JAXA plans to launch the Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite
(GOSAT), together with six small piggyback satellites, in the
summer of 2008. Selected six small satellites were introduced
in APRSAF feature stories and they are now being developed well.
http://www.aprsaf.org/feature/feature_20.html
The launch date has not been determined yet, but the project
leaders of each small satellite are preparing to launch their
satellites this summer season.
Taking this opportunity of six months before the planned launch,
and as the first article in this series, the APRSAF secretariat
interviewed Prof. Shinichi Nakasuka, Project manager of the small
satellites (PRISM), Tokyo University, to learn about the current
developmental status of PRISM and his determination to develop
it. Here, we introduce part of the interview we had with him.
At present (March 2008), we have almost finished
manufacturing the Engineering Model (EM) and done the ground
testing for it, and we are about to start manufacturing the Flight
Model (FM).
For the expansion boom in particular, as one of the important
devices that supports the lens of the narrow-angle camera, we
performed two weightless flight experiments in March and September
2007 and confirmed the re-creation of the dynamics when the expansion
boom expands and the re-creation of the position of the lens
and the attitude, and we repeatedly improved the design based
on the experimental data obtained.
We have finished making the onboard Engineering Module (EM)
of a separation system for a rocket and we are now conducting
vibration tests on the state of the rocket when PRISM is in the
separation device. In November 2007, we held a review meeting
and CDR and introduced some outside experts.
Our satellites (including five other satellites chosen in 2007)
are scheduled to be launched on JAXA’s H-IIA rocket in 2009, as
piggy back satellites together with the main satellite GOSAT.
We strongly intend to make our satellite a success and obtain
brilliant results so that this system, whereby JAXA takes applications
for small satellites to place onboard an H-IIA rocket, continues
for a long time.
Since 2002, our laboratory has been making great efforts to get
PRISM launched. We now think our earnest wish is at last going
to be fulfilled. This satellite, called PRISM, is packed with
all the students' dreams and technologies that could not fit
into CubSat because they were too large."
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