From mxl01506 @ nifty.ne.jp Sat Dec 1 03:00:39 2018 From: mxl01506 @ nifty.ne.jp (=?ISO-2022-JP?B?GyRCQmdDKyEhSyc9PBsoQg==?=) Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2018 03:00:39 +0900 (JST) Subject: [jamsat-news:3574] =?iso-2022-jp?b?SkFNU0FUGyRCOWJEUCVfITwlRiUjJXMlMCROMys6RSRLGyhC?= =?iso-2022-jp?b?GyRCJEQkJCRGGyhC?= Message-ID: <460704103.498881543600839756.mxl01506@nifty.ne.jp> 皆さん、こんにちは。 JAMSAT関西ミーティング開催のお知らせです。 ミーティングの開催日が、いよいよ来週の土曜日に迫りましたので、再度のご案内です。 衛星通信に興味のある方でしたら何方でも参加大歓迎ですので、ふるってご参加下さい。 日時 12月8日(土)14:00 〜 17:00 場所 高槻現代劇場 201会議室 阪急高槻市駅より南へ徒歩約5分 アクセス http://www.city.takatsuki.osaka.jp/bunka/theater/access/ ミーティング終了後、阪急高槻駅周辺の店で忘年会を行いたいと思います。 人数を把握したいと思いますので、以下のアドレス宛て、至急参加表明を いただけると有難いです。どうぞよろしくお願いします。  jh4dhx(あっとまーく)jamsat.or.jp では、皆さんのお越しを、お待ちしております。 2018.12.1 JH4DHX/3 大谷 From ans @ amsat.org Sun Dec 2 09:16:22 2018 From: ans @ amsat.org (JoAnne K9JKM via ANS) Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2018 18:16:22 -0600 Subject: [jamsat-news:3575] [ans] ANS-336 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins Message-ID: <80ff9bb1-4b3c-48ca-9bb9-a457ac290563@comcast.net> AMSAT NEWS SERVICE ANS-336 The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor- mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building, launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio satellites. The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it. Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to: ans-editor at amsat.org. You can sign up for free e-mail delivery of the AMSAT News Service Bulletins via the ANS List; to join this list see: http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans In this edition: * Fox-1Cliff Launch Targeted for December 2nd * AMSAT Web Adds Donation Portal * Amateur Radio Contest for Receiving PW-Sat2 Telemetry * Additional Amateur Radio Communication Cubesats Launch on SSO-A * AMSAT-DL Provides Update for Es'hail-2/P4A Geosynchronous Orbit * Nihon University NEXUS VU-mode Linear Transponder Launch Announcement * AMSAT Rover Award Updates * VUCC Awards-Endorsements for November 2018 * Upcoming Satellite Operations Reported by KE4AL * ESA and RaspberryPi.org Collaborate on Astro Pi Mission Zero * MarCo Cubesats Relay NASA's InSight Mars Lander Touchdown * Happy 20th Anniversary to the International Space Station * Satellite Shorts From All Over SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-336.01 ANS-336 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins AMSAT News Service Bulletin 336.01 From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD. DATE December 2, 2018 To All RADIO AMATEURS BID: $ANS-336.01 Fox-1Cliff Launch Targeted for December 2nd SpaceX has announced that the SSO-A: SmallSat Express mission carrying Fox-1Cliff is now targeted for launch on Sunday, December 2, 2018 at 18:33 UTC. In addition to Fox-1Cliff, the SSO-A mission will carry several other amateur radio satellites, includingF UNcube on ESEO, JY1-SAT, K2SAT, and ExseedSat. The launch window opens at 18:31:47 UTC and extends for approximately 30 minutes. At press time less than 24 hours remain until the scheduled launch of Fox-1Cliff! The SpaceX video feed of the launch and a live blog of the launch events can be found on the AMSAT website: https://www.amsat.org/fox-1cliff-launch-live-blog/ Some amateur operators choose to participate in an unofficial on-line chat (Internet Relay Chat) at: https://webchat.freenode.net/ then enter your callsign as your Nickname; enter #cubesat as the Channel. You do not need to 'Auth to services' so leave that unchecked. Verify you are not a robot and then Connect. +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ ??? Do not attempt to access this satellite until the activation ?? announcement from AMSAT Engineering and AMSAT Operations Teams +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ Here is what to expect after launch: + Capturing Initial Telemetry is the Most Important Task + Safe Mode/Beacon Mode Operation on Start Up + On-Orbit Checklist Activities + Activation for Amateur Radio Access + Fox-1Cliff Technical Details Capturing Initial Telemetry is the Most Important Task ------------------------------------------------------- Following the successful launch and deployment of Fox-1Cliff, all amateur radio satellite enthusiasts can play an important part in the commissioning of the new satellite. Telemetry helps us tremendously, starting ASAP after startup (~59 minutes after deployment*) and for the next 72-96 hours at least (for the life of the satellite is preferred!) as we look for successful startup, watch the general health and function as the satellite begins to acclimate to space, and start to perform the on orbit checkout. The first station to successfully receive and submit telemetry to the AMSAT server will receive a special 3D printed QSL card acknowledging their contribution. If you are capturing telemetry with FoxTelem, please be sure that "Upload to Server" is checked in your settings and your Ground Station Params are filled in as well. You can help AMSAT and everyone waiting to get on the air with Fox-1Cliff tremendously, by capturing Fox-1Cliff telemetry. Safe Mode/Beacon Mode Operation on Start Up ------------------------------------------- In the initial Safe Mode after startup, which we actually call Beacon Mode, the transmitter is limited to 10 seconds on time then does the two minutes off cycle. For those of you capturing telemetry, that means that you will only see Current frames and no High or Low frames because the High and Low are truncated as it takes just over 10 seconds to send two frames. You will hear Veronica announcing "Fox-1Cliff Safe Mode" while in Beacon Mode. We will likely leave the satellite in Beacon Mode for 24 hours to observe power telemetry. If we are seeing good readings from what you gather, when it comes over the U.S. for the first good pass after that holding period we will command it from Beacon Mode to normal Safe Mode. That puts Fox-1Cliff in full (still Safe Mode though) operation and transmits a full two frames of telemetry which is one Current frame followed by, and alternating each ID cycle, a High or a Low frame. On-Orbit Checklist Activities ----------------------------- We will begin the rest of the in orbit checklist activities at that time, and it is expected to take 7 to 10 days. Help your friends and all of our satellite ham friends get on the air and have fun sooner by being polite and patient! The in orbit checkout procedure is similar to Fox-1D and could be completed in as little as 7 days if we have the cooperation of the users. It is very important, not to mention just plain good Amateur Operating Practice, to refrain from using the transponder uplink so we can do the on orbit tests, including when we turn on transponder mode for testing. I cannot stress enough, the importance of this cooperation not just for us but also for all users, simply having a little patience so we can conduct the tests as quickly and accurately as possible. Activation for Amateur Radio Access ----------------------------------- AMSAT will make it broadly known when the tests are complete and the transponder is available for all to use. If you hear someone on the transponder, please do not assume that it is open for general use - check our website, Facebook, Twitter, to be sure you are not accidentally jumping in with and unwittingly causing interference as well. Many hams put thousands of volunteer hours of their time into making Fox-1Cliff happen. Just like any ham radio project you might undertake, we build satellites. We do it because we like to, and when we are done, we freely share our project with hams everywhere as is the spirit of amateur radio. I have to say though, that the incidents we have experienced in the past with stations intentionally disregarding the command stations requests to keep the frequency clear during testing not only delays the commissioning, but also negatively impacts the enthusiasm that our volunteers feel toward handing over a new bird to the members and users as soon as possible. I am asking all satellite hams to contribute just a little bit of your time to the fun now, by being patient and just gathering telemetry, not using the transponder uplink, and helping us complete the last few days of getting Fox-1Cliff in orbit and operating for all of you. Fox-1Cliff Technical Details ---------------------------- Uplink:???? 435.300 MHz / 1267.300 MHz** with 67 Hz CTCSS Tone Downlink:?? 145.920 MHz ** Uplinks switched by command station, not operational ?? simultaneously Nominal operating frequencies may vary slightly after launch. Ground stations need to adjust your transmit frequency for Doppler Shift. One suggested approach includes programming 5 uplink fre- quencies into memory channels and stepping through the channels depending on Fox-1Cliff's relative position to you. (Fc in the table below is the nominal uplink center frequency = 435.300 MHz). Full duplex operation is recommended to allow you to hear if you are tuned on-frequency and also avoids interfering if another station is transmitting. ADJUSTING YOUR UPLINK FREQUENCY to TRACK DOPPLER SHIFT ------------------------------------------------------ AOS???????? (Memory Channel 1) Fc - 10 KHz 435.290 MHz Approaching (Memory Channel 2) Fc - 5 KHz? 435.295 MHz Nearest???? (Memory Channel 3) Fc????????? 435.300 MHz Departing?? (Memory Channel 4) Fc + 5 KHz? 435.305 MHz LOS???????? (Memory Channel 5) Fc + 10 KHz 435.310 MHz Access the Fox-1 Operating Guide on-line at: https://www.amsat.org/station-and-operating-hints/ Find all of AMSAT Fox-1 frequencies on-line at: https://www.amsat.org/fm-satellite-frequency-summary/ SatPC32 users can find updated *.SQF files at: http://tinyurl.com/ANS-336-SatPC32files [ANS thanks Jerry Buxton, N0JY, AMSAT Vice President-Engineering for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- AMSAT Web Adds Donation Portal AMSAT relies on your donations to Keep Amateur Radio in Space. Please consider a donation to the AMSAT General Fund, the GOLF Program, or ARISS today! Access the Donation Portal on the AMSAT front page http://www.amsat.org --> Select Donate from the main menu bar -or- visit https://www.amsat.org/donations/ for direct access to the page. +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ ??????? For a limited time, new and rewewing AMSAT members ?????????????? will receive a free digital copy of ???????????? "Getting Started with Amateur Satellites" ?????????? Join or renew your AMSAT membership today at ????? https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/ +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ [ANS thanks AMSAT for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Amateur Radio Contest for Receiving PW-Sat2 Telemetry PW-Sat2, the second Polish student satellite, also launched on the SpaceX Falcon 9 SSO-A flight with AMSAT Fox-1Cliff, is a student pro- ject with the goal to test a new deorbit sail. A team formed of over 30 students from many different faculties of Warsaw University of Technology started working on a new satellite in 2013. For more information visit: https://github.com/PW-Sat2/HAMRadio/wiki Amateur radio operators are invited to take part in a multi-faceted contest. How to take part in the contests? It's easy! Register on the website: https://radio.pw-sat.pl/ - then - use the application for HAM radio, to receive, decode and upload PW-Sat2 frames to our cloud based service. Just after completing of the PW-Sat2 satellite mission, the team will announce the winners and send prizes! On the ham radio contest web page https://pw-sat.pl/en/ham-contest/ you'll find several categories to participate: + QSL cards - for a correctly received and decoded frame + The first received and uploaded frame - First come, first served! + The last received and uploaded frame - During the deorbit sail ? deployment sequence! + The largest number of uploaded frames PW-Sat2 will transmit on 435.275 MHz using 1k2-9k6 BPSK AX25. [ANS thanks the PW-Sat2 team for the above information] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ ?????????? Purchase AMSAT Gear on our Zazzle storefront. ?????????? 25% of the purchase price of each product goes ???????????? towards Keeping Amateur Radio in Space ?????????????? https://www.zazzle.com/amsat_gear +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ Additional Amateur Radio Communication Cubesats Launch on SSO-A JY1SAT is a one unit CubeSat, dedicated to the memory of His Majesty the late King Hussein, the first founder of the HAM Radio in Jordan and holder of call sign JY1. This will be Jordan's first satellite. JY1SAT contains the AMSAT-UK FUNcube-6 communications transponder with expanded capabilities to be able to transmit stored images reflecting the Jordanian culture and its historical heritage, along with a voice message recorded by the Crown Prince to be transmitted in space to receivers around the world. Frequencies for the JY1SAT FUNcube-6 transponder include: Uplink:??? 435.100 - 435.120 MHz CW, LSB Downlink:? 145.855 - 145.875 MHz CW, USB Telemetry: 145.840 MHz (FUNcube BPSK format, new Dashboard software ??????????????????????? will be made available) JYISAT will transmit pre-stored images of the Kingdom which have been selected by a national competition. These images will be downlinked using a SSDV digital format. The SpaceX Falcon-9 v1.2 launch from Vandenberg also includes 40+ cubesat passengers, notably ExseedSat 1 from India, the European Student Earth Orbiter - ESEO (FUNcube 4) and AMSAT-NA Fox 1Cliff. Exseedsat-1 ----------- Uplink:??? 435.340 MHz FM voice with 67 Hz CTCSS tone ?????????????????????? and APRS digipeater Downlink:? 145.900 MHZ FM voice, APRS digipeater, telemetry ESEO (FUNcube 4) ---------------- Uplink:?? 1263.500 MHz FM voice with 67Hz CTCSS tone Downlink:? 145.895 MHz FM voice and telemetry See also the AMSAT-UK summary of mission descriptions and frequencies at: https://amsat-uk.org/2018/11/14/ssoa-amateur-radio-satellites/ [ANS thanks the satellite teams for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- AMSAT-DL Provides Update for Es'hail-2/P4A Geosynchronous Orbit Es'hail-2 with the P4A transponder is currently in a temporary GEO slot at ~24°E. After testing the satellite will be moved to the location planned to be at 26°E. Peter Guelzow, DB2OS, explained the current testing and commis- sioning procedures, "During the next 1-2 month Es'hail-2 will undergo fine tuning and extensive In-Orbit-Testing (IOT). The current orbital position is selected to not interfere with other GEO satellites nearby. Once testing is finished, the satellite will slowly be drifting to and stationed at the final position." The checkout and inauguration of the both AMSAT transponders will be performed after the IOT phase is finished as explained at: https://amsat-dl.org/p4a-positionining-and-iot Peter reported several "hunters" have already spotted the Engineer- ing beacon from Es'hail-2, so obviously everything looks good and is going according to plan. Stay tuned for latest news on https://amsat-dl.org and? the official Es'hail-2 / P4-A discussion forum on: https://forum.amsat-dl.org/index.php?board/3-es-hail-2-amsat-phase-4-a/ The AMSAT Phase 4-A transponder on Es’hail-2 is a joint project by the Qatar Satellite Company (Es’hailSat), the Qatar Amateur Radio Society (QARS) and AMSAT Deutschland (AMSAT-DL). Recent Keplerian Elements for Es'hail-2 are: ES'HAIL 2 ? 1 43700U 18090A?? 18331.74832885? .00000138? 00000-0? 00000+0 0? 9994 ? 2 43700?? 0.0937 247.5840 0001194 359.8609 112.5666 1.00272646?? 252 Pedro, LU7ABF says that the tracking site on the AMSAT-Argentina web provides visualization of the current satellite location and footprint: http://amsat.org.ar/pass?satx=ESHAIL [ANS thanks Peter Guelzow, DB2OS, AMSAT-DL for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Nihon University NEXUS VU-mode Linear Transponder Launch Announcement Mikio Mouri, JA3GEP, JAMSAT, announced the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) plans to launch RAPIS-1(RAPid Innovative Payload Demon- stration Satellite) and three small satellites (Micro-Dragon, RISESAT, ALE-1) and three CubeSats (OrigamiSat-1, Aoba VELOX-IV, NEXUS) on January 16, 2019 at 00:50 UTC (January 17, 2019 at 09:50 JST) from the JAXA Uchinoura Space Center. NEXUS(NExt generation X Unique Satellite) is designed and manufact- ured by Nihon University, and it includes a VU-mode(mode-J) Linear Transponder: + Uplink:??? 145.930 MHz - 145.900 MHz + Downlink:? 