ARISSat-1 Loaded Aboard Progress-41P for Launch

NASA TV to show arrival of ARISSat-1 at ISS

The arrival of the Russian Progress-41 flight carrying the ARISSat-1 Amateur Radio Experiment to the International Space Station will be televised live via NASA TV starting at 8PM CST (UTC-6) on Saturday, January 29.

The unpiloted flight of the Progress resupply craft is expected to automatically berth to the Pirs docking compartment at 8:40 p.m. CST.

Expedition 26 Commander Scott Kelly and Flight Engineers Cady Coleman, Paolo Nespoli, Alexander Kaleri, Oleg Skripochka and Dmitry Kondratyev will be standing by during the automated docking manuevers.

In addition to ARISSat-1, the cargo ship is carrying three tons of supplies for the crew members.

ARISSat engineers will be meeting with Russian EVA specialists in Houston on Tuesday, February 1 to prepare for the February 16 deployment of the satellite.

For more information about the space station, visit:
NASA - International Space Station

For NASA TV downlink, schedule and streaming video information, visit: NASA - NASA TV

Check the AMSAT Web Page AMSAT - The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation for the latest ARISSat-1 information, a copy of the Symposium Slides, and a color guide showing the transponder bandplan.
 
Bummer...Deployment of ARISSat-1 delayed until July. It will be activated onboard ISS on April 12th however. Here are the details.

ARISSat-1 to be activated April 12

The Russian Federal Space Agency reports that the Amateur Radio satellite ARISSat-1
will be activated April 12 on 145.950MHz FM
to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first human space flight.

ARISSat-1 is also known as Kedr, the callsign of Cosmonaut Yury Gagarin on his historic flight.

The satellite is currently inside the International Space Station (ISS) and will be connected to an Amateur Radio antenna mounted on the ISS for the commemorative transmission. It is planned to deploy the satellite during a space walk in July.

Read the Russian Federal Space Agency announcement at
http://www.federalspace.ru/main.php?id=2&nid=11374&lang=en

ARISsat-1
http://www.ARISSat1.org/]Arissat 1

Twitter: Arissat-1 | RS0RS (Arissat1) on Twitter
 
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Looks like they may have figured out the battery issue... so it may be launched around August 3rd. Arissat AND the Droid Bionic out that week... Nerdvana, can't wait! :)
Arissat 1
13 July 2011

During the International ARISS teleconference Sergey Samburov, RV3DR announced that the ARISSat battery will be charged late July and a test of the system will be conducted on the ISS from 1915 UTC 30 July to about 1200-1400 UTC 31 July. The standard ARISSat-1/KEDR 2m downlink band plan should be transmitted as well as the FM signal also downlinked on 437.55 MHz. More information as it becomes available.

During the test ARISSat-1 will be in LOW power mode, this means that it will transmit about 40 seconds and then shut down for 2 minutes and then transmit for 40 seconds.

Today we are looking at a 3 Aug 2011 date for EVA 29 and the ARISSat-1/KEDR deployment. This is all subject to change.
Gould, WA4SXM

-Mike
 
ARISSat-1 Amateur Radio Satellite Deployment To Be Carried Live on NASA TV

NASA will have live coverage of the spacewalk that will see the deployment of the amateur radio satellite ARISSat-1/KEDR.

Two cosmonauts will conduct a six-hour spacewalk on Wednesday, August 3, to continue outfitting the Russian segment of the International Space Station. NASA Television will broadcast the spacewalk beginning at 9 a.m. CDT.

Expedition 28 Russian Flight Engineers Sergei Volkov and Alexander Samokutyaev will install laser communications equipment and replace experiments on the Zvezda service module. They also will retrieve a rendezvous antenna, relocate a boom structure to aid future spacewalks and deploy a small satellite equipped with an amateur radio transmitter and a student-built experiment.

The duo will wear Russian Orlan spacesuits and will emerge from the Pirs docking compartment airlock at about 9:30 a.m. The spacewalk will be the third for Volkov, who performed two spacewalks as Expedition 17 commander in 2008. This will be the first spacewalk for Samokutyaev.

For NASA TV downlink, schedule and streaming video information, visit: NASA - NASA TV
 
Deployment Delayed

Deployment delayed once again due to an antenna problem. :(

Guess you'll have to wait a little longer to get that Arrow out Mike!
 
Update: The UHF antenna is missing. Photos here:

ARISSat-1/RadioSkaf-V Arrives at Baikonur

There are supposed to be two antennas on this satellite. The taller VHF one on top and the shorter UHF one on the bottom. It's hard to believe they didn't check everything over before attempting deployment. I wish I would have monitored for SSTV signals last weekend when they were testing it.
 
Apparently the antenna was OK after all, and it's been launched!
 
Signals have been very good. Listen on 145.950 voice, slow scan tv and info on satellite health (via voice). Tracking info from N2YO or Heavans Above sites.

Fun. Following behind the ISS in orbit. Expect some fading since it was hand launched and is tumbling.
 
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Apparently the antenna was OK after all, and it's been launched!

Well the 2m antenna is ok but they think the 70cm may have been torn off by accident... However enough it apparently is there that the linear transponder is working to a fashion. In any case it's pretty cool :) I was hoping to catch a pass that wasn't in the middle of the night or at the crack of dawn, but may not be so lucky for a while.

-Mike
 

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