November 22, 2024

What Happened to those CubeSats that were Launched with Artemis I?

NASA made history on November 16th when the Artemis I objective removed from Launch Complex 39B at Cape Canaveral, Florida, on its method to the Moon. This uncrewed mission is checking the abilities of the Space Launch System (SLS) and Orion spacecraft in preparation for the long-awaited return to the Moon in 2025 (the Artemis III objective). Instead of astronauts, this objective carries a group of mannequins with sensing units and has a main payload consisting of the Callisto innovation demonstrator (a human-machine video user interface system).
As a secondary payload, Artemis I likewise brought 10 6U CubeSats beyond Low Earth Orbit (LEO), three of which were NASA objectives developed to perform experiments. The rest were constructed by partner space companies, commercial space entities, research study institutes, and universities to perform a variety of unique deep-space science experiments. While all these satellites managed to deploy effectively, 6 have not reached controllers on the ground or considering that experienced issues, and their location stay unidentified.

The three NASA objectives consist of the BioSentinel, which was created, built, and evaluated by engineers at NASAs Ames and will determine the impacts of deep-space radiation on DNA utilizing yeast organisms. The second is the Lunar Flashflight, an innovation demonstrator developed at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) with assistance from the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), the Goddard Space Flight Center, and the Georgia Institute of Technology. Its function is to look for surface area water ice in the permanently-shadowed areas near the lunar south pole and test out brand-new spacecraft technologies.

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NASA made history on November 16th when the Artemis I mission took off from Launch Complex 39B at Cape Canaveral, Florida, on its method to the Moon. As a secondary payload, Artemis I also brought ten 6U CubeSats beyond Low Earth Orbit (LEO), three of which were NASA objectives designed to carry out experiments. The 3 NASA missions consist of the BioSentinel, which was created, developed, and checked by engineers at NASAs Ames and will measure the results of deep-space radiation on DNA utilizing yeast organisms. The third is the NEA Scout objective developed by the NASA Marshal Space Flight Center in collaboration with NASA JPL, with assistance from NASA Goddard, the Johnson Space Center, and the Langley Research. On November 24th, NASA reported that the NEA Scout mission still hadnt made contact.

NASAs Lunar Flashlight CubeSat undergoing tests at a Georgia Tech tidy space. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech.
All 10 CubeSats successfully deployed from the Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS), an adapter connected to the SLSs upper stage. On November 18th, NASA authorities confirmed that ArgoMoon, Biosentinel, Equuleus, LunaH-Map, and OMOTENASHI were all operational, though OMOTENASHI started experiencing problems ever since. On November 24th, NASA reported that the NEA Scout objective still hadnt made contact. This prompted the mission controllers to deploy the CubeSats sail ahead of schedule, hoping it will be noticeable to ground-based telescopes.
In other words, only 4 satellites were deployed and successfully developed communications with their controllers back in the world. The groups behind the staying 6 missions are presently repairing various options and are waiting to find out more. However as time has taught us, such is the nature of CubeSat objectives, which are inherently high-risk and high-reward. And it may be early at this moment to pass over all the missions that have actually experienced problems.
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The third is the NEA Scout mission developed by the NASA Marshal Space Flight Center in collaboration with NASA JPL, with support from NASA Goddard, the Johnson Space Center, and the Langley Research. The purpose of the objective is twofold: one, to demonstrate solar sail deployment; and two, to show solar sail navigation by rendezvousing (and defining) the near-earth asteroid (NEA) 2020 GE. The other objectives consist of the following:
ArgoMoon: Contributed by the European Space Agency (ESA) and ArgoTec, an Italian aerospace company. This CubeSat aims to observe the SLS interim cryogenic propulsion phase with sophisticated optics and software imaging systems.CuSP: Contributed by the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI), this satellite is a “space weather condition” mission that will determine solar particles and magnetic fields.EQUULEUS: This satellite was established by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and the University of Tokyo to image Earths plasmasphere and study Earths radiation environment from the Earth-Moon L2 point.Lunar IceCube: Developed by Morehead State University, this CubeSat will browse for lunar water and other volatiles utilizing an infrared spectrometer.LunaH-Map: This satellite, contributed by Arizona State University, will utilize neutron spectrometers to develop higher-fidelity maps of near-surface hydrogen in permanently-shadowed craters and other regions near the lunar South Pole.Linux: Developed by Lockheed Martin, this objective will carry out advanced infrared imaging of the lunar surface.OMOTENASHI: Developed by JAXA, this lunar lander (the smallest ever deployed) will study the lunar environment.Team Miles: Developed by Florida-based aerospace business Miles Space, this demonstrator will evaluate plasma thrusters and contend in NASAs Deep Space Derby Centennial Challenge (previously the Cube Quest Challenge).