NASA To Develop Small Satellites 85
coondoggie brings news that NASA has announced it will team with Machine-to-Machine Intelligence Corp. to produce small satellites, called 'nanosats,' weighing between 11 and 110 pounds. The satellites will work together in 'constellations' and facilitate networking in space. According to NASA's press release, it will 'develop a fifth generation telecommunications and networking system for Internet protocol-based and related services.' We've discussed miniature satellites in the past.
Great, (Score:5, Interesting)
I guess it would be more difficult to shoot down a self-healing mesh of small satellites(as opposed to shooting down one big one [cnn.net]).
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Re:Great, (Score:5, Funny)
(woman's voice:)"...oooh, shiny! Ethanol J. Fueled, please take me NOW"!
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it's the NEXT lay thats the problem....
Re:Great, (Score:5, Funny)
I think you'd have better luck if you lost some mass.
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No, he's trying to get some ass. Oh, sorry, you said mass, my bad.
Cheers
Re:Great, "Nano". Bah! Nano my (Score:1)
Maybe they are trying to cash in on the cache or cachet of Apple Nano? They should just start out with "Sattlets". (Then, they might curry fayvor from the current praysident and get more budget approval from him.)
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minisatellite: 100 - 1000 kg
micro-: 10 - 100 kg
nano-: 1 - 10 kg
pico-: 100 g - 1 kg
Theoretically, these satellites come down by orders of magnitude in cost, too. An example of a Picosat would be the CubeSat [cubesat.org] p
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In any case, my big question is how many nuts are orbiting Uranus?
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Its kinda like moving away from centralized mainframe systems of the past to the distributed networks that are used today (i.e. the Internet)
Its just more efficient and has greater fail safes.
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Nothing new Hams been doing for years (Score:5, Informative)
oh yes, no machines have ever communicated before (Score:4, Funny)
Mass appeal (Score:5, Insightful)
Come on, people. This is a tech site. Can't we please use metric units? This case is especially annoying for two reasons:
1. When the satellites are deployed, their weight will be zero.
2. Those odd range limits -- 11 and 110 pounds -- are obviously Imperial conversions of the more reasonable range 5-50 kg.
We've already crashed one probe into Mars trying to juggle Imperial and metric units. Everyone reading
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Re:Mass appeal (Score:5, Informative)
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Sure, it may be just as easy to launch something bigger, but why bother if something smaller will do? Hell, there may come a point in the future where we aren't even capable of building them that big...unless we just build a big hull and have a bunch of empty space around the computer. Technology is shrinking. It will most likely continue to
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I could easily build something to throw a penny through a field goal from 30 yards away. And I'm sure in the future we'll be able to put gram-size satellites into orbit.
Sure, it may be just as easy to launch something bigger, but why bother if something smaller will do? Hell, there may come a point in the future where we aren't even capable of building them that big...unless we just build a big hull and have a bunch of empty space around the computer. Technology is shrinking. It will most likely continue to do so. Besides, a gram size satellite would be much harder to hit with a missile (or another space ship...) than one that's several kilograms.
Imagine something like a compact disk. A stackable reflective disc with LCD shutters to control reflectivity. Give it a little CPU in the centre with photovoltaic cells to provide power.
Attitude and trajectory are controlled by opening and closing the shutters. Commands come from the ground by broadcast messages. You could launch thousands of the things on a single vehicle.
It would make a great way of concentrating sunlight for solar power.
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Attitude and trajectory are controlled by opening and closing the shutters. Commands come from the ground by broadcast messages. You could launch thousands of the things on a single vehicle. It would make a great way of concentrating sunlight for solar power.
Remind me again how you can change trajectory with aerodynamics in space? Also, solar power in space requires a concentrated beam so that the energy is not lost as heat to the atmosphere. That and you can get a better surface area from a connected solar panel. Face it, controlling the trajectory of a small object isn't worth the difficulty when bigger would be better anyways. Yea launching smaller is easier, but it makes more sense to have them assemble once they're in orbit.
Re:Mass appeal (Score:4, Insightful)
It would make a great way of concentrating sunlight for solar power.
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I also wonder that the surface area is getting sufficiently small that I would expect light pressure to be scaling downward too, though this is in the direction that square/cube effects are helping us. As an alternative I might suggest deploying fans, black on one side and silver on the other, like a classic radiometer. Then twist each fan blade at the base, to catch the sun with the desired angle. The fans themselves could likely b
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1 Sat = 5,000,000,000 kg (Score:5, Insightful)
Like you, I hate the corruption of engineering terminology in the hands of marketing. And that NASA, of all groups, would fall for the "nano" = "really small" meme is egregious. Clearly some people need to hand in their geek badges.
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Re:Mass appeal (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mass appeal (Score:4, Informative)
epic fail. they still weigh 100 pounds on earth and it's getting INTO space where they will weigh nothing that's the expensive part.
Re:Mass appeal (Score:4, Informative)
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But the force of gravity pulling down will be countered by the force of it spinning around the earth. Astronauts are in free fall, not in 0g.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weightlessness [wikipedia.org]
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Could you be more pretentious? I'm a techie, not a friggin' chemist. Pounds work just fine for me as these units do for the majority of readers. Now, if this site was mostly European, I'd expect metric units.
And, wise guy, the weight is very important when you're considering the expense of getting one off the ground.
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I'm fairly confident that Slashdot hasn't crashed any probes.
Also, for a really good time, check out the Wikipedia article on the lunar rover [wikipedia.org], which gives maximum payload weight in both pounds and kilograms. This is the kind of thing I find very humorous.
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In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
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Announce ware, Is always perfect. (Score:1)
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'Orbiting Unix Guru'
HAM radio operators.... (Score:2)
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NASA designs and builds for long reliable life. Hams can tolerate a lot more risk in exchange for cheaper parts and less rigor.
NASA has certain institutional aspects that push for a fairly large "minimum project size" (e.g. the need to report to Congress, be auditable, verify that the taxpayer isn't getting ripped off) Those institutional costs d
WOW! (Score:2)
everyone misuses "nano" (Score:1)
Quick fix (Score:1)
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Marketing wanks name them because they sign the paychecks. Life's unfair, cope.
Ahhhh... (Score:2)
Mars (Score:3, Interesting)
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had to check myself (Score:4, Informative)
OTH, if you are too high or orbit is wrong, then earth plays with it as well. [physorg.com]
Thanx for pointing that out. I like to learn.
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Women?
Nanosats aren't new (Score:1, Informative)
NASA To Develop SMELL Satellites (Score:1, Offtopic)
It's about time! (Score:1)
Bring on the tiny satellites!
Just What We Need (Score:3)
In news today (Score:1)
Apart from Cartosat-2 (690 kg), all other 9 are 'nano' satellites from India, Canada and Germany.
Detailed article here-
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gTY3Q6PejpjZOsEbIKmCYuRhjK_g [google.com]