435.880 MHz - 435.910 MHz + Telemetry: 437.075 MHz 0.1W CW Nihon University has published more information about NEXUS: http://sat.aero.cst.nihon-u.ac.jp/nexus/1_Nexus.html (using google translate may help) OrigamiSat-1 will have downlinks on 5840.000 MHz (115kbps data rate) and 437.505 MHz (1k2 AFSK and CW) Aoba VELOX-IV will have a downlink on 437.225 MHz (9k6 GMSK AX25) Access the JAXA launch announcement press release at: http://global.jaxa.jp/press/2018/11/20181130_epsilon4.html [ANS thanks Mikio Mouri, JA3GEP, JAMSAT for the above information] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ ?? AMSAT and ARISS are currently supporting a FundRazr campaign ?? to raise $150,000 for critical radio infrastructure upgrades ?? on ISS. The upgrades are necessary to enable students to ?? continue to talk to astronauts in space via Amateur Radio. ??? We have reached a great milestone with $15,645 raised ?? or about 10% towards our goal. This would not have been ??????? possible without your outstanding generosity!! ???????? For more information and to DONATE TODAY visit: ??? https://fundrazr.com/arissnextgen?ref=ab_e7Htwa_ab_47IcJ9 +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ AMSAT Rover Award Updates AMSAT Director of Contests and Awards, Bruce Paige, KK5DO, says that congratulations are in order for the newest Rover Award operators: Since the last Rover Award announcement in ANS-266 the following stations have qualified for the award: Number???? Callsign????????? Award Date ------???? --------????????? ---------- 035???????? AD7DB??????????? 26 Sep 2018 036???????? AB5SS??????????? 24 Nov 2018 037???????? W9TWJ??????????? 26 Nov 2018 The AMSAT Rover award is granted to stations who achieve a combined 25 points using any combination of the defined criteria posted at: https://www.amsat.org/amsat-rover-award. Points can be earned for each grid square activated outside of your home grid square using the FM, linear, and digital satellites. While FM contacts count for 1 point each multiplier points are available for contacts via the linear and digital satellites. Additional points are available for photographs, publicity, social media promotion, and AMSAT Journal articles. The options are numerous so please refer to the Rover Award Website for all of the details. [ANS thanks AMSAT Director of Contests and Awards, Bruce Paige, KK5DO ?for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- VUCC Awards-Endorsements for November 2018 Here are the endorsements and new VUCC Satellite Awards issued by the ARRL for the period November 1, 2018 through December 1, 2018. Congratulations to all those who made the list this month! CALL???? 01Nov?? 01Dec KD8CAO??? 1253?? 1262 N0JE?????? 562??? 569 WD9EWK???? 500??? 513 KE4AL????? 480??? 502 NM3B?????? 416??? 481 AA8CH????? 351??? 406 AE5B?????? 295??? 300 N3GS?????? 277??? 300 KE8FZT???? 254??? 275 W7JSD????? 239??? 257 N4YHC????? 175??? 250 PT2AP????? 200??? 221 PS8ET????? 201??? 211 K3RRR????? New??? 200 AD0HJ????? 100??? 175 WW8W?????? 128??? 152 K9UO?????? New??? 150 WA7HQD???? 138??? 148 PU8RFL???? 125??? 134 PS8MT????? New??? 130 K7ULS????? New??? 119 CU2ZG????? New??? 101 PU8RJI???? New??? 101 If you find errors or omissions. please contact me off-list at @.com and I'll revise the announcement. This list was developed by comparing the ARRL .pdf listings for November 1, 2018 and December 1, 2018. It's a visual comparison so omissions are possible. Apologies if your call was not mentioned. Thanks to all those who are roving to grids that are rarely on the birds.? They are doing most of the work! [ANS thanks Ronald Parsons, W5RKN for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Upcoming Satellite Operations Reported by KE4AL + Yuri UT1FG/MM will be going into port at Santos Brazil during ? the week of November 26-30 to unload.? It should take 3-4 days. ? His next port will be in Argentina where he will load cargo and ? then proceed to the Baltic Sea. Lots of new grids are anticipated ? along the way. He has been active on all of the SSB and FM birds ? and reports contacts with V51 and ZS on AO-7. ? (via K8YSE on amsat-bb) + James WX4TV wrote, "Watch the DX Clusters for N4P." This will be ? for the Dry Tortugas National Park DXpedition that we are doing ? from December 14-17. They will be on 80m, 40m, 20m, 17m, and the FM ? satellites. (WX4TV via Facebook) + Switzerland? (FN30, JN36, JN47) ? November 28 ? December 7, 2018 ? Brennan, N4QX, fall ASMAT roving plans: ? * JN36 as HB9/N4QX & from 4U1ITU November 28 ? December 7 ??? as work permits ? * JN47 as HB9/N4QX & HB0/N4QX December 1-2 ? For now, FM only. Watch Twitter for pass announcements. ? https://twitter.com/BrennanTPrice.? QSLs *exclusively* via ? Logbook of the World. + Brazil (GH62,GH63,GH72,GH73) ? November 30, 2018 ? PP2CC, PT2AZ amd PT2AP will activate 4 grids in Brazil on ? 30 November. Specific passes should be announced on Twitter ? https://twitter.com/PT2AP + Oahu and Maui (BL01, BL10, BL11) ? December 3-14, 2018 ? John, N7AME, will be in Hawaii December 3-14.? John hopes to ? rove? BL01, BL10 and BL11, but the Hawaiian Islands appear ? to have ten (10) different grids, and he hopes he can work ? all of them. John can only work FM satellites AO-91 and AO-92. + Greenburg, PA (FN00) ? December 10-12, 2018 ? Tanner, W9TWJ, will be travelling for business the week of ? December 10-12, to Greensburg, PA (FN00). He will attempt to ? be active on FM evening passes and hopefully not freeze! ? Specific pass announcements will be posted to Twitter: ? https://twitter.com/twjones85 + RMS Queen Mary (DM03) ? December 15, 2018 ? Patrick , WD9EWK, will be part of a day of satellite operating ? from a deck on the RMS Queen Mary, docked at Long Beach in southern ? California, on Saturday 15 December 2018. Operations will be port- ? able, almost like a Field Day, and should include FM, SSB, and ? possibly packet. All operations from the Queen Mary will be as ? W6RO, the call sign for the wireless room on the ship operated by ? the Associated Radio Amateurs of Long Beach. Depending on staffing ? in the W6RO wireless room, there may also be HF activity during ? the satellite operation. QSLing for the W6RO satellite activation ? will be handled per the procedure on W6RO’s QRZ page: ? http://www.qrz.com/db/W6RO Please submit any additions or corrections to ke4al (at) amsat.org [ANS thanks Robert, KE4AL for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- ESA and RaspberryPi.org Collaborate on Astro Pi Mission Zero The European Space Agency announced the official launch the of Astro Pi Mission Zero, part of the 2018-2019 European Astro Pi Challenge. This is an ESA Education programme run in collabora- tion with RaspberryPi.org. In this challenge, students and young people get the chance to have their computer programs run in space on the International Space Station! Read the full entry details and get the latest program resources on-line at: https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/mission-zero-2018-19/ Students and young people will have until 20 March 2019 to form teams and write a simple program to display their personal mes- sage to the astronauts onboard. The Mission Zero activity can be completed in a couple of hours with just a computer and an internet connection. You don't need any special equipment or prior coding skills, and all participants that follow the guidelines are guaranteed to have their programs run in space. [ANS thanks ESA and RaspberryPi.org for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- MarCo Cubesats Relay NASA's InSight Mars Lander Touchdown Riding along with NASA's InSight Mars Lander were two CubeSats, the first of this kind of spacecraft to fly to deep space. The twin communications-relay CubeSats, built by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, constitute a technology demon- stration called Mars Cube One (MarCO). Visit the MarCo web pages and watch a mission video at: https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/cubesat/missions/marco.php -and- https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=7295 During InSight's entry, descent and landing (EDL) operations, the lander transmitted information in the UHF radio band to NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) flying overhead. MRO would then forward EDL information to Earth using a radio frequency in the X band, but cannot simultaneously receive information over one band while trans- mitting on another. Confirmation of a successful landing could be received by the orbiter more than an hour before it's relayed to Earth. The two CubeSats separated from the Atlas V booster after InSight's launch, then travelled along their own trajectories to Mars. After release from the launch vehicle, MarCO's deployed two radio antennas and two solar panels. The high-gain, X-band antenna is a flat panel engineered to direct radio waves the way a parabolic dish antenna does. MarCO navigated to Mars independently of the InSight space- craft, with its own course adjustments on the way. The successful MarCO cubesat demonstration mission it could allow for additional communications relay option for use by future Mars missions in the critical few minutes between Martian atmospheric entry and touchdown. [ANS thanks NASA for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Happy 20th Anniversary to the International Space Station The largest and most complex international construction project in space began on the steppes of Kazakhstan 20 years ago this month. Atop its Proton rocket, on Nov. 20, 1998, the Zarya Functional Cargo Block (FGB) thundered off its launch pad at the Baikonur Cosmodrome into cold wintry skies. Zarya was built by the Khrunichev in Moscow and served as a temporary control module for the nascent ISS. On Dec. 4, Space Shuttle Endeavour on the STS-88 mission roared off Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, carrying the Unity Node 1 module in its cargo bay. Built by The Boeing Corporation at a facility at the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, Unity was the first American component of the ISS. A collection of interesting ISS historical articles begins at: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/20-years-ago-iss-construction-begins [ANS thanks NASA for the above information.] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ ?????????????? 2019 is AMSAT's 50th Anniversary! ? Watch this space for announcements of special events coming in 2019 ???????? Get ready to help celebrate with us at the Hamvention ??????????? Symposium 2019 promises to be a special event ?????? Stand by for 50th anniversary operating events and awards +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ Satellite Shorts From All Over + The 20th annual Ham Radio University event will be held on Saturday ? January 5, 2019 at LIU/Post Hillwood Commons Student Center in ? Brookville, NY. Frank Garofalo, WA2NDV will host the "Satellite ? Operations for Beginners" forum scheduled for 9:00 AM. Find the ? full details at: http://hamradiouniversity.org/ + The European Space Agency published a timelapse video of the ? Russian Progress MS-10 cargo spacecraft launched on 16 November ? 2018 at 18:14 GMT from Baikonur cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, taken ? by ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst from the International Space ? Station: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ouBfzCgXHgk&feature=youtu.be ? The Progress spacecraft delivered food, fuel and supplies, ? including about 750 kg of propellant, 75 kg of oxygen and air and ? 440 liters of water. Also on-board was the replacement #ARISS ? packet module. Some notable moments in this video are: ? 00:07 Soyuz-FG rocket booster separation. ? 00:19 Core stage separation. ? 00:34:05 Core stage starts burning in the atmosphere as it returns ?????????? to Earth after having spent all its fuel. ? 00:34:19 Progress spacecraft separates from rocket and enters orbit ?????????? to catch up with the International Space Station. ? (most of the action occurs on the top-right portion of the screen) + Listen for amateur radio clubs at NASA facilities as they partici- ? pate in the NASA On The Air activity to commemorate the 50th anni- ? versary of the Apollo 8 mission that spanned launch December 21, ? 1968, to splashdown on December 27, 1968. The 50th anniversary ? event will start on 0000 UTC December 21, 2018 through 2359 UTC ? December 27, 2018. 14.271 MHz and other bands depending on condi- ? tions with spotting announcements on DX clusters, facebook, and ? twitter. QSL and a certificate with information available on QRZ.com ? under the callsign of the stations contacted. This will mark the ? concluding event of the year-long NASA On the Air celebration of ? 60th anniversary of NASA. See https://nasaontheair.wordpress.com/ + Congratulations to Jharwin, DW2JHA on apparently the first ? IGATED ISS packet from the Philippines. He built his own TNC ? to digipeat packets using his FT-60 radio. His IGATE is based ? on a Raspberry Pi Zero, DireWolf packet software, and an RTL-SDR ? dongle. (via DW2JHA on AMSAT-NA facebook) + F1NNI maintains the AAR29 Satellite Status Page at: ? http://aar29.free.fr/sat/indexlogin.html + AMSAT-UK explains their software series of FUNcube Payload ? Telemetry Dashboards - Each satellite with a FUNcube payload ? has a dedicated dashboard and we have created a one page PDF ? summary of those dashboards, their current version number ? and a dedicated download link, see: https://amsat-uk.org/2018/12/01/funcube-payload-telemetry-dashboards/ + A number of free technical items have crossed the editorial ? desk this past week: ? - Rhode & Schwartz has a free Wireless Communications Standards ??? Poster for download: http://tinyurl.com/ANS-336-RhodeSchwartz ? - AMSAT-DL found a source for rocket paper models: ??? http://tinyurl.com/ANS-336-RocketModels ? - A book Wi-Fi paradigm shift with 802.11ax is available at: ??? https://content.aerohive.com/802.11ax_dummies_book ? - A book Visualize the Relationships in Your Connected Data. ??? Download the O'Reilly Graph Databases Ebook for Free: ??? https://neo4j.com/lp/book-graph-databases-fb + Registration for the 2019 CubeSat Developers Workshop Sponsor ? & Exhibitor is now open. This year the cubesat workshop will be ? held April 23-25, 2019 at the Cal Poly Performing Arts Center, ? San Luis Obispo, CA. Register at: https://calpoly.irisregistration.com/Register?code=cubesat-sponsors-2019 ? Their e-mail is cubesat-workshop @ calpoly.edu. Join the mailing ? list at: http://www.cubesat.org/mailinglist/ or follow on Twitter ? @CalPolyCubeSat for the latest Workshop updates! #CubeSatDW + India launched a PSLV flight on Thursday, November 29 that included ? four CubeSats which are using 70cm downlink frequencies that have ? been coordinated by the IARU: ? - FacSat-1???? - 9k6 GMSK downlink ? - 3CAT1??????? - 9k6 FSK downlink ? - InnoSat-2??? - 50kHz wide telemetry using AX25 proprietary ?????????????????? packet format ? - Hello World? - 9k6 packet 2GFSK for telemetry & 1Mbps MSK ?????????????????? downlink on S Band ? For more details of these cubesats see the IARU pages at: ? see http://www.amsatuk.me.uk/iaru/finished.php ? See also the AMSAT-UK summary at: https://amsat-uk.org/2018/11/27/ham-radio-satellites-launch-from-india/ ? (Graham Shirville, G3VZV) [ANS thanks everyone for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- /EX In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi- tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT Office. Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu- dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status. Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership information. 73 and remember to behave, and do your part to help Keep Amateur Radio In Space, This week's ANS Editor, JoAnne Maenpaa, K9JKM k9jkm @ amsat.org _______________________________________________ Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans From ans @ amsat.org Wed Dec 5 23:24:17 2018 From: ans @ amsat.org (JoAnne K9JKM via ANS) Date: Wed, 5 Dec 2018 08:24:17 -0600 Subject: [jamsat-news:3576] [ans] ANS-339 AMSAT News Service Special Bulletin - Fox-1Cliff Designated AMSAT-OSCAR 95 (AO-95) Message-ID: <5890d11b-a743-c9fb-ac7d-d92646e6b578@comcast.net> AMSAT NEWS SERVICE SPECIAL BULLETIN ANS-339.01 In this Special Bulletin: * Fox-1Cliff Designated AMSAT-OSCAR 95 (AO-95) SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-339.01 ANS-339 AMSAT News Service Special Bulletin AMSAT News Service Special Bulletin 339.01 From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD DATE December 5, 2018 To All RADIO AMATEURS BID: $ANS-339.01 On December 3rd, 2018, Fox-1Cliff was launched on a Falcon 9 vehicle from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Part of Spaceflight’s SSO-A: Smallsat Express launch, Fox-1Cliff was named after long time AMSAT supporter Cliff Buttschardt, K7RR (SK). In the 48 hours after launch, more than 110 amateur radio operators around the world have successfully received and submitted telemetry from the satellite. Following in our long tradition of naming amateur satellites, AMSAT hereby designates Fox-1Cliff as AMSAT-OSCAR 95 (AO-95). Thank you to those who have supported this mission with their time, talent, and financial support for the benefit of amateur radio operators worldwide. 73, Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA AMSAT VP Operations / OSCAR Number Administrator [ANS thanks Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, AMSAT VP Operations / ?OSCAR Number Administrator for the above information] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ ??????? For a limited time, new and rewewing AMSAT members ?????????????? will receive a free digital copy of ???????????? "Getting Started with Amateur Satellites" ?????????? Join or renew your AMSAT membership today at ????? https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/ +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ /EX In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers life memberships, and sustaining donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive additional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT Office. Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the student rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status. Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership information. 73 and Remember to help keep Amateur Radio in space, This week's ANS Contributing Editor, JoAnne Maenpaa, K9JKM k9jkm at amsat dot org _______________________________________________ Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans From ans @ amsat.org Fri Dec 7 23:47:58 2018 From: ans @ amsat.org (JoAnne K9JKM via ANS) Date: Fri, 7 Dec 2018 08:47:58 -0600 Subject: [jamsat-news:3577] [ans] ANS-341 AMSAT News Service Special Bulletin - ExseedSat Granted VO-96 OSCAR Number Message-ID: <833067ec-41d1-c51f-a7eb-a0bbf90d6bef@comcast.net> AMSAT NEWS SERVICE SPECIAL BULLETIN ANS-341.01 In this Special Bulletin: * ExseedSat Granted VO-96 OSCAR Number SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-341.01 ANS-341 AMSAT News Service Special Bulletin ExseedSat Granted ??????? VO-96 OSCAR Number AMSAT News Service Special Bulletin 341.01 From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD DATE December 7, 2018 To All RADIO AMATEURS BID: $ANS-341.01 On December 3rd, 2018, ExseedSat was launched on a Falcon 9 vehicle from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Part of Spaceflight's SSO-A: Smallsat Express launch, ExseedSat was built by a team of Indian radio hams including Ashhar Farhan (VU2ESE), George Phillips (VU2GT), Gurudutta Panda (VU3GDP), Sasi Bhusan (VU3ELR), and Nitin Mutin (VU3TYG). Initial telemetry has been received around the world. At the request of Exseed Space, AMSAT hereby designates ExseedSat as VUsat-OSCAR 96 (VO-96). We congratulate the owners and operators of VO-96, thank them for their contribution to the amateur satellite community, and wish them continued success on this and future projects. 73, Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA AMSAT VP Operations / OSCAR Number Administrator [ANS thanks Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, AMSAT VP Operations / ? OSCAR Number Administrator for the above information] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ ???????? For a limited time, new and rewewing AMSAT members ??????????????? will receive a free digital copy of ????????????? "Getting Started with Amateur Satellites" ??????????? Join or renew your AMSAT membership today at ?????? https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/ +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ /EX In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers life memberships, and sustaining donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive additional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT Office. Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the student rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status. Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership information. 73 and Remember to help keep Amateur Radio in space, This week's ANS Contributing Editor, JoAnne Maenpaa, K9JKM k9jkm at amsat dot org _______________________________________________ Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans From ans @ amsat.org Sat Dec 8 06:40:50 2018 From: ans @ amsat.org (JoAnne K9JKM via ANS) Date: Fri, 7 Dec 2018 15:40:50 -0600 Subject: [jamsat-news:3578] [ans] ANS-341.02 AMSAT News Service Special Bulletin - JY1SAT now Jordan-OSCAR 97 (JO-97) Message-ID: AMSAT NEWS SERVICE SPECIAL BULLETIN ANS-341.02 In this Special Bulletin: * JY1Sat now Jordan-OSCAR 97 (JO-97) SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-341.02 ANS-341.02 AMSAT News Service Special Bulletin JY1Sat now ?????????? Jordan-OSCAR 97 (JO-97) AMSAT News Service Special Bulletin 341.02 From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD DATE December 7, 2018 To All RADIO AMATEURS BID: $ANS-341.02 On December 3rd, 2018, JY1Sat was launched on a Falcon 9 vehicle from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Part of Spaceflight’s SSO-A: Smallsat Express launch, JY1Sat is a project of the Crown Prince Foundation of Jordan. Telemetry has been received and decoded around the world since the launch. At the request of the Crown Prince Foundation, AMSAT hereby desig- nates JY1Sat as Jordan-OSCAR 97 (JO-97). We congratulate the owners and operators of JO-97, thank them for their contribution to the amateur satellite community, and wish them continued success on this and future projects. 73, Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA AMSAT VP Operations / OSCAR Number Administrator [ANS thanks Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, AMSAT VP Operations / ? OSCAR Number Administrator for the above information] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ ???????? For a limited time, new and rewewing AMSAT members ??????????????? will receive a free digital copy of ????????????? "Getting Started with Amateur Satellites" ??????????? Join or renew your AMSAT membership today at ?????? https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/ +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ /EX In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers life memberships, and sustaining donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive additional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT Office. Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the student rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status. Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership information. 73 and Remember to help keep Amateur Radio in space, This week's ANS Contributing Editor, JoAnne Maenpaa, K9JKM k9jkm at amsat dot org _______________________________________________ Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans From ans @ amsat.org Sun Dec 9 10:12:57 2018 From: ans @ amsat.org (E.Mike McCardel via ANS) Date: Sat, 8 Dec 2018 20:12:57 -0500 Subject: [jamsat-news:3579] [ans] ANS-343 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins Message-ID: AMSAT NEWS SERVICE ANS-343 The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor- mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building, launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio satellites. The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it. Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to: ans-editor at amsat.org. In this edition: * Fox-1Cliff/AO-95 Commissioning Status * Fox-1Cliff Launched, Initial Telemetry Received * Fox-1Cliff Designated AMSAT-OSCAR 95 (AO-95) * ExseedSat Granted VO-96 OSCAR Number * JY1Sat Now Jordan-OSCAR 97 (JO-97) * Remind Me Again? What is Going On With Fox-1Cliff? * Updates to AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for 12-6-2018 * Changes to FUNcube Warehouses * RadFxSat-2 / Fox-1E Launch Date NET March 2019 * Satellites Activation From The Queen Mary On December 15 * Help Wanted: Radio Amateurs Requested to Monitor Cubesat Downlinks * KG5FYI and RN3DX Join KG5TMT and KF5ONO Aboard the ISS * AMSAT Web Adds Donation Portal * Upcoming Satellite Operations * ARISS News * Shorts From All Over SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-343.01 ANS-343 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins AMSAT News Service Bulletin 343.01 >From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD. December 9, 2018 To All RADIO AMATEURS BID: $ANS-343.01 Fox-1Cliff/AO-95 Commissioning Status Following the launch of Fox-1Cliff/AO-95 AMSAT Engineering began the commissioning process, with the help of AMSAT Operations, on Tuesday December 4. Satellite telemetry indicates that the bird is healthy, and I thank all of the stations who have captured and relayed the telemetry that enabled us to monitor and determine the health of the various systems on board. Fox-1Cliff required an extended period monitoring battery and power levels due to the anomaly and fix that was applied back in February of 2016 during environmental testing, and the result of that is positive. However, during the next steps of commissioning we discovered an anomaly with her receive capability. After a few days of tests, analysis, and discussion, it appears that Fox-1Cliff/AO-95 will not be commissioned as our fourth Fox-1 amateur radio satellite. AMSAT Engineering will continue to evaluate and test Fox-1Cliff/AO- 95 for solutions to the anomaly and your continued help in providing telemetry is appreciated so that we can have data throughout her daily orbits rather than limited data over our U.S. stations. The data, analysis, and testing could lead to a positive solution but at the very least will be important to AMSAT's satellite programs in providing information that would help us and others, as we do freely share our successes and failures, to avoid similar situations with future missions. I would like to thank all of the AMSAT Fox Engineering volunteers who made Fox-1Cliff possible and continue to build our new satellites, becoming even better as we move forward. I will provide more information on the anomaly and any determination we make regarding the possible cause or causes as well as information on the possibility of recovery, over time. Please be patient regarding that. Many of you have probably built a project and had to troubleshoot it on your bench, we are in a troubleshooting situation here with the additional challenge of being 600 km away from our bench. [ANS thanks Jerry Buxton, N0JY, AMSAT Vice President of Engineering for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Fox-1Cliff Launched, Initial Telemetry Received Fox-1Cliff was successfully launched on Spaceflight's SSO-A: SmallSat Express mission on a SpaceX Falcon 9 from Vandenberg Air Force Base at 18:34:05 UTC on December 3, 2018. Following deployment, the space- craft was activated on schedule at 23:54:27 UTC. At approximately 00:30 UTC on December 4th, several stations in Brazil, including PS8MT, PT9BM, and PT2AP, reported hearing the voice beacon "Fox-1Cliff Safe Mode," confirming that the satellite was alive. Just before 00:40 UTC, AMSAT Fox-1 Team Member Burns Fisher, WB1FJ, was the first to submit telemetry to AMSAT servers. Initial telemetry values show the satellite to be in good health. Thanks to the 29 different stations that contributed telemetry during Fox-1Cliff's initial orbits. At press time this week over 130 stations have received telemetry and uploaded their data to AMSAT's servers. All stations are encouraged to please continue collecting telemetry during the commissioning process and are reminded not to transmit on the uplink frequencies until AMSAT opens the satellite for general use. The commissioning process is expected to take approximately 7-10 days. [ANS thanks AMSAT for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Fox-1Cliff Designated AMSAT-OSCAR 95 (AO-95) On December 3rd, 2018, Fox-1Cliff was launched on a Falcon 9 vehicle from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Part of Spaceflight's SSO-A: Smallsat Express launch, Fox-1Cliff was named after long time AMSAT supporter Cliff Buttschardt, K7RR (SK). In the 48 hours after launch, more than 110 amateur radio operators around the world have successfully received and submitted telemetry from the satellite. Following in our long tradition of naming amateur satellites, AMSAT hereby designates Fox-1Cliff as AMSAT-OSCAR 95 (AO-95). Thank you to those who have supported this mission with their time, talent, and financial support for the benefit of amateur radio operators worldwide. 73, Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA AMSAT VP Operations / OSCAR Number Administrator [ANS thanks Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, AMSAT VP Operations / OSCAR Number Administrator for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- ExseedSat Granted VO-96 OSCAR Number On December 3rd, 2018, ExseedSat was launched on a Falcon 9 vehicle from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Part of Spaceflight's SSO-A: Smallsat Express launch, ExseedSat was built by a team of Indian radio hams including Ashhar Farhan (VU2ESE), George Phillips (VU2GT), Gurudutta Panda (VU3GDP), Sasi Bhusan (VU3ELR), and Nitin Mutin (VU3TYG). Initial telemetry has been received around the world. At the request of Exseed Space, AMSAT hereby designates ExseedSat as VUsat-OSCAR 96 (VO-96). We congratulate the owners and operators of VO-96, thank them for their contribution to the amateur satellite community, and wish them continued success on this and future projects. 73, Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA AMSAT VP Operations / OSCAR Number Administrator [ANS thanks Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, AMSAT VP Operations / OSCAR Number Administrator for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- JY1Sat now Jordan-OSCAR 97 (JO-97) On December 3rd, 2018, JY1Sat was launched on a Falcon 9 vehicle from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Part of Spaceflight's SSO-A: Smallsat Express launch, JY1Sat is a project of the Crown Prince Foundation of Jordan. Telemetry has been received and decoded around the world since the launch. At the request of the Crown Prince Foundation, AMSAT hereby desig- nates JY1Sat as Jordan-OSCAR 97 (JO-97). We congratulate the owners and operators of JO-97, thank them for their contribution to the amateur satellite community, and wish them continued success on this and future projects. 73, Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA AMSAT VP Operations / OSCAR Number Administrator [ANS thanks Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, AMSAT VP Operations / OSCAR Number Administrator for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ For a limited time, new and rewewing AMSAT members will receive a free digital copy of "Getting Started with Amateur Satellites" Join or renew your AMSAT membership today at https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/ +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ --------------------------------------------------------------------- Remind Me Again? What is Going On With Fox-1Cliff? Jerry Buxton, N0JY, AMSAT Vice President-Engineering, and the Fox Engineering Team remind you of the post-launch testing activities for Fox-1Cliff. + Capturing Initial Telemetry is the Most Important Task + Safe Mode/Beacon Mode Operation on Start Up + On-Orbit Checklist Activities + Activation for Amateur Radio Access + Fox-1Cliff Technical Details Capturing Initial Telemetry is the Most Important Task ------------------------------------------------------- Following the successful launch and deployment of Fox-1Cliff, all amateur radio satellite enthusiasts can play an important part in the commissioning of the new satellite. Telemetry helps us tremendously, starting ASAP after startup (~59 minutes after deployment*) and for the next 72-96 hours at least (for the life of the satellite is preferred!) as we look for successful startup, watch the general health and function as the satellite begins to acclimate to space, and start to perform the on orbit checkout. The first station to successfully receive and submit telemetry to the AMSAT server will receive a special 3D printed QSL card acknowledging their contribution. If you are capturing telemetry with FoxTelem, please be sure that "Upload to Server" is checked in your settings and your Ground Station Params are filled in as well. You can help AMSAT and everyone waiting to get on the air with Fox-1Cliff tremendously, by capturing Fox-1Cliff telemetry. Safe Mode/Beacon Mode Operation on Start Up ------------------------------------------- In the initial Safe Mode after startup, which we actually call Beacon Mode, the transmitter is limited to 10 seconds on time then does the two minutes off cycle. For those of you capturing telemetry, that means that you will only see Current frames and no High or Low frames because the High and Low are truncated as it takes just over 10 seconds to send two frames. You will hear Veronica announcing "Fox-1Cliff Safe Mode" while in Beacon Mode. We will likely leave the satellite in Beacon Mode for 24 hours to observe power telemetry. If we are seeing good readings from what you gather, when it comes over the U.S. for the first good pass after that holding period we will command it from Beacon Mode to normal Safe Mode. That puts Fox-1Cliff in full (still Safe Mode though) operation and transmits a full two frames of telemetry which is one Current frame followed by, and alternating each ID cycle, a High or a Low frame. On-Orbit Checklist Activities ----------------------------- We will begin the rest of the in orbit checklist activities at that time, and it is expected to take 7 to 10 days. Help your friends and all of our satellite ham friends get on the air and have fun sooner by being polite and patient! The in orbit checkout procedure is similar to Fox-1D and could be completed