TUMnanoSAT
Operator | Technical University of Moldova |
---|---|
COSPAR ID | 1998-067UD |
SATCAT no. | 53464 |
Website | Official website |
Mission duration | 5 months and 19 days |
Spacecraft properties | |
Manufacturer | Technical University of Moldova |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 15 July 2022 (2022-07-15) |
Rocket | Falcon 9 |
Launch site | Kennedy LC-39A |
Contractor | SpaceX |
End of mission | |
Decay date | 31 January 2023 |
TUMnanoSAT was a nanosatellite and the first artificial satellite made by Moldova. It was built by the Technical University of Moldova (UTM) and was launched on 15 July 2022. SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket carried TUMnanoSAT to the International Space Station (ISS). This was through the SpaceX CRS-25 Commercial Resupply Service mission. In this mission, Falcon 9 carried a SpaceX Dragon 2 spacecraft which contained the J-SSOD launch capsule of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) within which in turn was TUMnanoSAT. The satellite project and its launch was carried out in cooperation with the JAXA and the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) as part of the KiboCUBE program.[1] Once brought to the ISS, TUMnanoSAT was put into orbit from there on 12 August.[2]
The main missions of TUMnanoSAT were to achieve an efficient communications system between the satellite and its ground station, to study the reliability of electronic components when exposed to space radiation, to test the satellite's system for supply of solar power to find out the most appropriate form of distributing the accumulated energy and to observe the behavior of the satellite's nanosensors and micro-wires in open space and of the sensors of the satellite's subsystem to determine and optimize the performance of the satellite.[3]
After the launch of TUMnanoSAT on 15 July, the UTM and Moldcell organized a public lecture dedicated to the satellite's fabrication and mission attended by several children and adolescents to introduce them to the fields of innovation and technology.[3]
TUMnanoSAT reentered the atmosphere on 31 January 2023.[4]
References
- ^ ""TUMnanoSAT" satellite, built by the Technical University of Moldova, was launched into space". Technical University of Moldova. 15 July 2022.
- ^ "Nanosatelitul TUMnanoSAT construit de UTM a fost lansat pe orbită" (in Romanian). Moldpres. 12 August 2022.
- ^ a b "Lansarea TUMnanoSAT – un eveniment istoric pentru Republica Moldova". Agora (in Romanian). 29 July 2022.
- ^ "TUMNANOSAT". N2YO.com. 31 January 2023. Retrieved 15 February 2023.
External links
- Official website of the TUMnanoSAT project
- v
- t
- e
- Starlink G4-5 (49 satellites)
- ION-SCV 004 (LabSat, STORK-1, STORK-2, SW1FT), Capella 7, Capella 8, ICEYE X14, ICEYE X16, USA-320, USA-321, USA-322, USA-323, DEWA SAT-1, Flock 4x × 44, Kepler × 4, Lemur-2 × 5, Nepal PQ-1
- Lemur-2 Krywe, STORK-3, TechEdSat-13, Unicorn-1, Unicorn-2 × 4
- Shiyan 13
- Starlink G4-6 (49 satellites)
- USA-324 / GSSAP-5, USA-325 / GSSAP-6
- CSG-2
- USA-326
- Starlink G4-7 (49 satellites)
- Kosmos 2553 / Neitron №1
- OneWeb L13 (34 satellites)
- EOS-04 / RISAT-1A
- Progress MS-19
- Cygnus NG-17 (KITSUNE)
- Starlink G4-8 (46 satellites)
- Starlink G4-11 (50 satellites)
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D × 9, Jilin-1 Mofang-02A 01
- GOES-18 / GOES-T
- Starlink G4-9 (47 satellites)
- Noor 2
- Starlink G4-10 (48 satellites)
- SpaceBEE × 16, SpaceBEE NZ × 4
- Yaogan 34-02
- Soyuz MS-21
- Starlink G4-12 (53 satellites)
- Meridian-M 10
