transmitting on Wednesday, January 4, 2012. The last full telemetry captured and reported to the ARISSatTLM web site at 06:02:14 UTC on January 4 were received from ground stations as the satellite passed over Japan. You can view the full telemetry display or the condensed telemetry display. Telemetry reports showed that the temperature aboard ARISSat-1/KEDR had been rising as atmospheric drag began to affect the satellite. Final temperatures received via ARISSatTLM reported this data:
IHU 75 ° C / 167.0 °F
PSU 76 ° C / 168.8 °F
RF 88 ° C / 190.4 °F
Control Panel 61 ° C / 141.8 °F
Experiment 64 ° C / 147.2 °F
Tracking data from Space Command gave a Predicted Decay Time 0700 GMT +/- 3 Hours on January 4. Telemetry report narrows the impact time window to about 4 hours. The predicted decay location is 12.7° S, 354.3° E, an open part of the South Atlantic, well west of Angola. Send reports to the amsat-bb If you heard the satellite, even briefly, after 0600 UTC. This will help confirm the actual impact point. Stations receiving telemetry from ARISSat-1 at any time over the last few months, please forward all of your .CSV telemetry files to telemetry AT arissattlm.org. Konstantin, RN3ZF sent a reception report of his copy of the 0842 UTC pass that, "the telemetry was absent, voice messages were not legible, very silent and interrupted. Most likely, I saw last minutes in the life of the satellite." Dee, NB2F reported, "Nothing heard from ARISSat-1/KEDR on any frequency during the first USA pass at 16:00 UTC, January 4." ARISSat-1/KEDR was deployed from the International Space Station on August 3, 2011 during during EVA-29 on by Cosmonaut/Flight Engineers Sergei Volkov and Alexander Samokutyaev.
The satellite carried a student experiment from Kursk State University in Russia which measured atmospheric density. Students from around the world provided the voices for the FM voice announcements. The amateur radio payload aboard ARISSat-1/KEDR achieved many "firsts" for amateur radio in space:
First flight test of AMSAT Software Defined Transponder which transmitted simultaneous:
FM voice downlink cycling between student messages, spoken telemetry and SSTV from cameras on the spaceframe.
16KHz bandwith linear transponder,
CW beacon with telemetry and callsigns of radio amateurs noting their significant contributions to amateur radio in space.
Robust, forward error corrected 1K rate BPSK downlink with satellite telemetry and Kursk experiment telemetry.
Development and release of the ARISSatTLM software for PC and Mac platforms enabled amateur stations worldwide with reliable reception of the BPSK telemetry, CW telemetry, display on the station's computer, and automatic upload of received data via the internet to the ARISSat engineering team. A new Integrated Housekeeping Unit was developed and successfully flown. A new Power Management System was developed and successfully flown.
AMSAT President Barry Baines, WD4ASW noted, ARISSat-1/KEDR marked a new type of satellite which has captured the attention of the national space agencies around the world for the unique educational opportunity we have been able to design, launch, and operate. By designing an educational mission aligned with NASA's Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics goals amateur radio operators around the world have been able enjoy a new satellite in orbit." ARISSat-1/KEDR Project Manager, Gould Smith, WA4SXM said, "Dozens of amateur radio volunteers, AMSAT, ARRL, NASA, and Energia teamed up for this successful mission to bring you the most unique and innovative amateur radio satellite mission. Congratulations to all who made ARISSat-1 successful!""
Sacado de http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/
"November 29, 2011
It is with a heavy heart I report that AO-51 has ceased transmission and is not responding to commands. The last telemetry data indicated that the third of six batteries was approaching failure to short, and observations indicate the voltage from three cells is insufficient to power the UHF transmitters. The IHU may continue to be operative. Initial tests with the S band transmitter were also not positive, although more attempts are in order. We have tried leaving the satellite in an expected state where if voltages climb high enough, the 435.150 transmitter may possibly be heard.
The command team will regularly attempt communications with the satellite over the coming months (and years). There is always the possibility that a cell will open and we could once again talk to our friend while illuminated. Thanks to all who helped fund, design, build, launch, command, and operate AO-51. It's 7 year mission has been extraordinary. Please support AMSAT's Fox-1 project, and other AMSAT projects worldwide with your time and money.