in as little as 7 days if we have the cooperation of the users. It is very important, not to mention just plain good Amateur Operating Practice, to refrain from using the transponder uplink so we can do the on orbit tests, including when we turn on transponder mode for testing. I cannot stress enough, the importance of this cooperation not just for us but also for all users, simply having a little patience so we can conduct the tests as quickly and accurately as possible. +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ Do not attempt to access this satellite until the activation announcement from AMSAT Engineering and AMSAT Operations Teams +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ Activation for Amateur Radio Access ----------------------------------- AMSAT will make it broadly known when the tests are complete and the transponder is available for all to use. If you hear someone on the transponder, please do not assume that it is open for general use - check our website, Facebook, Twitter, to be sure you are not accidentally jumping in with and unwittingly causing interference as well. Many hams put thousands of volunteer hours of their time into making Fox-1Cliff happen. Just like any ham radio project you might undertake, we build satellites. We do it because we like to, and when we are done, we freely share our project with hams everywhere as is the spirit of amateur radio. I have to say though, that the incidents we have experienced in the past with stations intentionally disregarding the command stations requests to keep the frequency clear during testing not only delays the commissioning, but also negatively impacts the enthusiasm that our volunteers feel toward handing over a new bird to the members and users as soon as possible. I am asking all satellite hams to contribute just a little bit of your time to the fun now, by being patient and just gathering telemetry, not using the transponder uplink, and helping us complete the last few days of getting Fox-1Cliff in orbit and operating for all of you. Fox-1Cliff Technical Details ---------------------------- Uplink: 435.300 MHz / 1267.300 MHz** with 67 Hz CTCSS Tone Downlink: 145.920 MHz ** Uplinks switched by command station, not operational simultaneously Nominal operating frequencies may vary slightly after launch. Ground stations need to adjust your transmit frequency for Doppler Shift. One suggested approach includes programming 5 uplink fre- quencies into memory channels and stepping through the channels depending on Fox-1Cliff's relative position to you. (Fc in the table below is the nominal uplink center frequency = 435.300 MHz). Full duplex operation is recommended to allow you to hear if you are tuned on-frequency and also avoids interfering if another station is transmitting. ADJUSTING YOUR UPLINK FREQUENCY to TRACK DOPPLER SHIFT ------------------------------------------------------ AOS (Memory Channel 1) Fc - 10 KHz 435.290 MHz Approaching (Memory Channel 2) Fc - 5 KHz 435.295 MHz Nearest (Memory Channel 3) Fc 435.300 MHz Departing (Memory Channel 4) Fc + 5 KHz 435.305 MHz LOS (Memory Channel 5) Fc + 10 KHz 435.310 MHz Access the Fox-1 Operating Guide on-line at: https://www.amsat.org/station-and-operating-hints/ Find all of AMSAT Fox-1 frequencies on-line at: https://www.amsat.org/fm-satellite-frequency-summary/ SatPC32 users can find updated *.SQF files at: http://tinyurl.com/ANS-336-SatPC32files [ANS thanks Jerry Buxton, N0JY, AMSAT Vice President-Engineering for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Updates to AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for 12-6-2018 Fox-1Cliff has been renamed AMSAT-OSCAR 95 (AO-95) per ANS Special Bulletin 339.01, December 5, 2018. The following Satellites have been added to this week's AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution. >From the India ISRO PSLV-C43 launch on November 29, 2018: FacSat 1 - NORAD CAT ID 43721 Reaktor H W - NORAD CAT ID 43728 (Reaktor Hello World, CAT ID per owner) InnoSat 2 - NORAD CAT ID 43738 3CAT 1 - NORAD CAT ID 43721 (CAT ID per owner) Thanks to Nico Janssen, PA0DLO, for ID's on FactSat 1 and InoSat 2) >From the SpaceX Falcon 9 SSO-A launch on December 3,2018: OBJECT A - NORAD CAT ID 43758 JY1Sat - NORAD CAT ID 43759 ITASat 1 - NORAD CAT ID 43760 OBJECT D - NORAD CAT ID 43761 OBJECT E - NORAD CAT ID 43762 ESEO - NORAD CAT ID 43763 OBJECT G - NORAD CAT ID 43764 OBJECT H - NORAD CAT ID 43765 OBJECT J - NORAD CAT ID 43766 OBJECT K - NORAD CAT ID 43767 OBJECT L - NORAD CAT ID 43768 AO-95 - NORAD CAT ID 43774 (Fox-1Cliff renamed AO-95) MOVE-II - NORAD CAT ID 43775 PWSat 2 - NORAD CAT ID 43776 Thanks to Nico Janssen,PA0DLO, for the ID's on JY1-Sat, ITASAT 1, ESEO, MOVE-II, PWsat 2, and AO-95 (Fox-1Cliff). Note: The Falcon 9 SSO-A 12/3/2018 launch includes 64 spacecraft (15 microsats and 49 cubesats). The 14 objects listed above are those objects with TLEs currently listed by Space-Track.org. The objects are very close together at this time. More CAT IDs probably will be added and some satellites may change their CAT ID. Right now Cat ID 43774 is the best match for AO-95. I recommend patience. More later. The following satellite has decayed from orbit and has been removed from the distribution: UNSW-EC0 - NORAD CAT ID 42723 - Decayed December 3, 2018 i-INSPIRE II - NORAD CAT ID 42731 - Decayed November 24, 2018 SFERA 2 - NORAD CAT ID 42913 - Decayed November 29, 2018 Thanks to Nico Janssen, PA0DLO [ANS thanks Ray Hoad WA5QGD for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Changes to FUNcube Warehouses The FUNcube team are busy commissioning JY1Sat and assisting with ESEO. To this end we have instigated a new data warehouse which will aggregate all the data generated by FUNcube payloads. This can be found at http://data.amsat-uk.org and is currently supporting NAYIF-1, JY1Sat & ESEO. (The Dashboard warehouse URL for these satellites is the same) The existing warehouse at http://warehouse.funcube.org.uk will continue to support FUNcube-1 and hold data for UKube-1 and it's Dashboard warehouse URL remains http://data.funcube.org.uk We appreciate that this may be a little confusing as we transition but please bear with us. We be transferring all your points from the existing warehouse to the new one in the next few days when the commissioning dust settles. For those wishing to register or have lost there upload credentials, please visit: http://data.amsat-uk.org/registration A 'lost credentials' link has been added to the page. We still have forum.funcube.org.uk available for general discussions. Dave also mentions that in answer to "how do you handle change of callsigns?" that they have the ability to put in an alias for the ranking display which does not affect the dashboard credentials. This should be done by emailing me at operations @ funcube.org.uk This is the first bulk email we have sent using the database. If, under the rules of GDPR, please let us know if you would like your account marked as not wishing to receive emails. [ANS thanks Dave G4DPZ for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- RadFxSat-2 / Fox-1E Launch Date NET March 2019 NASA's CubeSat Launch Initiative has posted upcoming ELaNa Cubesat Launches on their website https://www.nasa.gov/content/upcoming-elana- cubesat-launches. AMSAT's RadFXSat-2/Fox-1E is among the satellites onboard the ELaNa XX launch set for NET March 2019. The ELaNa XX Mission will feature the flight of Virgin Orbit Flight 2 LauncherOne from Mojave, California The 11 CubeSat Missions scheduled to be deployed include: CACTUS-1 - Capitol Technology University, Laurel, Maryland CAPE-3 - University of Louisiana Lafayette, Louisiana EXOCUBE-2 - California Polytechnic University, San Louis Obispo, California INCA - New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico MicroMas-2b - Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lexington, Massachusetts MiTEE - University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan PICS - Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah PolarCube - University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, Colorado Q-PACE - University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida RadFXSat-2 - Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee TechEdSat-7 - NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett, California [ANS thanks NASA for alerting us to this information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Satellites Activation From The Queen Mary On December 15 Patrick WD9EWK will be part of a day of satellite operating from a deck on the RMS Queen Mary, docked at Long Beach in southern California, Saturday 15 December 2018. Operations will be portable, almost like a Field Day, and should include FM, SSB, and possibly packet. All operations from the Queen Mary will be as W6RO, the call sign for the wireless room on the ship operated by the Associated Radio Amateurs of Long Beach. Depending on staffing in the W6RO wireless room, there may also be HF activity during the satellite operation. Amateur radio has a long history on the Queen Mary, including a special-event station GB5QM that operated as the ship made its final voyage from England to Long Beach in 1967, and in almost 4 decades with the W6RO operations from Long Beach. More about the history of amateur radio on the Queen Mary is available at: https://queenmary.com/history/amateur-radio/ http://aralb.org/club-station-w6ro/ Patrick had the pleasure of working AO-7 from W6RO in March 2016. An article covering this quick operation appeared in the AMSAT Journal, and is available from the "Articles" folder in my Dropbox space: http://dropbox.wd9ewk.net/ as well as an AMSAT-BB posting after that activation: http://amsat.org/pipermail/amsat-bb/2016-March/057636.html QSLing for the W6RO satellite activation will be handled per the procedure on W6RO's QRZ page: http://www.qrz.com/db/W6RO with one exception: no QSO numbers will be given during the satellite operation. Satellite QSOs from W6RO will be done in the normal manner, with an exchange of call signs and grid locators. W6RO is located in grid DM03. W6RO does not use Logbook of the World, so all QSL requests will need to be mailed directly to the W6RO address in QRZ. Thanks to Endaf Buckley N6UTC, the Associated Radio Amateurs of Long Beach and the ARALB's W6RO Wireless Room Manager (David Akins N6HHR), and the Queen Mary management for their work in arranging this event. I look forward to another opportunity to work satellites from the Queen Mary. [ANS thanks Patrick WD9EWK for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Help Wanted: Radio Amateurs Requested to Monitor Cubesat Downlinks In addition to Fox-1Cliff, the SSO-A mission carried several other amateur radio satellites, including FUNcube on ESEO, JY1SAT, K2SAT, and ExseedSat. JY1SAT Signals Heard --------------------- Data is being received by many stations around the globe and being uploaded to the data warehouse http://data.amsat-uk.org . AMSAT-UK has provided Dashboard Software to decode JY1SAT: https://download.funcube.org.uk/JY1Sat_Dashboard_v1178.msi The first signals were picked up in Australia approximately 6 min- utes after deployment. Commissioning of the spacecraft is continu- ing and there will be some periods when the telemetry being trans- mitted is not valid. This will show up with invalid data collec- tion flags in the dashboard. The spacecraft is presently in safe mode so the TX power is approximately 30mW only! More up to date news and details can be found on the https://funcube.org.uk/ website. Frequencies for the JY1SAT FUNcube-6 transponder include: Uplink: 435.100 - 435.120 MHz CW, LSB Downlink: 145.855 - 145.875 MHz CW, USB Telemetry: 145.840 MHz (FUNcube BPSK format, new Dashboard software will be made available) JYISAT will transmit pre-stored images of the Kingdom which have been selected by a national competition. These images will be downlinked using a SSDV digital format. Exseedsat-1 Heard Intermittently -------------------------------- Please listen to Exseedsat RTTY telemetry on 145.900 FM and send reports directly to Nitin Muttin VU3TYG, vu3tyg at yahoo.co.in. Jerry Buxton, N0JY requests stations with large antennas listen for a possibly weak signal from the satellite. The telemetry downlink frequency is 145.900 MHz, and is transmitted as five short ASCII words in RTTY. You can use any RTTY software to receive the telemetry. Set the center frequency of RTTY to 2344. The RTTY is sent as 45.45 baud, 7-bit ASCII with one start bit, two stop bits and no parity. We recommend fldigi for receiving the telemetry on PCs. The telemetry decoder is at: http://amsatindia.org/exseeedsat-rtty-telemetry-decoder/ The satellite sends out a beacon "V" followed by the RTTY telemetry every minute. Uplink: 435.340 MHz FM voice with 67 Hz CTCSS tone and APRS digipeater Downlink: 145.900 MHZ FM voice, APRS digipeater, telemetry ESEO (FUNcube 4) ---------------- Signals and telemetry continue to be received from ESEO from the main platform transmitter on 437.00 MHz. The are bursts of 9k6 data transmitted every one minute. Full details of these trans- missions, including the telemetry equations, can now be found at https://www.esa.int/Education/ESEO. Daniel Estévez, EA4GPZ, com- mented that the beacon at 437.000 MHz it is not standard FSK AX.25, and it cannot be decoded with direwolf, UZ7HO or similar. The AMSAT payload transmitter on 145.895MHz has not yet been act- ivated and it seems likely to be sometime before this occurs. Uplink: 1263.500 MHz FM voice with 67Hz CTCSS tone Downlink: 145.895 MHz FM voice and telemetry Telemetry: 145.875 MHz Use ESEO Dashboard from AMSAT-UK https://download.funcube.org.uk/ESEO_Dashboard_v1177.msi See also the AMSAT-UK summary of mission descriptions and frequencies at: https://amsat-uk.org/2018/11/14/ssoa-amateur-radio-satellites/ [ANS thanks the satellite teams for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- KG5FYI and RN3DX Join KG5TMT and KF5ONO Aboard the ISS Three astronauts - including two radio amateurs - have docked at the International Space Station (ISS) on the first crewed Soyuz vehicle launch since a dramatic failure in October. The astronauts from the US, Canada, and Russia, left Kazakhstan at 1130 UTC on December 3, and the Russian space agency Roscomos confirmed their successful docking at the station. On board were David Saint-Jacques, KG5FYI, a Canadian engineer, astrophysicist, and medical doctor; space veteran Oleg Kononenko, RN3DX, of Russia, and Anne McClain, of the US. The three-person crew's mission was originally set for later this month, but officials moved up the date to avoid leaving the space station unstaffed, when the current ISS crew of cosmonaut Sergey Prokopyev and astronauts Serena Auñón-Chancellor, KG5TMT, and Alex- ander Gerst, KF5ONO, return to Earth on December 20. Meanwhile, NASA astronaut Nick Hague, KG5TMV, who was on the aborted October 11 Soyuz launch, is getting ready for another try. Hague, NASA astronaut Christina Hammock Koch, and cosmonaut Alexey Ovchinin are scheduled to launch from Baikonur Cosmodrome on February 28 aboard the Russian Soyuz MS-12 spacecraft. [ANS thanks the ARRL for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- AMSAT Web Adds Donation Portal AMSAT relies on your donations to Keep Amateur Radio in Space. Please consider a donation to the AMSAT General Fund, the GOLF Program, or ARISS today! Access the Donation Portal on the AMSAT front page http://www.amsat.org --> Select Donate from the main menu bar -or- visit https://www.amsat.org/donations/ for direct access to the page. +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ For a limited time, new and rewewing AMSAT members will receive a free digital copy of "Getting Started with Amateur Satellites" Join or renew your AMSAT membership today at https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/ +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ [ANS thanks AMSAT for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Upcoming Satellite Operations as of December 6, 2018 Oahu and Maui (BL01, BL10, BL11) - December 3-14, 2018 John, N7AME, will be in Hawaii December 3-14. John hopes to rove BL01, BL10 and BL11, but the Hawaiian Islands appear to have ten (10) different grids, and he hopes he can work all of them. John can only work FM satellites AO-91 and AO-92. Haleakala, HI (BL10, BL11, BL20) - December 8-11, 2018 Gabe, AL6D, has been approved for a flight deck training trip to Hawaii, December 8-11. Planned flight lands mid-afternoon at OCG on Dec 8th and departs late on Dec 11th. Gabe will rent a car and activate BL10/11/20, ultra-distance passes from Haleakala. Trip is dependent on availability of cockpit jumpseat, so subject to cancellation. Keep an eye on the @AL6D_Alaska Twitter for further updates https://twitter.com/AL6D_Alaska Greenburg, PA (FN00) - December 10-12, 2018 Tanner, W9TWJ, will be travelling for business the week of December 10th-12th, to Greensburg, PA (FN00). He will attempt to be active on FM evening passes and hopefully not freeze! Specific pass announcements will be posted to Twitter: https://twitter.com/twjones85 RMS Queen Mary (DM03) - December 15, 2018 Patrick , WD9EWK, will be part of a day of satellite operating from a deck on the RMS Queen Mary, docked at Long Beach in southern California, on Saturday 15 December 2018. Operations will be portable, almost like a Field Day, and should include FM, SSB, and possibly packet. All operations from the Queen Mary will be as W6RO, the call sign for the wireless room on the ship operated by the Associated Radio Amateurs of Long Beach. Depending on staffing in the W6RO wireless room, there may also be HF activity during the satellite operation. QSLing for the W6RO satellite activation will be handled per the procedure on W6RO's QRZ page: http://www.qrz.com/db/W6RO Oahu (BL01, BL11) - December 28 thru January 1, 2019,2018 Gabe, AL6D willbe heading to Oahu, Hawaii, at the end of the year. Plan is to operate from BL01 and BL10, linears and FM. Trip is dependent on availability of cockpit jumpseat, so subject to cancellation. Keep an eye on the @AL6D_Alaska Twitter for further updates https://twitter.com/AL6D_Alaska Please submit any additions or corrections to ke4al (at) amsat.org For updated information see: https://www.amsat.org/satellite-info/upcoming-satellite-operations/ [ANS thanks Robert KE4AL for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- ARISS News The ARISS-US program's education proposal window open Oct. 1 - Nov. 30, 2018 has now closed. The next window should go open in the spring of 2019. Recent Successful ARISS Contacts + Wed 2018-12-05 14:20 UTC between Alexander Gerst KF5ONO using ISS callsign DPØISS and Realschule & Gymnasium Weingarten, Weingarten, Germany. Contact was direct via DN1RMG. ARISS Mentor was Peter IN3GHZ. + Wed 2018-12-05 14:20 UTC between Alexander Gerst KF5ONO using ISS callsign DPØISS and Robert-Mayer-Gymnasium, Heilbronn, Germany. Contact was direct via DN1RMG. ARISS Mentor was Peter IN3GHZ. + Fri 2018-12-07 18:48:30 UTC between Serena Aunon-Chancellor KG5TMT using ISS callsign NA1SS and Hudson Memorial School, Hudson, NH. Contact was direct via N1FD. ARISS Mentor was Dave AA4KN +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ AMSAT and ARISS are currently supporting a FundRazr campaign to raise $150,000 for critical radio infrastructure upgrades on ISS. The upgrades are necessary to enable students to continue to talk to astronauts in space via Amateur Radio. We have reached a great milestone with $15,895 raised or about 10% towards our goal. This would not have been possible without your outstanding generosity!! For more information and to DONATE TODAY visit: https://fundrazr.com/arissnextgen?ref=ab_e7Htwa_ab_47IcJ9 +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ Upcoming ARISS Contact Schedule Hudson Memorial School, Hudson, NH, direct via N1FD The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be NA1SS The scheduled astronaut is Serena Aunon-Chancellor KG5TMT Contact was successful: Fri 2018-12-07 18:48:30 UTC [ANS thanks ARISS, Charlie AJ9N and David AA4KN for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Shorts From All Over + Dr. T.S. Kelso @TSKelso tweeted: Just a note, but we only update TLEs every two hours on CelesTrak, so if you are checking or down- loading files more than a dozen times a day, you are wasting band- width for the other ~350,000 daily users. Please review your scripts and adjust accordingly. Thanks! (@TSKelso via twitter) + Congratulations to Wyatt Dirks, AC0RA, for placing first place as Rover station AC0RA/R, Limited Rover earning him a score of 121,264 points in the ARRL September VHF Contest. Wyatt's score set a new record for W/VE stations, 1st place W/VE, and 1st place in the Minnesota Section. (ARRL) + Any update on AO-85? Many have asked about the staus of AO-85, with it recently being placed into safe mode. Burns Fisher notes, "...(we) have not had any time to look at it trying to deal with the launch and testing of AO-95 (Fox-1Cliff). We let it turn into safe mode when it had some odd behavior. However, the safe mode telemetry seems to be fine. I'm surprised that the power seems low to you. It should be sending two strong frame of telemetry and then "resting" for two minutes, then repeating. [ANS thanks Burns W2BFJ For the above information] + NASA TV to Air 'Spirit of Apollo' Tribute from National Cathedral. This month marks the 50th anniversary of NASA's Apollo 8 mission, which was the first to bring humans to another world as they orbited the Moon on Christmas Eve, 1968. To commemorate this historic event in human spaceflight and NASA's history, Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum will present "Spirit of Apollo," a program celebrating the milestone Apollo 8 mission, which brought humanity together and pushed the limits of exploration. The event will take place at 8 p.m., Tuesday, Dec. 11 (UTC-5), at Washington National Cathedral. It will air live on NASA Television and the agency's website. (NASA) + The Ham Talk Live podcast episode 143 featured an interview with Keith Baker, KB1SF, AMSAT Treasurer, Neil discussed AMSAT's history With Keith. You can listen to a recording of the podcast at: https://www.spreaker.com/show/ham-talk-live (via AMSAT) + Middle School and High School cubesats fly on SSO-A with Cliff https://tinyurl.com/ANS343-SchoolSats + AO-96 First Signals Heard AO-96 First Signals were as listed on https://www.amsat.org/fox- 1cliff-launched-initial-telemetry-received/ including Burns Fisher as first data. This was first DUV received and arriving at the AMSAT Server. Plus the Brazilian stations listed on that web page heard the voice beacon. N1JEZ said "Heard [voice beacon] about 7:39 PM [0039 UTC] here in FN34im Burlington, VT. Very low pass. DUV came on, but not enough to grab a packet" N3CRT reported 2018-12-04 at 0215-fox1cliff received 1 frame TLM (The above information if a synopsis of reports] --------------------------------------------------------------------- /EX In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi- tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT Office. Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu- dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status. Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership information. 73, This week's ANS Editor, EMike McCardel, AA8EM aa8em at amsat dot org _______________________________________________ Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans From ans @ amsat.org Sun Dec 16 07:20:09 2018 From: ans @ amsat.org (Mark D. Johns via ANS) Date: Sat, 15 Dec 2018 16:20:09 -0600 Subject: [jamsat-news:3580] [ans] ANS-350 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins Message-ID: AMSAT NEWS SERVICE ANS-350 The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor- mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building, launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio satellites. The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it. Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to: ans-editor at amsat.org. You can sign up for free e-mail delivery of the AMSAT News Service Bulletins via the ANS List; to join this list see: http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans In this edition: * November/December 2018 Apogee View Posted * AO-85 Operation Guidelines * AMSAT Engineering Team Moves Forward * Recurring Donations Feature Added to AMSAT.org * Support AMSAT Using Your IRA * Updates to AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution * Fox-1E and Co-Passenger Amateur Radio Frequencies * ELaNa XIX Launch Delayed * Upcoming Satellite Operations * AMSAT Award Announcements * Dragon/NanoRacks Delivers Cubesats to ISS * Apollo 8 50th Anniversary Special Event * Amateur Satellite News From South Africa * Satellite Shorts From All Over SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-350.01 ANS-350 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins AMSAT News Service Bulletin 350.01 >From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD. DATE YYY To All RADIO AMATEURS BID: $ANS-350.01 November/December 2018 Apogee View Posted The November/December 2018 edition of Apogee View, an update on AMSAT's activities from AMSAT President Joe Spier, K6WAO, has been posted to the AMSAT website: https://www.amsat.org/apogeeview/ [ANS thanks AMSAT for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- AO-85 Operation Guidelines AO-85 is back in transponder mode and open for use with a few conditions. Please do not use the satellite while in eclipse. If the footprint of the satellite does not touch any part of the ground that is in daylight, the satellite is in eclipse. (Also, many tracking programs will indicate when a satellite is in eclipse -- Ed.) This will give us a little extra battery life, and extend the satellite’s usable life. Please also do not “kerchunk” the satellite while in eclipse. I know this has been done to increase the number of telemetry packets received, but it is no longer acceptable. Thank you for your under- standing and cooperation. [ANS thanks Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- AMSAT Engineering Team Moves Forward Last week’s ANS bulletin carried the news that AO-95/Fox-1Cliff is exhibiting an anomaly that will prevent it from being commissioned and opened to the amateur community. Jerry Buxton, N0JY, AMSAT Vice- President Engineering writes that, while efforts to recover AO-95 continue, the engineering team is focused on upcoming missions: "The AMSAT Engineering team has been discussing the problem, possible causes, and working on leads ever since the Fox-1Cliff/AO-95 anomaly became known. Certainly, many of us are unhappy at not succeeding in making everybody else happy, but right now, with no readily apparent reason or reasons for the behavior, there is nothing further to report. "The situation has gone from a commissioning to being a challenge, and we're on it. We are looking at data from a number of sources, as well as our past experiences with the other Fox-1 satellites during their journey from their construction to orbit. Ideas such as employing a mega-QRO station to see if it can be heard by the bird have been on the table for several days but there are others of course, and I don't plan to report or discuss every thought we have in working this unless and until it is something of merit or actionable. As you probably know, our resources are limited and it's all volunteered time. Most if not all of our remaining Fox-1 engineers are also involved in the GOLF-TEE project so I have asked them to give that first priority with their available volunteer time in order to keep the schedule. AO-95 is in orbit now and we can vary the amount of attention on her as resources allow in order to achieve both goals. "If the results of our investigation point to a possibility of recovery be it partial, full, or some workaround method, we would all like to see her working as much as the rest of you and that is one of the drivers for the investigation of the anomaly. But perhaps the most important driver is that there are lessons to be learned for the betterment of future missions. I expect us to continue to look for the cause or causes until we have results or reach a dead end because of the inability to take the lid off and look inside AO-95. "I will certainly be keeping everyone posted when we have something new to report so in the meantime please carry on and enjoy the birds!" "On behalf of all of the volunteers who make up AMSAT Engineering, I would like to thank you all for supporting us. Your understanding of the risks involved and continued support through words and also by just getting on the birds and having fun, or capturing telemetry to help us monitor, troubleshoot, and make the next satellites better, is most gratifying!" [ANS thanks Jerry Buxton, NØJY for the above information.] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Recurring Donations Feature Added to AMSAT.org Would you like to donate to AMSAT and/or ARISS but can only afford a little at a time? Even small amounts help, especially as they add up over time! You can now use AMSAT’s recurring donations on the new donation portal at https://www.amsat.org/donations/ This is a great way for everyone to donate $5-10 a month over time to make a significant contribution. Thank you for helping keep amateur radio in space. [ANS thanks Paul Stoetzer, N8HM for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Support AMSAT Using Your IRA United States residents over age 70-1/2 may distribute up to $100,000 annually from their Individual Retirement Account (IRA) directly to qualifying charities, like the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT), without first having to declare the distribution as income. That means your income will not increase, enabling you potentially to remain in a lower tax bracket for income taxes and possible Medicare premium surcharges. Donating directly from your IRA to AMSAT could have more tax advantages for you than a direct personal donation, depending on your personal tax situation. To make this kind of donation, first contact the custodian of your IRA plan (e.g., the bank, mutual fund, brokerage, insurance company, etc.) that manages your IRA, and instruct that you wish to make a donation to AMSAT directly from your IRA. The check from the custodian must be made payable to the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation. Your custodian will then send you a 1099 form showing you, as the owner of the IRA, did not receive the income for your personal use. Most custodians will have you complete a direct donation form, and will mail the check directly to AMSAT. AMSAT greatly appreciates any size donation from your IRA. Please call the AMSAT Office at 301-822-4376 for help with any information or mailing instructions required by your IRA custodian. AMSAT strongly encourages those interested in supporting AMSAT through an IRA to consult with their attorney, accountant, and tax preparer or financial advisor to determine the implications and impact of such a gift on your personal situation. Thank you for supporting AMSAT! The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation is an IRC 501(c)(3) organiza- tion (tax identification number 52-0888529). [ANS thanks https://www.amsat.org/support-amsat-using-your-ira/ for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Updates to AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution The following satellites from the SpaceX Falcon 9 SSO-A 12-03-2018 launch that have been identified to date by either Space-Track or by detailed doppler analysis. Thanks again to Nico Janssen,PA0DLO, for the satellite ID updates for this week. MinXSS 2 - NORAD CAT ID 43758 HAWKEYE 1 - NORAD CAT ID 43765 (per SPACE-Track,commercial) AO-95 - NORAD CAT ID 43769 FLOCK 3S 1 - NORAD CAT ID 43770 (per SPACE-Track,commercial) PWSat 2 - NORAD CAT ID 43775 MOVE-II - NORAD CAT ID 43780 SNUSat 2 - NORAD CAT ID 43782 ITASat 1 - NORAD CAT ID 43786 Unknown Satellite - NORAD CAT ID 43787 (Downlink: 435:500 Mhz) EAGLET 1 - NORAD CAT ID 43790 ESEO - NORAD CAT ID 43792 CSIM - NORAD CAT ID 43793 HAWKEYE 2 - NORAD CAT ID 43794 (per SPACE-Track,commercial) SKYSAT C12 - NORAD CAT ID 43797 (per SPACE-Track,commercial) RANGE A - NORAD CAT ID 43798 HAWKEYE 3 - NORAD CAT ID 43799 (per SPACE-Track,commercial) SKYSAT C13 - NORAD CAT ID 43802 (per SPACE-Track,commercial) JO-97 - NORAD CAT ID 43803 Suomi 100 - NORAD CAT ID 43804 Al Farabi 2 - NORAD CAT ID 43805 The above list of SSO-A satellites has been included in the AMSAT-NA TLE Distibution this week with the exception of the following non- amateur radio satellites which have NOT been included: HAWKEYE 1 - NORAD CAT ID 43765 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) FLOCK 3S 1 -NORAD CAT ID 43770 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) HAWKEYE 2 - NORAD CAT ID 43794 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) SKYSAT C12 -NORAD CAT ID 43797 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) HAWKEYE 3 - NORAD CAT ID 43799 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) SKYSAT C13 -NORAD CAT ID 43802 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) Note: The Falcon 9 SSO-A 12/3/2018 launch includes 64 spacecraft (15 microsats and 49 cubesats). The 20 objects above are those objects out of a total of 55 listed by Space-Track.org that have, so far, been identified with reasonable confidence. We continue to wait for the remaining satellites to separate enough for doppler analysis to confirm their identity. I will continue to add satellites as they are identified. [ANS thanks Roy Hoad, WA5QGD, AMSAT Orbital Elements Manager, for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Fox-1E and Co-Passenger Amateur Radio Frequencies AMSAT's RadFXSat-2/Fox-1E is among the satellites onboard the ELaNa XX launch set for March 2019. According to http://www.amsat.org.uk/iaru/ here are the amateur radio frequencies for the launch: CACTUS-1 - Capitol Technology University, Laurel, Maryland No amateur radio payload found. CAPE-3 - University of Louisiana Lafayette, Louisiana 145.825 MHz AX.25 1K2 digipeater 435.325 MHz 1K2 FSK data with bursts to 100 KHz EXOCUBE-2 - California Polytechnic University, San Louis Obispo, Calif. 