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A TEAM OF Irish researchers are heading to Belgium next month where Ireland’s first-ever satellite will undergo a series of final tests, bringing it one step closer to a 2022 launch into low Earth orbit (LEO).
The Educational Irish Research Satellite 1 (EIRSAT-1) is the size of a shoebox, but when in orbit will collect data from the three science experiments on-board while powering itself, orientating itself, and communicating to the ground station on the roof of the UCD School of Physics.
For the rest of this month, the team of students and professors are caring out extensive testing on the qualification model – a duplicate aircraft of the flight model.
Members of the team will then travel to Belgium where further testing will be carried out through September and October on the 20cm long and 10 x 10cm wide miniature satellite.
Testing at the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Belgian facility will see EIRSAT-1 undergo two main tests to see if the satellite can survive being launched into space as each of the individual components has already qualified.
The assembled qualification model will be tested to see if it can survive the vibrational loads that come with being launched into space. It will also be subjected to extreme heating and cooling cycles under vacuum to confirm the spacecraft is ready for orbit.
If all goes smoothly it will mark a major milestone in the project and see the team go straight into the next phase of finalising the flight model. It will then go through a flight acceptance review before it’s passed over to the ESA who will handle the launch – details of which are still not mapped out.
EIRSAT-1 will hitch a ride on an ESA procured rocket to LEO, normally an altitude of less than 1000km but far enough away to ensure that it’s not pulled back into the Earth’s atmosphere, where it would burn up on re-entry.
Satellites in this orbit travel at a speed of around 7.8 km per second; at this speed, a satellite takes approximately 90 minutes to circle Earth. More about the common types of orbit here.
There have been a few launch dates flouted in the last four years but as project lead UCD Professor Lorraine Hanlon told TheJournal “we’re doing this for the first time and the result of that is it takes longer, because you’re building two complete versions of the system”.
“A lot of the process has been learning how to build a satellite, no one has ever done that before in this country.
“At the moment, we’re hoping at least to have our part done by the middle of next year. And then we hand the spacecraft over to ESA where it becomes a procurement issue, and we don’t know how long that part of the process will take.”
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Professor Hanlon made the giant leap to apply to the ESA’s Fly Your Satellite Programme (FYSP) back in 2017. After spending a few years as a research fellow at the ESA, Hanlon said she knew wanted to bring that same excitement to students, “to give them opportunities to really see that they’re good enough to do this on a global stage.”
Fellow FYSP participants from Sapienza University of Rome recently launched their miniature satellite, LEDSAT, from the ESA’s spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. The standard dimensions of CubeSats, like EIRSAT-1 and LEDSAT, have shaken up the space industry by making accessing space easier and cheaper for those who could previously only dream of it.
Hanlon hopes that EIRSAT-1′s launch, currently estimated to take place in the third quarter of 2022, is something that the whole country gets excited about given its groundbreaking nature.
“Space isn’t something that only other countries do, or only big space agencies do. Space is now in the realm where smaller countries can have national programmes and be credible,” she said. In recent years, Ireland has developed a thriving space industry and research community, facilitated primarily through Ireland’s membership of the ESA.
Students who get to work on the project during its life span will gain experience that will advance Ireland’s place in the space industry, explains Professor Hanlon, adding that it also “builds capability, a track record, and an understanding of how to develop a space system, which you can then use to replicate or to commercialise or to advance, or to build collaborations and partnerships internationally”.
PhD student from UCD’s School of Space Science and Technology Gabriel Finneran said he’s been interested in space since he was a child but never “imagined I would be helping to build a satellite at university”.
He hopes the mission can inspire young people to study STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) or to see the space industry as a viable career path that you can stay in Ireland to pursue.
A 2020 study by the Department of Education found that targets to increase the number of students taking STEM subjects in the Leaving Certificate by 20% by 2026 are unlikely to be met. The report also noted that another target to increase the number of female students taking STEM subjects by 40% is not on track to be achieved by 2026.
