Fr. 13.90

DIY Satellite Platforms - Building a Space-Ready General Base Picosatellite for Any Mission

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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Want to build your own satellite and launch it into space? It's easier than you may think. The first in a series of four books, this do-it-yourself guide shows you the essential steps needed to design a base picosatellite platform - complete with a solar-powered computer-controlled assembly - tough enough to withstand a rocket launch and survive in orbit for three months.
Whether you want to conduct scientific experiments, run engineering tests, or present an orbital art project, you'll select basic components such as an antenna, radio transmitter, solar cells, battery, power bus, processor, sensors, and an extremely small picosatellite chassis. This entertaining series takes you through the entire process - from planning to launch. Prototype and fabricate printed circuit boards to handle your payload Choose a prefab satellite kit, complete with solar cells, power system, and on-board computer Calculate your power budget - how much you need vs. what the solar cells collect Select between the Arduino or BasicX-24 onboard processors, and determine how to use the radio transmitter and sensors Learn your launch options, including the providers and cost required Use milestones to keep your project schedule in motion

List of contents













  • Preface




  • Chapter 1: Overview




  • Chapter 2: PCB Fab, Soldering, and Electronics




  • Chapter 3: Chassis, Structure, and Gross Anatomy




  • Chapter 4: Power




  • Chapter 5: Programming and Coding




  • Chapter 6: Launching and Rockets




  • Chapter 7: Milestones and Planning




  • Colophon




About the author

Alexander "Sandy" Antunes (born 1967 in Baltimore, Maryland) is a Maryland-area astronomer, author, and role playing game designer. He graduated from Boston University in 1989 with a dual major in astronomy and physics, received a Masters in astronomy from Penn State in 1992, and received his PhD in computational astrophysics from George Mason University in 2005. He was the Maryland Science Center "Science Person of the Month" for May 2007.

Summary

Can any hobbyist build a satellite? Our DIY guide steps you through designing and building a base picosatellite platform tough enough to withstand launch and survive in orbit. If you have basic maker skills, you can build a space-ready solar-powered computer-controlled assembly suitable for attaching instruments and rocketing into space.

Report

"Auch wer gar nicht vorhat, einen eigenen Satelliten ins All zu bringen, kann von Antunes' leicht verständlichen Beschreibungen eine Menge lernen." - c't, September 2012

Product details

Authors Sandy Antunes, Antunes Sandy
Publisher O'Reilly Media
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.02.2012
 
EAN 9781449310608
ISBN 978-1-4493-1060-8
No. of pages 84
Weight 121 g
Subjects Guides > Hobby, home > Home improvement, DIY
Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Technology > Aviation and space engineering

SCIENCE / Space Science / General, space, tubesat, payload, launch, picosatellite, picosatellite tubesat cubesat space launch orbit payload

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