STARGATE


STARGATESpacecraft Tracking and Astronomical Research into Gigahertz Astrophysical Transient Emission—is a radio-frequency technology facility currently under development in south Texas.
The facility is intended to provide students and faculty access to RF technologies widely used in spaceflight operations, and will include satellite and spacecraft tracking.

History

The Spacecraft Tracking and Astronomical Research into Gigahertz Astrophysical Transient Emission facility was proposed in 2012 by Fredrick Jenet, director of the Center for Advanced Radio Astronomy and an associate professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Texas-Brownsville. Initial funding included in seed money provided by the Greater Brownsville Incentives Corporation in October 2012, as part of a package to increase the likelihood of attracting SpaceX to build a launch site in the area.
In 2014, following the announcement of the SpaceX private spaceport being built near Boca Chica Beach, the Brownsville Economic Development Council purchased several lots in Boca Chica Village totaling approximately from the SpaceX launch site and renamed it as the STARGATE subdivision. The land will be used for the STARGATE project including the construction of a tracking center.
Construction bids for a dual-channel fiber optic link between UT Brownsville and the STARGATE/SpaceX sites at Boca Chica went out in early March 2015.
In mid-2015, the University of Texas at Brownsville merged with another university to become the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. STARGATE contracts and administration thus moved to the new university administrative structure.

Funding

, the grants to fund STARGATE have totaled approximately, consisting of:
STARGATE was initially funded by in seed money provided by the Greater Brownsville Incentives Corporation in October 2012, which was intended to improve the likelihood that Brownsville would be successful in attracting SpaceX to build a launch site in the area.
Further incentives were presented to SpaceX in September 2013 when the University of Texas System proposed that SpaceX partner with UT Brownsville's Center for Advanced Radio Astronomy in building and operating STARGATE.
STARGATE received a grant from the US Economic Development Administration in October 2014.
Early in 2015, "the Brownsville Economic Development Council donated property at Boca Chica to the UT system for the STARGATE Technology Park." The dollar value of the in-kind funding for the property was not released.

Technology

, STARGATE intends to develop new devices and new algorithms for tracking spacecraft, and intends to commercialize those technologies.
STARGATE plans to "test and commercialize a new phased-array antenna system that will replace fixed satellite-dish tracking communication systems."