Team members like Finneran have been sharing EIRSAT-1′s story at festivals, talks and workshops for primary schools in UCD. One workshop resulted in a collaborative poem by students in the JCSP libraries project that will be etched on the side of the satellite.
The EIRSAT-1 project is for the most part quite technical with students across STEM disciplines making up the team, but these subjects are only part of the space story, according to Professor Hanlon.
“Some things we do, like building a satellite, are necessarily technical, but that doesn’t mean that people are not inspired, or excited and don’t want to participate.
“To me, there’s enormous value in being open to everyone who wants to contribute.”
What will it do in orbit?
Once the flight model is handed over to the ESA you might naively think the work is done, joked Hanlon, but really it’s a whole other phase because “now you’re worried about orbit behaviour, troubleshooting, diagnosing, communicating, and getting the maximum data”.
All of the planning is a full-time job itself, she said. Once EIRSAT-1 is in orbit the team will only have five to ten-minute windows, maybe five or six times a day, when they can actually collect data from the spacecraft.
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“It’s very challenging to operate within those kinds of narrow timeframes so the team will have to stick to a very strict script,” she said.
Initial setbacks from the Covid-19 pandemic helped propel the team forward and taught them some valuable lessons when it came to operating the satellite remotely. EIRSAT-1 has been locked away in the Belfield campus cleanroom – a lab away from pollutants like dust, airborne microbes, and aerosol particles.
“We got a little bit further ahead than we would have otherwise been at this stage in the project because the team was keen to make as much progress as possible,” said Professor Hanlon.
Once the satellite is in orbit, it essentially has three aims. The first is to detect gamma-ray bursts and send the information back to the team on the ground. Gamma-ray bursts occur during the death of massive stars and are detected here from galaxies that may be billions of light-years away.
The second aim of the satellite is the testing of EMOD, a type of heat-resistant paint developed by Irish company Enbio. The experiment will see how the protective coatings perform in space. EMOD consists of two black panels and two white panels which will have their temperature monitored.
EIRSAT-1 has an “off the shelf” attitude (or pointing direction) control system at present but the team will upload their algorithm at some point during the mission. This third experiment will allow the team to control the orientation of the satellite using the Wave Based Control (WBC) technique developed by the dynamics and control group in the UCD School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering.
The ground team can only communicate with the satellite when it’s over Ireland, and they estimate that this will only happen for about 90 minutes per day depending on the orbit.
“The main reason we need EIRSAT-1 to see Ireland is if we want to send commands up to it, it has to come overhead,” said Professor Hanlon. “If we ended up for some weird reason in an orbit that didn’t allow us to do that, it would be a problem.”
Rendering of EIRSAT-1 in deployed configuration ESA
ESA
CubeSats in LEO have short lifespans and don’t leave much of a trace when they burn up on re-entry. The EIRSAT-1 team are hoping their CubeSat will stay in orbit for one to two years, but that all depends on the conditions and altitude it ends up in.
It will be able to adjust its position using the WBC but can’t do any collision avoidance manoeuvres should it run into another satellite or some space debris that is now cluttering LEO.
“It’s one risk the team can do nothing about,” said Hanlon as EIRSAT-1 is set to join hundreds of thousands of man-made objects that are zipping around our planet. Space debris mitigation efforts mean the UCD team has to comply with the usual responsibilities that govern ESA missions.
Should anything go wrong, the trusty qualification model on the ground will help the team to diagnose any faults.
This work is co-funded by Journal Media and a grant programme from the European Parliament. Any opinions or conclusions expressed in this work is the author’s own. The European Parliament has no involvement in nor responsibility for the editorial content published by the project. For more information, see here.
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@DJ François: Starlink is great. I follow Joe Robinet on YouTube and people in his remote part of Canada can now upload regularly, thanks to Starlink. Previously they had to drive for hours into a town.