- ION-SCV 005 (KSF2 × 4), EnMAP, Lynk Tower 01, MP42 / Tiger-3, ÑuSat × 5, SpaceBEE × 12
- Gaofen 3-03
- Kosmos 2554 / Lotos-S1 №5
- Axiom Mission 1
- ChinaSat 6D
- USA-327 / NOSS-3 9A, NOSS-3 9B
- Starlink G4-14 (53 satellites)
- SpaceX Crew-4
- Kosmos 2555 / EO MKA №2
- Starlink G4-16 (53 satellites)
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D × 4, Jilin-1 Gaofen-04A
- SpaceBEE × 16, SpaceBEE NZ × 8, Unicorn-2F
- Jilin-1 Kuanfu-01C, Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D × 7
- Starlink G4-17 (53 satellites)
- Tianzhou 4
- Jilin-1 Mofang-01A†
- Starlink G4-13 (53 satellites)
- Starlink G4-15 (53 satellites)
- Starlink G4-18 (53 satellites)
- Kosmos 2556 / Bars-M 3L
- Boe OFT-2
- ION-SCV 006 (SBUDNIC), SHERPA AC1, Vigoride-3, ICEYE × 5, ÑuSat × 4, Lemur-2 × 5, Platform 1, PTD-3
- Progress MS-20
- Shenzhou 14
- TROPICS 02†, TROPICS 04†
- Starlink G4-19 (53 satellites)
- CMS-02 or GSAT-24
- Yaogan 35-02 (3 satellites)
- CAPSTONE
- USA-337
- Kosmos 2557 / GLONASS-K 16L
- Starlink G4-21 (53 satellites)
- Starlink G3-1 (46 satellites)
- Tianlian II-03
- SpaceX CRS-25 (TUMnanoSAT)
- Starlink G4-22 (53 satellites)
- Starlink G3-2 (46 satellites)
- Wentian
- Starlink G4-25 (53 satellites)
- Yaogan 35-03 (3 satellites)
- Kosmos 2558 / Nivelir №3
- USA-335 / RASR-4
- USA-336 / SBIRS GEO-6
- Chinese reusable experimental spacecraft
- Danuri
- EOS-02 / Microsat-2A†, AzaadiSAT†
- Starlink G4-26 (52 satellites)
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D × 10, Jilin-1 Hongwai-01A × 6
- Starlink G3-3 (46 satellites)
- Yaogan 35-04 (3 satellites)
- Starlink G4-27 (53 satellites)
- Starlink G4-23 (54 satellites)
- Starlink G3-4 (46 satellites)
- Yaogan 33-02
- Starlink G4-20 (51 satellites)
- Yaogan 35-05 (3 satellites)
- Eutelsat Konnect VHTS
- Starlink G4-2 (34 satellites)
- ChinaSat 1E
- Starlink G4-34 (54 satellites)
- Soyuz MS-22
- KH-11 19/NROL-91
- Shiyan 14, Shiyan 15
- Starlink G4-35 (52 satellites)
- Yaogan 36-01 (3 satellites)
- Shiyan 16A, Shiyan 16B, Shiyan 17
- TechEdSat-15
- SES-20, SES-21
- SpaceX Crew-5
- Starlink G4-29 (52 satellites)
- Galaxy 33, Galaxy 34
- GLONASS-K 17L
- RAISE-3†, KOSEN-2†, MAGNARO†, MITSUBA†, WASEDA-SAT-ZERO†
- Huanjing 2E
- Yaogan 36-02 (3 satellites)
- Hotbird 13F
- Starlink G4-36 (54 satellites)
- OneWeb L14 (36 satellites)
- Gonets-M × 3
- Progress MS-21
- Starlink G4-31 (53 satellites)
- Shiyan 20C
- Mengtian
- LDPE-2, USA-339 / Shepherd Demonstration, USA-340, USA-341, USA-344 / USUVL
- Kosmos 2563 / EKS-6
- Hotbird 13G
- MATS
- ChinaSat 19
- Cygnus NG-18 (SpaceTuna1)
- NOAA-21, LOFTID
- Yunhai-3 01
- Tianzhou 5
- Galaxy 31, Galaxy 32
- Yaogan 34-03
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D × 5
- Artemis 1 (ArgoMoon, BioSentinel, CuSP, EQUULEUS, LunaH-Map, Lunar IceCube, LunIR, Near-Earth Asteroid Scout, OMOTENASHI, Team Miles)
- Eutelsat 10B
- EOS-06 / Oceansat-3, Astrocast × 4
- SpaceX CRS-26
- Yaogan 36-03 (3 satellites)
- Kosmos 2564 / GLONASS-M 761
- Shenzhou 15
- Kosmos 2565 / Lotos-S1 №6 (Kosmos 2566)
- Oceansat-3
- Gaofen 5-01A
- OneWeb L15 (40 satellites)
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D × 7, Jilin-1 Pingtai-01A 01
- Hakuto-R Mission 1 (Rashid), Lunar Flashlight
- Shiyan 20A, Shiyan 20B
- Galaxy 35, Galaxy 36, MTG-I1
- Yaogan 36-04 (3 satellites)
- Shiyan 21
- SWOT
- O3b mPOWER 1, O3b mPOWER 2
- Starlink G4-37 (54 satellites)
- Pléiades Neo 5†, Pléiades Neo 6†
- Gaofen 11-04
- Starlink G5-1 (54 satellites)
- Shiyan 10-02
- EROS-C3
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).