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NASA Space

Arduino Enables a Low-Cost Space Revolution 70

RocketAcademy writes "Arduino, the popular open-source microcontroller board, is powering a revolution in low-cost space-mission design. San Francisco-based Planet Labs, a spinoff of NASA's PhoneSat project, has raised $13 million to launch a flock of 28 Arduino-based nanosatellites for remote sensing. Planet Labs launched two test satellites this spring; Flock-1 is scheduled to launch on an Orbital Sciences Antares rocket in 2014. NanoSatisifi, also based in San Francisco-based company, is developing the Arduino-based ArduSat, which carries a variety of sensors. NanoSatisifi plans to rent time on ArduSats to citizen scientists and experimenters, who will be able upload their own programs to the satellites. The first ArduSat is scheduled for launch August 4 on a Japanese H-II Transfer Vehicle carrying supplies to the International Space Station. The cost of orbital launches remains a limiting factor, however. As a result, Infinity Aerospace has developed the Arduino-based ArduLab experiment platform, which is compatible with new low-cost suborbital spacecraft as well as higher-end systems such as the International Space Station. The non-profit Citizens in Space has purchased 10 flights on the XCOR Lynx spacecraft, which will be made available to the citizen-science community. Citizens in Space is looking for 100 citizen-science experiments and 10 citizen astronauts to fly as payload operators. To help spread the word, it is holding a Space Hacker Workshop in Dallas, Texas on July 20-21. Infinity Aerospace will be on hand to teach Arduino hardware and software."
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Arduino Enables a Low-Cost Space Revolution

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  • troll (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 09, 2013 @11:24PM (#44233949)

    if you can afford to put something into orbit, maybe you can afford to pay a real C programmer

  • by hamster_nz ( 656572 ) on Tuesday July 09, 2013 @11:31PM (#44233997)

    ... I guess you can always use weedkiller for artistic purposes [metro.co.uk], and photograph it from space.

  • Real Science? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by thesupraman ( 179040 ) on Tuesday July 09, 2013 @11:40PM (#44234031)

    Waiting for the real science to begin in 3...2... oh wait, never?

    Really, what exactly do they think these are actually useful for except for adding 'In Space' to a bunch of
    college programming projects? As these dont even use radiation hardened electronics of any ECC, I
    suspect investigating failure modes will be their main use.

    Come on, the world is full of useful and interesting things to do, this just aint one of them people!

  • Re:Real Science? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Techman83 ( 949264 ) on Wednesday July 10, 2013 @01:23AM (#44234589)

    I'd suggest watching the talk from LCA 2013. Video here [linux.org.au]. I went along and found it quite interesting. Puts Orbital science experimentation into the hands of people that would have never been able to afford it previously.

    But I'm seaminly responding to another trollish post with a +4 Insightful. Imagine a class room full of students excited about science because their teacher organised for a bunch of their projects to go up into space, and that drives them to further that knowledge and go on to become successful scientists. No, there is no useful purpose for this project at all

Any circuit design must contain at least one part which is obsolete, two parts which are unobtainable, and three parts which are still under development.

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