@Ciaran: Will Eirsat1 be of any use to Ireland’s increasing number of homeless people? Perhaps beaming back coordinates to some safe side street in which they can pitch their tent for the night. Or perhaps conducting some experiments on the materials used to make sleeping bags might be another one.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not against space exploration. But that the present time I think the funding for this would have been better spent on some exploration of issues closer to home, such as the home less. I’m sure a shoebox sized container could be filled to the brim with ideas on how the cost of this could be better spent.
@John Vectravi: When has there ever been a time, anywhere, when there have been no homeless people. By your logic exploration of any form, whether space or otherwise, would never happen.
@sean o’dhubhghaill: I guess a good time would be when we don’t have 900000 people waiting for medical treatment for a start.
Yes we can spurge on space exploration but let’s get those numbers and other issues that effect the ordinary person in the street down first. Up to them a few reruns of Star Trek should suffice.
@Ciaran: Whitey,s on the moon comes to mind concerning your comment. I,m sure the person on a hospital trolley for days, and a homeless person walking the streets, would agree with you.
@John Vectravi: the total project cost is 1.5million and is co-funded by ESA with contributions to support studentships and other pieces of equipment from a range of funders https://www.eirsat1.ie/funders Sadly, this would rather a small budget with which to tackle the housing crisis, I’m afraid.
@Iain MacLaren: As the Tesco ad says….. Every little helps. 1.5 million would provide at least 10 family homes taking on average 30 people out of homelessness.
Again I wish to state I am not against space exploration I just feel that with the current state of our country the funding could have been used for more pressing issues.
@John Vectravi: sure. I understand and empathise. But, of course, you could say that about any money that is spent on anything other than those issues, and I’m sure there are plenty of other sources, not least of which might include a bit more focus on those organisations and people who seem to avoid their full dues in terms of taxation. That would yield a lot more and be recurrent so providing a far bigger impact.
The mere fact that is has to be directly over Ireland whizzing past at 7.8km per second to be able to communicate with it immediately evokes childhood memories of 2 empty bean cans and a taut piece of string between them using them as “walkie talkies”………..
@Ajax Penumbra: Am I right is saying you would rather spend tax payers money on finding out if black paint gets hotter than white paint? Gramma ray bursts, a rare event which is already monitored closely and in greater detail.
Fair enough if these were new, world first experiments, but they aren’t.
I think the majority of taxpayers would opt to reduce hospital waiting lists but that’s just my opinion. You have yours and I have mine.
Perhaps a journal poll could provide more clarity.
@Terry McSweeney: Terry, your comment to Tony would appear to be more apt for your good self. Tony is entitled to his opinion without being dismissed by yourself without a valid counter argument. Perhaps you feel that instructing Tony to find something more productive to do, increases you standing on the discussion. Terry, it doesn’t, it only demonstrates the kind of person you are
@Sam Harms: Sam, given the current medical treatment waiting list in Ireland 900000 and growing, and the plight of our homeless people and the lack of funding in other areas of community welfare, I would like to hear why you think it isn’t wasted.
@John Vectravi: as the article says they hope it will help to inspire people to study STEM subjects in college which is a good thing. Education is incredibly important, and the people involved with this could go on to use the skills learned to invent other things in the future. Do you think all money should be spent on healthcare and housing and everything else should just be forgotten about?
@Sam Harms: For people to be inspired by this firstly they need a home. Then they can obtain a proper life with a proper education. Unless you feel that the children in homelessness are not the ones that could be inspired?
@Elaine Phelan: It is pretty cool all the same, but I struggle to think of an instance of tax spending that has led to infrastructure of benefit to those that pay for it. The Luas maybe? I would love to live in a country that did this a decade ago, tho the idea seems as barmy as a high speed train! Lol.
@Paul Cunningham: I’m (all things considered) ‘pretty happy’ but I guess whatever fantasy you’ve invented there, needs a blanket of sentiment to slumber with… Theres a total of “6,542 satellites, out of which 3,372 satellites are active and 3,170 satellites are inactive” Space trash. Psyched to see which Irish communications company buys this. Hopefully we can see if from our diesel powered cars in commuter traffic on the M50.
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