437.270 MHz AX.25 GMSK PSK variable rates to 38K4 INCA - New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico 437.125 MHz 200 kbps MSK MicroMas-2b - Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lexington, Mass. No amateur radio payload found. MiTEE - University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 437.800 MHz 9K6 FSK AX.25 PICS - Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah No amateur radio payload found. PolarCube - University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, Colorado No amateur radio payload found. Q-PACE - University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida 2412.500 MHz 1M25F1D modulation RadFXSat-2 - Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee Uplink: 145.890 - 145.860 MHz LSB/CW Downlink: 435.760 - 435.790 MHz USB/CW Telemetry: 435.750 MHz 1K2 BPSK TechEdSat-7 - NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett, California No amateur radio payload found. [ANS thanks http://www.amsat.org.uk/iaru/ for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- ELaNa XIX Launch Delayed “With a worsening weather system on the way, Rocket Lab is now target- ing no earlier than 0400 UTC, Sunday 16 December for the #ELaNa19 launch on Electron. We'll let the weather clear completely to give us a solid green window.” NASA's Educational Launch of Nanosatellites (ELaNa)-19 mission was to be launched from Rocket Lab’s private orbital launch site, Launch Complex 1, on New Zealand’s Māhia Peninsula on Thursday, Dec. 13. The Rocket Lab Electron A will carry 13 cubesats, and a number of the satellites carry amateur radio payloads. See https://tinyurl.com/ychudkyu Satellites to be launched on ELaNa XIX include: ? ALBUS ? NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, Ohio ? CeREs ? NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland ? CHOMPTT ? University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida ? CubeSail ? University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ? DaVinci ? North Idaho STEM Charter Academy, Rathdrum, Idaho ? ISX ? SRI International/ California Polytechnic University ? NMTSat ? New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology ? RSat ? United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland ? Shields-1 ? NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia ? STF-1 ? West Virginia University / NASA IV&V [ANS thanks Terry Osborne ZL2BAC for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Upcoming Satellite Operations East Coast Rove, Part Duex (EM91/92, FM02, FM03/13, FM04/14, EM84/94, EM75/85, EM76/86) ? December 15-17, 2018 Robert, KE4AL, will head out to complete the second half of his East Coast rove, December 15-17. Stops include the EM91/EM92 gridline, FM02, and FM03/FM13 gridline on Saturday. Sunday will start out on the FM04/FM14 gridline, followed by EM84/EM94 gridline, EM75/EM85 gridline, and EM76/EM86 gridline. Specific pass schedule posted at https://twitter.com/KE4ALabama/status/1070888100337979392. You can follow Robert during the trip on aprs.fi (KE4AL-9) and on his Twitter page https://twitter.com/KE4ALabama. Oahu (BL01, BL11) ? December 28 thru January 1, 2019,2018 Gabe, AL6D willbe heading to Oahu, Hawaii, at the end of the year. Plan is to operate from BL01 and BL10, linears and FM. Trip is dependent on availability of cockpit jumpseat, so subject to cancellation. Keep an eye on the @AL6D_Alaska Twitter for further updates https://twitter.com/AL6D_Alaska Central California (CM95, CM96, DM05, DM06) ? January 12, 2019 David, AD7DB, will be in the area of Kettleman City, Calif. near a convergence of four grids, operating on FM satellites. Grids (maybe gridlines) will depend on the satellite passes. Operation expected from 1700 UTC through 2300 UTC. Updates will be on Twitter as the time approaches: https://twitter.com/ad7db Please submit any additions or corrections to ke4al (at) amsat.org [ANS thanks AMSAT for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- AMSAT Awards Announcements + On December 10 Matt, NJ4Y completed his Worked All States - Satellite with a QSO with AL6D visiting Hawaii. The contact was between Florida and Hawaii via FO-29. Matt wrote, "I found a great spot with a -1° horizon in EL97, freezing cold but we made it!! Thats WAS on Sats for me from FL!" (Matt Stevens, NJ4Y via Twitter) [Editor's Note: Those of us in Minnesota have no sympathy at all for what Floridians term as "freezing cold."] + Congratulations to David, WN9Q, for earning AMSAT Rover Award #038. And to Billy, KM6NJL, for @amsat Rover Award #039. Keep on Rov'in! https://www.amsat.org/amsat-rover-award/ [ANS thanks Bruce Paige, KK5DO for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Dragon/NanoRacks Delivers Cubesats to ISS Last weekend, Dragon, the spacecraft from the sixteenth SpaceX contracted resupply mission, berthed with the International Space Station carrying educational experiments, CubeSats, and industry science research from NanoRacks customers into orbit. Included were five CubeSats to be deployed from the Company’s commercially developed CubeSat Deployer on the Space Station. These CubeSats are: Delphini-1, Aarhus University UNITE, University of Southern Indiana TechEdSat-8, NASA Ames, San Jose State University CATs (two identical CubeSats), Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab For more information, see: http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=53481 [ANS thanks spaceref.com for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Apollo 8 50th Anniversary Special Event Several NASA Amateur Radio clubs will mark the 50th anniversary of Apollo 8 on December 21 ? 27, concluding the year-long NASA on the Air activity, which celebrates NASA’s 60th anniversary. Special event operation will be on various bands and modes, and partici- pating stations will self-spot on the DX cluster as well as via Facebook and Twitter. [ANS thanks ARRL for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Amateur Satellite News From South Africa AMSAT SA has announced that parallel to its analogue Kletskous Cube- Sat, the group is working on a digital project featuring a Software defined transponder. Called AfriCUBE, the CubeSat will use the same space frame as KLETSKOUS. Anton Janovsky is current building a proto- type transponder. AMSATSA is inviting persons interested in becoming part of the development team to send their details to: admin @ amsatsa.org.za. Meanwhile the development and final construction of the AMSAT SA KLETSKOUS is plagued by electronic component obsolescence. This forces unwanted design changes to be made to ensure that when the time comes to construct the final launch unit, the main components are still available. The KLETSKOUS team decided to freeze the design of KLETSKOUS and purchase a quantity of devices to proactively mitigate future obso- lesce. This decision will also speed up the process of putting a final satellite on the table. "Every time we change designs to mitigate for the discontinued components, it is like starting the design afresh, often creating new problems that have to be solved", Hannes Coetzee, ZS6BZP said. "By freezing the design, in other words making a final decision on the main specialised devices to be used, we will be able to speed up the process of putting a flight ready unit on the table." KLETSKOUS is not a textbook design. Most of the sub-components that will make up KLETSKOUS are designed and being built by the volunteer team. "We do not have the finances to go out and purchase sub-units and simply wire them up.", Coetzee said. [ANS thanks http://www.amsatsa.org.za/ for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Satellite Shorts From All Over + Montana State University is asking for big ear antennas to listen for a pass or two for their RadSat-G 3U cubesat deployed from the ISS. The downlink frequency is 437.425 MHz 9k6 GMSK AX25 with 3 bursts every 2 minutes. For tracking pos- sible NORAD IDs include 43550 (object NX); 43553 (object PB); or 43554 (object PC) (Montana State University) + AMSAT SA has issued a call for papers to be presented at the 2019 AMSAT SA Space Symposium to be held in Gauteng on 16 March 2019. Send a synopsis of a paper proposal to admin @ amsatsa.org.za. The theme of the conference is "Space Science with Amateur Radio." + Stephen 2E0SSM recently did a talk at the Lincoln Shortwave Club about working amateur satellites and he has now published an article on his website explaining the things Stephen had to learn when he first started. His guide is available at: http://mcbainsite.co.uk/working-amateur-radio-satellites/ (ANS thanks southgatearc.org for the above information) + An ARISS contact was completed with Kenilworth School and Sixth Form, Kenilworth, United Kingdom, direct via GB4KHS on Friday, Dec. 14. The astronaut was Serena Aunon-Chancellor, KG5TMT. The contact may be viewed on YouTube at https://tinyurl.com/y7kmml4y The ARISS-US program’s education proposal window open Oct. 1 - Nov. 30, 2018 has now closed. The next window should go open in the spring of 2019. The ARISS webpage is at http://www.ariss.org/ (ANS thanks Charlie Sufana, AJ9N for the above information) + A robotic lander and rover lifted off Friday, Dec. 7 from China’s Xichang space center, kicking off a journey that will culminate in an attempt in early January to touch down on the far side of the moon for the first time. For more, see: https://tinyurl.com/yar5plhz + Voyager II, launched in 1977, has left the solar system! https://tinyurl.com/ydahmnhl + A detailed explanation of the challenges facing the SSO-A launch that included a number of amateur radio cubesats has been published by Wired magazine at: https://tinyurl.com/y9nbl9xz + Est-ce que tu parles français? TV News report videos about the ARISS contact between ISS astronaut Serena Auñón-Chancellor, KG5TMT and students in Thiviers, France on December 10 can be seen at http://www.ariss-f.org/ariss-24-contact-etabli/+ + 2018 Microwave Update conference proceedings are available on the homepage: http://www.microwaveupdate.org/ Conference videos are available at: https://tinyurl.com/y7tr8v8d --------------------------------------------------------------------- /EX In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi- tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT Office. Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu- dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status. Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership information. 73 and Remember to help keep amateur radio in space, This week's ANS Editor, K0JM at amsat dot org _______________________________________________ Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans From ans @ amsat.org Sun Dec 23 12:04:22 2018 From: ans @ amsat.org (Frank Karnauskas via ANS) Date: Sat, 22 Dec 2018 20:04:22 -0700 Subject: [jamsat-news:3581] [ans] ANS-357 AMSAT Weekly News Bulletin Message-ID: <000301d49a6c$34efe730$9ecfb590$@GoKarns.com> AMSAT NEWS SERVICE ANS-357 The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and information service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in space including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building, launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio satellites. The news feed on http://amsat.org publishes news of Amateur Radio in space as soon as our volunteers can post it. Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to: ans-editor at amsat dot org. In this edition: * AO-85 Update as of December 19, 2018 * Changes to the AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for December 20, 2018 * UWE-4 Satellite Ready to Launch * New Amateur Radio Packet Gear Awaits Unpacking, Installation on Space Station * Successful "AMSAT on the Queen Mary" Operation * AMSAT CW Activity Day January 1, 2019 In Memory Of W3XO * ELaNa-XIX Successfully Launched * AMSAT Awards * Upcoming Satellite Operations * ARISS News * Satellite Shorts from All Over SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-357.01 ANS-357 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins AMSAT News Service Bulletin 357.01 >From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD. December 23, 2018 To All RADIO AMATEURS BID: $ANS-357.01 AO-85 Update as of 12/19/2018 Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, Vice-President Operations published the following on AO-85's status as of December 19, 2018: "As you probably know, AO-85 has had issues recently with the batteries dropping precariously low during eclipse. We think it's likely the batteries suffered degradation due to heat during previous periods of no eclipses. This has made it difficult to keep the satellite available for use without endangering the batteries. Today the nominally 3.6v pack was down to 2.8v at the end of the eclipse. That is dangerously low. "In an effort to extend the useable life of the satellite, this evening we turned both the IHU and the transmitter off. This ceases all transmissions, including the beacons every two minutes in both sunlit and eclipsed parts of the orbit. We will periodically turn the satellite back on for an orbit or two, in order to gather telemetry. If all goes as planned, we will turn the repeater back on during the next period of no eclipses beginning around January 24th. "In the meantime, it is important to leave AO-85 tracked in your FoxTelem setups, in order for us to gather telemetry and keep tabs on the situation. If you do happen to hear a Veronica beacon, or either the normal repeater or the COR/no telemetry repeater, please let the list know, or send me an email or message directly. "We appreciate your understanding and cooperation as we try to make the most of the situation. Please consider supporting the AMSAT GOLF project with your membership, and one-time or recurring donations at: https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/ or https://www.amsat.org/donate/" [ANS thanks Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA for the above information.] -------------------------------------------------------------------- Changes to the AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for December 20, 2018 The identification of the 64 satellites launched by SpaceX SSO-A mission on December 3, 2018 continues. The consensus is that the spacing between unidentified satellites is growing to a point where positive identification may now be possible. In the past, two weeks after launch has been the time when distance between CubeSats increases enough to identify most individual satellites. We will see. There are no major changes to the previous AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution (Monday, December 17, 2018) for the IDENTIFIED SSO-A launch objects at this time except for the following comments: (1) There is a disagreement between this week's TLE distribution (Thursday, December 20, 2018) and the Space-Track data of the same date. Space-Track shows PWSat 2 as OBJECT 43814, but detailed Doppler analysis suggests that PWSat 2 is object 43775 or 43779. Hopefully this will be resolved in the next week. In the meantime, all three objects 43775, 43779, and 43814 are included in this week's distribution with PWSat 2 shown as CAT ID 43775. (2) The following satellites still await greater separation: - AO 95 (ex Fox 1Cliff) is shown as OBJECT 43769 but may be 43771; - JO 97 (ex JY1Sat) is shown as OBJECT 43803 but may be 43801, downlink 145.839085 MHz. (3) The following objects have been identified as non-amateur radio satellites and have been removed from this week's distribution: - ICEYE-X2 1 - CAT ID 43761 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) - STPSAT-5 - CAT ID 43762 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) - CORVUS BC4 - NORAD CAT ID 43767 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) - NEXTSAT-1 - NORAD CAT ID 43811 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) - GLOBAL-2 - NORAD CAT ID 43812 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) Finally, the following satellites have been added to this week's TLE distribution: - Reaktor Hello World is NORAD CAT ID 43743 (Downlink: 437.77527) - CHOMPTT is NORAD CAT ID 43855 (Downlink: 437.55895) AMSAT thanks to Nico Janssen, PA0DLO, and Alan Biddle, WA4SCA, two very diligent "telemetry fans" and to everyone else for their patience in this process. [ANS thanks Ray Hoad, WA5QGD for the above information.] