Published: Sept. 11, 2013

A small beach ball-sized satellite designed and built by a team of 麻豆视频 students to better understand how atmospheric drag can affect satellite orbits is now slated for launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Sept. 15.

The satellite, known as the Drag and Atmospheric Neutral Density Explorer satellite, or DANDE, is designed to investigate how a layer of Earth鈥檚 atmosphere known as the thermosphere varies in density at altitudes from about 200 to 300 miles above Earth. There are thousands of satellites orbiting Earth at those altitudes, most of which eventually degrade, lose altitude and burn up in the atmosphere.

The denser the thermosphere -- which is most affected by space weather caused by variations in solar activity -- the more drag on spacecraft, said Brian Sanders, deputy director of the Colorado Space Grant Consortium, or COSGC, who is helping to oversee the CU-Boulder student group that designed and built the DANDE spacecraft.

The International Space Station, for example, dropped several miles in altitude in just a few days time when a powerful solar and geomagnetic storm slammed Earth in 2000, dramatically increasing atmospheric density.

DANDE is carrying an accelerometer, a wind and temperature spectrometer, an onboard computer, an orientation control system and radio equipment to send back data to Earth in real time. DANDE, whose primary investigator is COSGC Director Chris Koehler, will launch aboard a commercial Falcon-9 Space-X rocket that also will carry satellites from the Canadian Space Agency, Cornell University and Utah State University.

The accelerometer aboard DANDE can sense the movement, speed and direction of the satellite to help scientists better understand drag forces.听 A second onboard instrument, the wind and temperature spectrometer, will provide information on the changing drag forces present in the thermosphere by identifying what kind of particles are impacting the spacecraft as well as their angles and collision velocities.

There are two DANDE project manager co-leaders 鈥 senior Miranda Link from Johnstown, Colo., majoring in general astronomy and Brenden Hogan, a junior from Littleton, Colo., majoring in aerospace engineering sciences.听 The roughly 150 students who have worked on DANDE since its 2007 inception are from several CU-Boulder departments, including aerospace engineering, electrical engineering, environmental and civil engineering, mechanical engineering, computer science and astronomy.听

鈥淎ll satellites experience drag, which causes their orbits to degrade over time,鈥 said Link, who attended Roosevelt High School in Johnstown.听 鈥淜nowing more about the drag forces and how they change is information we think would be valuable to any groups flying satellites, whether they are from the government or commercial sector.鈥

Hogan, who attended Mountain Vista High School in Littleton, said changes in the thermosphere can be 鈥渜uite drastic鈥 at times, especially during major solar events. 鈥淭he more information that users have on how changes in the thermosphere are going to affect satellites, the better they can plan in order to avoid problems,鈥 said Hogan. 鈥淲hat we really are trying to do is to improve models of the atmosphere to better understand how it might affect spacecraft.鈥澨

The COSGC, which involves 17 universities, colleges and institutes in the state, is headquartered in CU-Boulder鈥檚 aerospace engineering sciences department. Begun with a $110,000 seed grant from the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research in 2007, the DANDE project won the University Nanosatellite Flight Competition Review held by AFOSR in 2009 -- beating out competitors like the University of Texas at Austin and Pennsylvania Sate University -- and earning the students a coveted launch opportunity.

The timing of the DANDE satellite launch is serendipitous because it is coming near a so-called 鈥渟olar maximum鈥 -- the time when Earth鈥檚 roughly 11-year solar cycle reaches peak activity, said Link, who attended Roosevelt High School in Johnstown. 鈥淲e think there will be more solar activity and more effects on the atmosphere, allowing us to gather more data.鈥

There are more than 13,000 satellites currently in orbit around Earth. DANDE, measuring roughly 20 inches in diameter and weighing just over 100 pounds, will be deployed into a polar orbit.听 DANDE team members hope to gather continuous data from the satellite for about one and a half years, downloading it several times a day to the COSGC satellite control facility in the CU-Boulder engineering college.

Roughly 10 members of the present and past DANDE teams are going attend the California launch, including some who are flying to Vandenberg at their own expense. 鈥淭hey want to see this project all the way to launch,鈥 Hogan said.

Since 1989, more than 5,000 students, primarily undergraduates, have been directly involved in COSGC鈥檚 hands-on space hardware program. Of the space grant consortia established by NASA in all 50 states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico, Colorado鈥檚 may be the most active, having launched three space shuttle payloads, three sounding rockets, two orbiting satellites, 12 sounding rocket payloads, five long-duration high-altitude balloon payloads and more than 350 short-duration high-altitude balloon payloads.听

鈥淲hen I came here as a freshman I had no idea there was a student organization that built satellites on campus,鈥 said Link.听 鈥淭his opportunity with the Colorado Space Grant Consortium just fell into my lap, and it has completely changed my life.鈥

鈥淭o see the expertise passed down by students through the seven-year lifetime of DANDE is awesome,鈥 said Hogan. 鈥淚 think the undergraduate experience available designing and building satellites and instruments, not just at the Colorado Space Grant Consortium but in other space research groups across campus as well, is one of the things that makes CU-Boulder a great university.鈥

For more information on COSGC visit . For more information the aerospace engineering sciences department visit . Amateur radio operators can track the satellite at .

To see a video on the DANDE student satellite project visit .

Contact:
Chris Koehler, 303-378-4765
koehler@colorado.edu
Brian Sanders, 303-492-5451
brian.sanders@colorado.edu
Jim Scott, CU-Boulder media relations, 303-492-3114
jim.scott@colorado.edu

鈥淭o see the expertise passed down by students through the seven-year lifetime of DANDE is awesome,鈥 said Brenden Hogan, a junior from Littleton, Colo., majoring in aerospace engineering sciences. 鈥淚 think the undergraduate experience available designing and building satellites and instruments, not just at the Colorado Space Grant Consortium but in other space research groups across campus as well, is one of the things that makes CU-Boulder a great university.鈥