For the AO-51 Command Team,
73, Drew KO4MA
AMSAT-NA VP Operations"
____________
"ARISSat-1/KEDR Goes Silent
Reception reports indicate that ARISSat-1/KEDR has stopped transmitting on Wednesday, January 4, 2012. The last full telemetry captured and reported to the ARISSatTLM web site at 06:02:14 UTC on January 4 were received from ground stations as the satellite passed over Japan. You can view the full telemetry display or the condensed telemetry display. Telemetry reports showed that the temperature aboard ARISSat-1/KEDR had been rising as atmospheric drag began to affect the satellite. Final temperatures received via ARISSatTLM reported this data:
IHU 75 ° C / 167.0 °F
PSU 76 ° C / 168.8 °F
RF 88 ° C / 190.4 °F
Control Panel 61 ° C / 141.8 °F
Experiment 64 ° C / 147.2 °F
Tracking data from Space Command gave a Predicted Decay Time 0700 GMT +/- 3 Hours on January 4. Telemetry report narrows the impact time window to about 4 hours. The predicted decay location is 12.7° S, 354.3° E, an open part of the South Atlantic, well west of Angola. Send reports to the amsat-bb If you heard the satellite, even briefly, after 0600 UTC. This will help confirm the actual impact point. Stations receiving telemetry from ARISSat-1 at any time over the last few months, please forward all of your .CSV telemetry files to telemetry AT arissattlm.org. Konstantin, RN3ZF sent a reception report of his copy of the 0842 UTC pass that, "the telemetry was absent, voice messages were not legible, very silent and interrupted. Most likely, I saw last minutes in the life of the satellite." Dee, NB2F reported, "Nothing heard from ARISSat-1/KEDR on any frequency during the first USA pass at 16:00 UTC, January 4." ARISSat-1/KEDR was deployed from the International Space Station on August 3, 2011 during during EVA-29 on by Cosmonaut/Flight Engineers Sergei Volkov and Alexander Samokutyaev.
The satellite carried a student experiment from Kursk State University in Russia which measured atmospheric density. Students from around the world provided the voices for the FM voice announcements. The amateur radio payload aboard ARISSat-1/KEDR achieved many "firsts" for amateur radio in space:
First flight test of AMSAT Software Defined Transponder which transmitted simultaneous:
FM voice downlink cycling between student messages, spoken telemetry and SSTV from cameras on the spaceframe.
16KHz bandwith linear transponder,
CW beacon with telemetry and callsigns of radio amateurs noting their significant contributions to amateur radio in space.
Robust, forward error corrected 1K rate BPSK downlink with satellite telemetry and Kursk experiment telemetry.
Development and release of the ARISSatTLM software for PC and Mac platforms enabled amateur stations worldwide with reliable reception of the BPSK telemetry, CW telemetry, display on the station's computer, and automatic upload of received data via the internet to the ARISSat engineering team. A new Integrated Housekeeping Unit was developed and successfully flown. A new Power Management System was developed and successfully flown.
AMSAT President Barry Baines, WD4ASW noted, ARISSat-1/KEDR marked a new type of satellite which has captured the attention of the national space agencies around the world for the unique educational opportunity we have been able to design, launch, and operate. By designing an educational mission aligned with NASA's Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics goals amateur radio operators around the world have been able enjoy a new satellite in orbit." ARISSat-1/KEDR Project Manager, Gould Smith, WA4SXM said, "Dozens of amateur radio volunteers, AMSAT, ARRL, NASA, and Energia teamed up for this successful mission to bring you the most unique and innovative amateur radio satellite mission. Congratulations to all who made ARISSat-1 successful!""
Re: Sats caidos
No se inglés
ea4gdu- Socio
- Cantidad de envíos : 176
Edad : 43
Localización : madrid
Fecha de inscripción : 15/05/2011
Re: Sats caidos
Pues la página de AMSAT está en inglés... de todas formas google traduce todo lo que le eches.
Todo lo anterior viene a decir que el primero se quedó sin pilas y el otro dejo de TX el 4 de enero de este año.
Todo lo anterior viene a decir que el primero se quedó sin pilas y el otro dejo de TX el 4 de enero de este año.
Re: Sats caidos
De todos modos se agradece la informacion aunque ultimamente ni escucho a la ISS
Un saludo
Un saludo
ZonaHam :: OTRAS BANDAS :: SATÉLITES
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