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ For a limited time, new and renewing AMSAT members will receive a free digital copy of "Getting Started with Amateur Satellites" Join or renew your AMSAT membership today at https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/ +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ UWE-4 Satellite Ready to Launch The University of Wuerzburg's UWE-4 1U CubeSat is ready for launch on December 27, 2018 at 02:07:18 UTC on Soyuz-2 from Russia's Vostochny Launch Site. The UWE-4 mission will demonstrate and characterize to enable attitude and orbit control using an electric propulsion system. Uplink: 437.385 MHz (when amateur digipeater is enabled) Downlink: 437.385 MHz 9K6 FSK AX.25 science data and digipeater Callsign: DP0UWH UWE-4 beacons are transmitted periodically every 60s. The beacon definition is provided in a file available at: tinyurl.com/ANS-357-UWE-4-Beacon Data recordings can also be forwarded to: uwe4 @ informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de After the scientific mission has been completed, a digipeater service on board the satellite will be activated, which is open to all radio amateurs. This service will not be active right after launch in order to avoid large radio interference at the satellite during payload operations. More information is available at: https://amsat-uk.org/2018/12/20/uwe-4-satellite/ or tinyurl.com/ANS-357-UWE-4-Satellite A live stream of the Soyuz Launch with UWE-4 CubeSat on board will be available online on December 27, 2018 at 02:06 GMT at: Livestream: http://www.russian.space/306/ Livestream: http://online.roscosmos.ru/ [ANS thanks the University of Wuerzburg, AMSAT-UK, and the IARU for the above information] -------------------------------------------------------------------- New Amateur Radio Packet Gear Awaits Unpacking, Installation on Space Station New Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) packet equipment awaits unpacking and installation on board the station after arriving in November as part of the cargo transported via a Russian 71P Progress resupply vehicle. The new packet module for NA1SS will replace the current packet gear, which has been intermittent over the past year. "With the arrival of Progress complete, the crew has to find free time to unpack Progress, uninstall the intermittent module, and then set up and test the replacement packet module," explained Dan Barstow, KA1ARD, senior education manager of the ISS National Laboratory (CASIS), an ARISS sponsor. The ISS packet system was reported to have gone down in July 2017, although it unexpectedly came back to life the following summer. At the time of the failure, NASA ISS Ham Radio Project Engineer Kenneth Ransom, N5VHO, said the revived system would fill the gap until the replacement packet module was launched and installed. The packet system operates on 145.825 MHz. ARISS hardware team members on the ground were able to locate a functional duplicate of the ISS packet module that has been in use on the ISS for 17 years. ARISS said the subsequent installation will depend on the crew's busy schedule. In an email to ARISS and other groups CASIS supports, Barstow pointed out that ARISS is an official back-up system for astronauts to talk with Mission Control in the unlikely failure of the station's primary communication systems. Barstow said that in 2017, hams relayed nearly 89,000 packet messages via the ISS - an average of 243 every day. The statistic so intrigued and amazed Barstow that he decided to get his Amateur Radio license and gear to join in the activity. [ANS thanks the ARRL for the above information.] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ AMSAT and ARISS are currently supporting a FundRazr campaign to raise $150,000 for critical radio infrastructure upgrades on ISS. The upgrades are necessary to enable students to continue to talk to astronauts in space via Amateur Radio. We have reached a great milestone with $15,895 raised or about 10% towards our goal. This would not have been possible without your outstanding generosity!! For more information and to DONATE TODAY visit: https://fundrazr.com/arissnextgen?ref=ab_e7Htwa_ab_47IcJ9 +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ Successful "AMSAT on the Queen Mary" Operation Patrick Stoddard, WD9EWK filed the following report after a day of satellite operation board the Queen Mary anchored in Long Beach, California: "After a few months of planning, the "AMSAT on the Queen Mary" event on December 15, 2018 was a success. Many months of planning led to the day-long satellite activity on the Verandah Deck of the Queen Mary, where the ship's club call sign W6RO was heard on several different satellites (AO-7, AO-91, AO-92, FalconSat-3, FO-29, ISS, and SO-50) during the day. There were two operators for the satellite activity - Endaf Buckley, N6UTC, and Patrick Stoddard, WD9EWK. The Associated Radio Amateurs of Long Beach, the club that operates the W6RO station, was represented by David Akins N6HHR, the W6RO Wireless Room Manager. "The W6RO club station has its own Wireless Room near the bow of the Queen Mary. Unfortunately, a deck in that area was being used for a small ice rink, so the satellite operation had to take place at the other end of the ship. Not a big deal, as the Verandah Deck is a large open area. This was the first satellite operation by W6RO in almost 3 years, and the first time W6RO was used on the ship from a location other than the Wireless Room. "The satellite activity was like a Field Day station, working with portable equipment (HTs, FT-817s, and handheld antennas). Being on a ship which is part museum and part hotel, there were tours passing by during the day, along with others who were curious about our event. There were flyers on a table, along with 3D-printed models of CubeSat satellites including a model of the AO-91 satellite. "After the 8-hour event, 50 QSOs were logged with stations across North America, and the log sheets were given to David N6HHR so they could be filed with the rest of the W6RO logs. The Associated Radio Amateurs of Long Beach will be happy to answer QSL requests with a QSL card. The QSL procedure is listed on W6RO's QRZ.com entry, with one exception - the QSO number referenced on the QRZ.com entry is not required for satellite QSOs made during "AMSAT on the Queen Mary. "Some thank-you's are in order, starting with Endaf Buckley N6UTC. Endaf started talking with the Associated Radio Amateurs of Long Beach about the possibility of having an amateur satellite event on the Queen Mary a few months ago. The W6RO Wireless Room Manager, David Akins N6HHR, worked with the Queen Mary management to get the approvals needed for this event to take place on the ship. Without their hard work this event wouldn't have taken place. We also had additional help from ARALB member Ron Frank N3HI during the day." [ANS thanks Patrick Stoddard, WD9EWK for the above information.] -------------------------------------------------------------------- AMSAT CW Activity Day January 1, 2019 In Memory Of W3XO You are cordially invited to participate in AMSAT's third annual CW Activity Day. It will be held from 0001 to 2400 UTC on January 1,2019. This year's event is being held in memory of AMSAT past president Bill Tynan, W3XO. Bill operated primarily SSB, but would always come back to my CW call. Bill's experience reminds us that one need not be a CW specialist to enjoy the mode. CW Activity Day rules are very simple: there aren't any. Just operate CW through any amateur radio satellite. Straight keys and "bugs" are encouraged, but not required. The important thing is to get on the air and have fun, as Bill did. [ANS thanks Ray Soifer, W2RS for the above information.] -------------------------------------------------------------------- ELaNa-XIX Successfully Launched Rocket Lab launched its Electron rocket December 16, 2018 at 06:33 UTC with a host of CubeSats for NASA's Educational Launch of Nanosatellites (ELaNa) program. The Electron rocket injected the CubeSats into a 500 km circular orbit at an inclination of 85 degrees. Liftoff occurred from Rocket Lab's private Launch Complex 1 (LC-1) on the Mahia Peninsula in New Zealand. Of the 13 Cubesats launched, 10 were sponsored by NASA or educational institutions from the United States: - ALBUS - NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH - CeREs - NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD - CHOMPTT - University of Florida, Gainesville, FL - CubeSail - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL - DaVinci - North Idaho STEM Charter Academy, Rathdrum, Idaho - ISX - SRI International/ California Polytechnic University, Menlo Park, CA - NMTSat - New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro, NM - RSat - United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, MD - Shields-1 - NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA - STF-1 - West Virginia University / NASA IV&V, Morgantown, WV A narrated video of the launch can be viewed at youtube.com/watch?v=F7Kr3664hJs [ANS thanks Terry Osborne, ZL2BAC and Spaceflight.com for the above information.] -------------------------------------------------------------------- AMSAT Awards + Congratulations to Ruth Willet, KM4LAO for earning AMSAT Rover Award #040 [ANS thanks Bruce Paige, KK5DO for the above information.] -------------------------------------------------------------------- Upcoming Satellite Operations + Oahu (BL01, BL11) - December 28 to January 1, 2019 Gabe, AL6D will be heading to Oahu, Hawaii, at the end of the year. Plan is to operate from BL01 and BL10, linears and FM. Trip is dependent on availability of cockpit jump seat, so subject to cancellation. Keep an eye on the @AL6D_Alaska Twitter for further updates at https://twitter.com/AL6D_Alaska + Azores (HM58) - December 30 to January 2, 2019 Pedro, CU2ZG, will spend the long New Year's weekend in HM58. Pedro will operate holiday style on FM and linears. Skeds are accepted and preferred, but keep in mind that being a family trip availability constrains might occur. Confirmations via LoTW using plain CU2ZG will be uploaded the following week, and any direct QSL will get a proper reply. Updates posted on Twitter and publicly viewable at https://twitter.com/pdsousa. + Point Pelee National Park, Canada (EN81) - January 1, 2019 Ron, AD0DX, and Mike, W8LID plan to active Point Pelee National Park on New Year's Day to kick of the Canadian National Parks on the Air (CNPOTA) event. Keep an eye on their Twitter accounts for further updates at https://twitter.com/ad0dx and https://twitter.com/w8lid + Central California (CM95, CM96, DM05, DM06) - January 5, 2019 Ron, AD0DX will activate the CM95, CM96, DM05, DM06 grid corner on January 5th. Keep an eye on the @ad0dx Twitter feed for more updates at https://twitter.com/ad0dx + Central California (CM95, CM96, DM05, DM06) - January 12, 2019 David, AD7DB, will be in the area of Kettleman City CA near a convergence of four grids, operating on FM satellites. Grids (maybe gridlines) will depend on the satellite passes. Operation expected from 1700 UTC through 2300 UTC. Updates will be on Twitter as the time approaches at https://twitter.com/ad7db + Quartzfest Arizona (DM23) - January 19-27, 2019 John, N7JY, will be operating FM satellites on a holiday schedule. He may also visit some adjoining grids. There will likely be other hams operating from the event, located a few miles south of Quartzsite AZ. QSL via LOTW, or you can send your card with SASE. [ANS thanks Robert Bankston, KE4AL for the above information.] -------------------------------------------------------------------- ARISS News + ARISS Contacts for 2018 Concluded The next ARISS contact is expected to be during the week of January 14th, 2019. [ANS thanks ARISS for the above information.] -------------------------------------------------------------------- Satellite Shorts from All Over +AMSAT Office Closed for the Holidays The AMSAT Office will be closed from 20:00 UTC December 21, 2018 until January 4, 2019. Voice mail and email will not be checked. Orders placed, will be processed when the office reopens. [ANS thanks Martha Saragovitz for the above information.] + AO-95 Trivia: Who is "Veronica"? While circling the earth, a female voice, referred to as "Veronica" announces that AO-95 is in Safe Mode. The message repeats every two minutes. As for the voice you're hearing deliver it, that's a young woman named Veronica who is the daughter of Tony Monteiro, AA2TX. Tony had been AMSAT's vice president of engineering and an unwavering advocate for the FOX series of satellites. Tony became a Silent Key in 2014 but now it is his daughter who is spreading the word that another satellite is making its way across the sky. [ANS thanks Amateur Radio Newsline for the above information.] + WD9EWK Wins the December QST Cover Plaque Award The winning article for the December 2018 QST Cover Plaque award was "Making Digital Contacts Through the ISS" by Patrick Stoddard, WD9EWK. The QST Cover Plaque Award, given to the author or authors of the most popular article in each issue, is determined by a vote of ARRL members on the QST Cover Plaque Poll web page. [ANS thanks the ARRL for the above information.] + Satellite Field Operations Photos Wanted Frank Garofalo, WA2NDV is hosting a forum at Ham Radio University to help those who may be interested in getting involved with satellite communications. While putting his presentation together he thought it might be nice to see what fellow sat ops are using to work the sats. He'll be discussing various rigs/antenna/rotator/ tracking systems and has stock photos but he thinks it would be fun to see what others are running in the real world. If you care to share some photos please send them to Frank at wa2ndv @ gmail.com and use HRU PIC in the subject line. Photo credits will be given if you like. Ham Radio University is a completely voluntary function, there are no vendors or swap meet. It's all about education and fellowship. More information is available at: http://hamradiouniversity.org/ [ANS thanks the Frank Garofalo, WA2NDV for the above information.] + Keith Baker, KB1SK Interviewed on QSO Today Eric, 4Z1UG interviews the eloquent and informative Keith Baker, KB1SF on a little bit of history, a little bit of AMSAT behind the scenes and a little bit of future opportunities of Amateur Radio space operations. You can listen to the 1-hour interview at: tinyurl.com/ybe3j2tj [Editor's Note: This is a concise, no-frill interview full of interesting information.] [ANS thanks Eric, 4Z1UG for the above information.] + AMSAT-DL & Qatar Television Showcase Es'hailSat AMSAT Deutschland is at Es'hailSat, the Qatar Satellite Company at Doha, Qatar. A must see for all Es'hail-2 / AMSAT P4-A fans, Qatar Television produced a beautifully made documentation about Es'hail-1 & Es'hail-2 launch campaigns. In the second half you can see the Es'hail-2 satellite which includes the history making first geostationary amateur radio transponders. Even if you don't understand the language, just enjoy the pictures and try to spot the antennas for the AMSAT transponder. Watch it at: tinyurl.com/ANS-357-EshailSat-Video [ANS thanks AMSAT-DL for the above information.] + Interactive Grid Square Map Available Robert Bankston, KE4AL originally published his 488-Grid Square Map in March 2018. It has become a popular way for amateur radio satellite operators to keep track of grid squares they have worked or confirmed. Now, Chris Tabor, K7TAB has transformed the original map (requiring manual input, Excel coloring book) into a more sophisticated, semi- automated GridMaster tracking tool. More information on the new and improved Gridmaster Map and the free download is available at: ke4al.wordpress.com/2018/06/29/new-and-improved-gridmaster-map/ [ANS thanks Robert Bankston, KE4AL for the above information.] + Dramatic power reduction on 23cm Proposed for Belgium Radio Hams The Belgium regulator BIPT has proposed cutting to just 20 watts the permitted power level for the Amateur and Amateur-Satellite allocations in 1260-1300 MHz which is to be used by the Galileo GNSS / GPS constellation. More information at: tinyurl.com/ANS357-Belgium-23CM [ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information.] + View a Cubesat Launch from Inside the ISS Check out what CubeSat deployment from the ISS Kibo module looks like. This short but interesting video can be viewed at: twitter.com/i/web/status/1075695199685369856 [ANS thanks the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs for the above information.] + KNACKSAT Makes Headlines in Thailand KNACKSAT, an acronym for KMUTNB Academic Challenge of Knowledge Satellite, was one of 64 satellites launched on the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket SSO mission on December 3, 2018. It received positive news coverage from the Bangkok Post. Read the article at: tinyurl.com/ANS-357-KNACKSAT [ANS thanks AMSAT for the above information.] + ESA Kids Website Updated The ESA Education office is proud to launch the new and improved ESA Kids website, the online home of Paxi, the ESA Education mascot. With the new design and organization, ESA Kids is the one-stop shop for all space-related information, resources, multimedia, and activities for children. The ESA Kids platform has a new look and feel that enables users easier access to space-inspired Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) content geared toward primary- school aged children (5-12 years) in English, German, Dutch, Spanish, French, and Italian. More information at: http://www.esa.int/Education/New_and_improved_ESA_Kids_website or https://www.esa.int/kids/en/home [ANS thanks the European Space Agency for the above information.] -------------------------------------------------------------------- /EX In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive additional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT office. Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the student rate for a maximum of six post-secondary years in this status. Contact Martha at the AMSAT office for additional student membership information. Happy Holidays Around the World and 73, This week's ANS Editor, Frank Karnauskas, N1UW n1uw at amsat dot org Sent via AMSAT-BB @ amsat.org. AMSAT-NA makes this open forum available to all interested persons worldwide without requiring membership. Opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not reflect the official views of AMSAT-NA. Not an AMSAT member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program! Subscription settings: http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb _______________________________________________ Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans From ans @ amsat.org Sun Dec 30 09:08:52 2018 From: ans @ amsat.org (Paul Stoetzer via ANS) Date: Sat, 29 Dec 2018 19:08:52 -0500 Subject: [jamsat-news:3582] [ans] ANS-364 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins Message-ID: AMSAT NEWS SERVICE ANS-364 The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and information service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in space including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building, launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio satellites. The news feed on http://amsat.org publishes news of Amateur Radio in space as soon as our volunteers can post it. Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to: ans-editor at amsat dot org. In this edition: * AMSAT CW Activity Day January 1, 2019 In Memory Of W3XO * Soyuz Flight Deploys Amateur Radio Satellites * In-Orbit Test (IOT) of Es’hail-2 AMSAT P4-A transponders * Changes to the AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for December 27, 2018 * Ham Talk Live Podcast Featuring KO4MA * Multiple Flight Projects Selected by International Space Station U.S. National Laboratory * AMSAT Awards Update * Upcoming Satellite Operations * Satellite Shorts from All Over SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-364.01 ANS-364 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins AMSAT News Service Bulletin 364.01 >From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD. December 30, 2018 To All RADIO AMATEURS BID: $ANS-364.01 +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ AMSAT relies on your donations to Keep Amateur Radio in Space Please consider a one-time or recurring donation today at https://www.amsat.org/donate/ +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ AMSAT CW Activity Day January 1, 2019 In Memory Of W3XO You are cordially invited to participate in AMSAT's third annual CW Activity Day. It will be held from 0001 to 2400 UTC on January 1,2019. This year's event is being held in memory of AMSAT past president Bill Tynan, W3XO. Bill operated primarily SSB, but would always come back to my CW call. Bill's experience reminds us that one need not be a CW specialist to enjoy the mode. CW Activity Day rules are very simple: there aren't any. Just operate CW through any amateur radio satellite. Straight keys and "bugs" are encouraged, but not required. The important thing is to get on the air and have fun, as Bill did. [ANS thanks Ray Soifer, W2RS for the above information.] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Soyuz Flight Deploys Amateur Radio Satellites The Soyuz flight on December 27th carrying a pair of Kanopus V remote sensing satellites also deployed two German Orbital Systems D-Star ONE satellites: D-Star ONE - Sparrow and D-Star ONE - iSat. Beacons have been successfully received. These satellites carry a D-STAR parrot repeater that will be available for use by amateur radio operators. The uplink is 437.325 MHz and the downlink is 435.525 MHz. The flight also deployed the UWE-4 1U CubeSat carrying an electric propulsion experiment and a 70cm 9k6 AX.25 digipeater. The uplink and downlink frequency is 437.375 MHz. The digipeater will be active after the Launch and Early Operations Phase (LEOP) More information on the launch and other payloads deployed can be found at http://russianspaceweb.com/kanopus-v5-v6.html [ANS thanks Russian Space Web, German Orbital Systems and the IARU for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- In-Orbit Test (IOT) of Es’hail-2 AMSAT P4-A transponders AMSAT-DL notes that the In-Orbit testing (IOT) of the P4-A ham radio transponders on Es’hail-2 have started. In a statement regarding the status of the transponders for amateur radio use AMSAT-DL said, "However: Please be reminded, that under no circumstances uplink attempts should be done! Like everyone, we are very excited by the received signals so far and we do appreciate any monitoring and receiving reports from the amateur radio community. We are happy to see how much interest and enthusiasm this satellite already created in our community." And continuing, "Any unsolicited transmissions will delay the commis- sioning and maybe even worse, might influence our good relation with Es’hailSat during this project. When a new satellite is launched, a number of tests are performed to verify that the stress loads imposed by the launch have not affected the on-board systems. An RF in-orbit test (IOT) is conducted to verify the performance of communication payloads. These operations are typic- ally performed by the manufacturer of the satellite, in this case by MELCO engineers. These operations also include both AMSAT P4-A trans- ponders on-board Es’hail-2. Such acceptance tests are part of the commercial contract and usually consists of Power, Frequency and other measurements like: Gain transfer, EIRP, In-Band and Out-Band response, receive & transmit antenna cross-polarization isolation, antenna gain, Gain-to-temperature ratio (G/T), Gain adjustments, TWT settings, Spacecraft spurious signal search, intermodulation, LO and beacon frequency stability and much more… When all IOT tests are successful performed, the satellite will be moved to it’s final position at 26°E and handed-over to it’s owner Es’hailSat. Please understand that AMSAT-DL is not authorized to give any details of the above operations in advance. [ANS thanks AMSAT-DL for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Changes to the AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for December 27, 2018 The identification of the 64 satellites launched by SpaceX SSO-A mission on December 3, 2018 continues. As noted last week, the consensus is that the spacing between unidentified satellites is STILL not to a point where positive identification is possible. In the past, two weeks after launch has been the time when distance between cubesats increases enough to identify most individual sat- ellites. But, this time, we must wait for more separation. There are no major changes to the previous AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution (Thursday, December 20, 2018) for the IDENTIFIED SSO-A launch objects at this time except for the following comments: (1) There is a disagreement between this week's TLE distribution (Thursday, December 27, 2018) and the Space-Track data of the same date. Space-Track shows PWSat 2 as OBJECT 43814, but detailed doppler analysis suggests that PWSat 2 is object 43775 or 43779. Hopefully this will be resolved in the coming week. In the mean time, all three objects 43775, 43779, and 43814 are included in this week's distribution with PWSat 2 shown as CAT ID 43775. (2) Space-Track has decided that OBJECT 43769 is now FLOCK 3S 1 (a commercial satellite). OBJECT 43769 was the object that we had used last week for AO 95. So, we are now going to use OBJECT 43771 for AO-95. OBJECT 43771 is the other object we think may be AO-95. Remember these objects are still too close together so we must wait for more separation. Patience! (3) Also we are still awaiting greater separation for JO 97 (ex JY1Sat). JO-97 is shown as OBJECT 43803 but may be 43801. The downlink is 145.839085 MHz. (4) The following objects have been identified as non-amateur radio satellites and have been removed from this week's distribution: EXCITE - CAT ID 43758 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) KAZSTSAT - CAT ID 43783 (identified by Space-Track, non-amateur) FLOCK 3S 3 - NORAD CAT ID 43788 (identified by Space-Track, non- amateur) FLOCK 3S 2 - NORAD CAT ID 43821 (identified by Space-Track, non- amateur) Thanks to Nico Janssen, PA0DLO, and Alan Biddle, WA4SCA, for this week's update details. [ANS thanks Ray Hoad, WA5QGD for the above information.] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Ham Talk Live Podcast Featuring KO4MA If you missed the Ham Talk Live show featuring Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, on December 27 you can play back a recording of this episode at: https://www.spreaker.com/show/ham-talk-live then select Episode 146 - Making the Most of Satellite Time 27 Dec Drew and Neil discussed getting the most out of satellite time. They talked about what to say, when to say it, and other etiquette and protocol issues so that you can make the most of your satellite operation! Ham Talk Live is also available as a podcast on nearly all podcast sites: Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Google Play, SoundCloud, and iHeart Podcasts; and it's also available on YouTube. [ANS thanks Neil Rapp, WB9VPG, and Ham Talk Live for the above information] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ For a limited time, new and renewing AMSAT members will receive a free digital copy of "Getting Started with Amateur Satellites" Join or renew your AMSAT membership today at https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/ +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ Multiple Flight Projects Selected by International Space Station U.S. National Laboratory The International Space Station (ISS) U.S. National Laboratory today announced multiple flight projects stemming from a variety of scientific and educational concepts that are in development to launch to the orbiting national laboratory. Each of the investigations selected for the ISS National Lab will benefit life on Earth by exploiting unique advantages of research in space. These projects represent a diverse mixture of scientific objectives and interests from commercial partners, academic investigations, and education initiatives to inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers. Below is an overview of recently selected investigations by the ISS National Lab: Blast Off! Story Time From Space: Engaging Young Learners in STEM and Literacy Twin Cities Public Broadcasting Service PI: Rita Karl and Patricia Tribe Blast Off! is a multiplatform initiative dedicated to engaging young learners (ages 2-8) in reading and hands-on science. Twin Cities PBS and Story Time From Space are developing Blast Off! as a pilot project for PBS. This program has the potential to reach millions of viewers, providing information on living and working in space and on microgravity's effects on science. This project is being done in partnership with the Story Time From Space educational program. [ANS thanks Spaceref.com for this information.] +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ AMSAT and ARISS are currently supporting a FundRazr campaign to raise $150,000 for critical radio infrastructure upgrades on ISS. The upgrades are necessary to enable students to continue to talk to astronauts in space via Amateur Radio. We have reached a great milestone with $16,695 raised or about 10% towards our goal. This would not have been possible without your outstanding generosity!! For more information and to DONATE TODAY visit: https://fundrazr.com/arissnextgen?ref=ab_e7Htwa_ab_47IcJ9 +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ AMSAT Awards Update Here we are, the last half of 2018, in fact the end of 2018, I have been posting all the Rover Awards on my Twitter account and tagging @AMSAT. I will include all the Rover Awards here for those that do not have Twitter. What will you be doing for AMSAT's 50th Anniversary in 2019. Stay tuned for some operating awards we have for you, AMSAT Members and Non-AMSAT Members. ------ AMSAT Satellite Communicators Award for making their first satellite QSO Mike Lozano, KI7WIB Harry Mueller, W1HMM Kirk Miller, W0KM Dennis Madarang, KD2QET Colbie Dison, KN4NIM Nathan Binder, BSA Troop 738 Jeffrey Howell, KO9P Alex Van Patten, KC3LPC Martin Gibson, VK2GIB Tom Zimmerman, W9TTY Michael Barry, KN4CFD Billy Penley, KN4MKB Bentley Skibell, WM1K Rich Olson, W9TIT Tom Snowden, KI7SNW ------ AMSAT Communications Achievement Award Brad Brooks, WF7T, #585 Brennan Price, N4QX, #586 Michael Lozano, KI7WIB, #587 ------ AMSAT South Africa Satellite Communications Achievement Award Brad Brooks, WF7T, #US209 Brennan Price, N4QX, #US210 ------ AMSAT Robert W. Barbee Jr., W4AMI Award Charles Reiche, N3CRT, #96 ------ AMSAT Rover Award (New for 2018) Rover Call ===== ======== 028 K4FTP 029 KB2YSI 030 N3CRT 031 N2WLS 032 K2MTS 033 AI6DO 034 KD8RTT 035 AD7DB 036 AB5SS 037 W9TWJ 038 WN9Q 039 KM6NJL 040 KM4LAO To see all the awards visit http://www.amsat.org and click on Services then Awards. [ANS thanks Bruce Paige, KK5DO, AMSAT Director of Contests and Awards for the above information] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Upcoming Satellite Operations + Oahu (BL01, BL11) ? December 28 to January 1, 2019 Gabe, AL6D willbe heading to Oahu, Hawaii, at the end of the year. Plan is to operate from BL01 and BL10, linears and FM. Trip is dependent on availability of cockpit jumpseat, so subject to cancel- lation. Keep an eye on the @AL6D_Alaska Twitter for further updates https://twitter.com/AL6D_Alaska + Azores (HM58) ? December 30 to January 2, 2019 Pedro, CU2ZG, will spend the long New Year’s weekend in HM58. Pedro will operate holiday style on FM and linears. Skeds are accepted and preferred, but keep in mind that being a family trip availability constrains might occur. Confirmations via LoTW using plain CU2ZG will be uploaded the following week, and any direct QSL will get a proper reply. Updates posted on Twitter and publicly viewable at https://twitter.com/pdsousa. + Point Pelee National Park, Canada (EN81) ? January 1, 2019 Ron, AD0DX, and Mike, W8LID plan to active Point Pelee National Park on New Year’s Day to kick of the Canadian National Parks on the Air (CNPOTA) event. Keep an eye on their Twitter accounts for further updates: https://twitter.com/ad0dx and https://twitter.com/w8lid + Central California (CM95, CM96, DM05, DM06) ? January 5, 2019 Ron, AD0DX will activate the CM95, CM96, DM05, DM06 grid corner on January 5th. Keep an eye on the @ad0dx Twitter feed for more updates https://twitter.com/ad0dx + Central California (CM95, CM96, DM05, DM06) ? January 12, 2019 David, AD7DB, will be in the area of Kettleman City CA near a conver- gence of four grids, operating on FM satellites. Grids (maybe grid- lines) will depend on the satellite passes. Operation expected from 1700 UTC through 2300 UTC. Updates will be on Twitter as the time approaches: https://twitter.com/ad7db + Quartzfest Arizona (DM23) ? January 19-27, 2019 John, N7JY, will be operating FM satellites on a holiday schedule. He may also visit some adjoining grids. There will likely be other hams operating from the event, located a few miles south of Quartzsite AZ. QSL via LOTW, or you can send your card with SASE + Las Vegas NV and Northwest AZ (DM25, DM26, DM36) ? January 20-22, 2019 David, AD7DB, will be in Las Vegas at DM25/26 line, operating on FM satellites on a holiday schedule. In addition, weather permitting, sometime on Monday 01/21/19 he will make a side trip to Beaver Dam AZ to activate from DM36aw. Updates will be on Twitter as the time approaches: https://twitter.com/ad7db [ANS Thanks Robert Bankston, KE4AL, for the above information] -------------------------------------------------------------------- Satellite Shorts from All Over + PW-Sat2 Sail Deployment PW-Sat2 has deployed its deorbiting sail experiment ahead of schedule. See PWSat2 on Twitter for more information https://twitter.com/PWSat2 (PWSat2 on Twitter) + NJ4Y Worked All States Congratulations to Matt, NJ4Y for earning the ARRL Worked All States - Satellite award #367. Matt tweeted, "This is probably the toughest radio award I've ever worked towards, and one of my favorites. Thanks especially to AC0RA, K8BL, and AL6D for my last 4 states over the past year, Oregon, Mississippi, Alaska, and Hawaii! (NJ4Y via Twitter) + NPR Highlights Cubesats National Public Radio posted an article on December 26th entitled "What's Next for Tiny Satellites." The article may be found at https://tinyurl.com/ANS-364-NPR --------------------------------------------------------------------- /EX In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive additional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT office. Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the student rate for a maximum of six post-secondary years in this status. Contact Martha at the AMSAT office for additional student membership information. Happy New Year and 73, This week's ANS Editor, Paul Stoetzer, N8HM n8hm at amsat dot org _______________________________________________ Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans