SSETI Express Satellite


SSETI Express was the first spacecraft to be designed and built by European students and was launched by the European Space Agency.
SSETI Express is a small spacecraft, similar in size and shape to a washing machine. On board the student-built spacecraft were three CubeSat pico-satellites, extremely small satellites weighing around one kg each. These were deployed one hour and forty minutes after launch. 23 university groups, working from locations spread across Europe and with very different cultural backgrounds, worked together via the internet to jointly create the satellite. The expected lifetime of the mission was planned to be 2 months. Express is the fastest developed micro-satellite in history.

Pico-satellites

The three pico-satellites on board the spacecraft were:
Its primary mission is the demonstration of newly developed solar cells in space. Other mission objectives include the acquisition of Earth images by a commercial off-the-shelf digital camera and the operation of a message transmission service using an amateur radio frequency.
The main objective of UWE-1, is to conduct telecommunication experiments related to the optimisation of an internet-related infrastructure for space applications.
This contains an automated identification system used to receive GPS signals. The AIS signals from Ncube II are detected and forwarded to Ncube ground stations, allowing them to track the satellite.

Purpose

The purpose of Express is to take pictures of the Earth, act as a test-bed and technology demonstrator for ESEO hardware, and also function as a radio transponder for the global amateur radio community. It is a pilot project for the SSETI student community and a demonstration of how ESA experts can support student initiatives. As well as this, it is meant to be an inspiration for other educational satellite programmes, but also a logistical precursor to the future SSETI micro-satellite projects.

Launch

The ground stations that manage the satellite when it is in orbit are as follows;
The main mission ground station consists of tracking antennas, an Ultra-High Frequency radio, an S-Band to Very-High-Frequency down-converter, a VHF radio, a Terminal Node Controller and a controlling computer. It is the primary command station for controlling the spacecraft.
The secondary ground station provides a redundant UHF support for telecommand uplink and mission telemetry downlink.
The Mission Control Computer is the interface between the operations team and the two ground stations. It is capable of controlling the uplink of detailed flight plans to the spacecraft and has a database in which all downlinked telemetry is stored. The MCC can be remote controlled.
The Operations team is responsible for defining the flight plans and commanding the spacecraft via the MCC and ground stations.
The Telemetry Interface Database is a web-based application facilitating the dissemination of all mission telemetry from the MCC to SSETI Express teams, radio amateurs and the general public.

Specifications

The Attitude Determination and Control System has two parts. The Attitude Control System uses semi-active magnetic stabilisation. A pair of magnetorquers provide detumbling functionality and actively damp any subsequent vibrations, while a passive permanent magnet ensures alignment of the spacecraft's z-axis with the Earth's magnetic field.
The on-board camera is based on a colour complementary metal oxide semiconductor sensor and an instrument control unit.
The Electrical Power System is based on the concept of power generation by body-mounted photo-voltaic cells. The energy is stored in a rechargeable lithium-ion battery to ensure power is available during eclipse phases or during periods of low sunlight.
The Propulsion Instrument Control unit is affectionately referred to as the 'Magic' box. This sub-system processes commands related to the propulsion system, controls the thruster valves and performs data acquisition from the various thermistors and pressure transducers.
The Mission Analysis subsystem doesn't produce any hardware, but data: it is in charge of the design of the space mission, as well as all the computations related to it, i.e., trajectories, eclipses, communication windows, etc. The MIAS team also assumed Flight Dynamics after the launch, which mainly confronted the current trajectory of the satellite with the expected one, and suggested corrections, in case these two differed too much.
The On-Board Computer controls the spacecraft during nominal and payload operations and collects all telemetry and payload data for subsequent transfer to the ground.
The propulsion payload is an attitude control cold-gas system with four low-pressure thrusters, fed by a pressure regulation system.
The S-band patch antennas are adapted from the ESEO microsatellite. A set of three directional patch antennas are used, outputting a total of 3 watts of circularly polarised radiation at 2401.84 MHz.
Radio amateurs from the United Kingdom have developed the S-Band transmitter. It serves a dual function providing both high-speed mission data downlink at 38 400 bit/s and also, in combination with the UHF system, a single-channel audio transponder.
The primary load-bearing spacecraft structure consists of aluminium honeycomb panels configured in a similar way to the game known as tic-tac-toe or noughts and crosses. The secondary structure consists of 1 mm aluminium outer lateral panels, serving as mounting surfaces for the solar cells, sun-sensors and other lightweight equipment.
Each of the three Tokyo Pico-satellite Orbital Deployers were used to store a passenger CubeSat during the launch and to deploy them from SSETI Express once orbit was achieved.
The Ultra-High Frequency unit contains a radio and a terminal node controller and is the spacecraft's primary communications system.

SSETI Express partners