session 3

Title

Small Satellite Operations

Description

This session covers the planning for, and execution of, cost-effective approaches for Small Satellite Operations, with emphasis on new missions with new models of operation to reduce mission lifecycle costs and to minimize the cost impact of mission extensions. Papers addressing innovation, an entrepreneurial approach to new business opportunities, novel finance and business models, management techniques, and international cooperation in support of Small Satellite Operations are particularly encouraged. Papers that discuss the application of novel technology to mission operations, such as automation and autonomy, constraint resolution, and timeline planning, as well as reports on missions recently accomplished and lessons learned, are also welcome. For papers not addressing small satellites, please refer to Symposium B6.

Date

2014-09-30

Time

14:45

Room

714A

IPC members
papers

Order

Time

Paper title

Selection result

Mode

Presentation status

Speaker

Affiliation

Country

1

Experience with the Maritime Monitoring and Messaging Microsatellite (M3MSat)

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mrs. Catherine Marchetti

Department of National Defence (DND)

Canada

2

LiteSat Mission Control Center –Comprehensive ground station solution for satellite constellations

accepted

15'

confirmed

Ms. Danna Linn Barnett

Rafael Advanced Defense Systems Ltd.

Israel

3

technical parameters of the nanosatc-br program’s ground stations network

accepted

15'

withdrawn

Mr. Leonardo Zavareze da Costa

Southern Regional Space Research Center-CRS/INPE-MCTI in collaboration with the Santa Maria Space Science Laboratory-LACESM/CT-UFSM

Brazil

4

Design of an automated system at the ground segment for data acquisition, processing and archiving for ‘Pratham’ IIT Bombay

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mr. Aayush Yadav

Indian Institute of Technology

India

5

Turn-Key Small Spacecraft for Generic Science Mission Support

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mr. Mark Becnel

RadioBro Corporation

United States

6

Planning of Operations for UKube-1, the UK's first cubesat

accepted

15'

confirmed

Dr. Peter M. Allan

STFC

United Kingdom

7

Sapphire In Orbit – A Low Cost, Agile Spacecraft For Space Situational Awareness

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mr. Haval Kadhem

Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL)

United Kingdom

8

From ground to space: prototype development and evaluation of the tracking system for small satellites with the Distributed Ground Station Network

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mr. Andreas Hornig

University of Stuttgart

Germany

9

improvement of satellite tracking at early orbit phase of a cluster launched nanosatellites

accepted

15'

confirmed

Prof. Jyh-Ching Juang

National Cheng Kung University

Taiwan, China

10

Flying in a Cloud of CubeSats: Lessons Learned from Early-Orbit Operations of AeroCube-4 and AeroCube-5

accepted

15'

confirmed

Dr. Joseph Gangestad

The Aerospace Corporation

United States

11

Orbit Maintenance Strategy with Conjunction Avoidance

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mr. Chek-Wu Tan

ST Electronics Satellite Systems

Singapore, Republic of

12

Flight Results and Lessons Learnt from the Delfi-n3Xt Electrical Power Subsystem Operations

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mr. Alejandro Lopez Telgie

The Netherlands