However, there are many interesting things you can do. Project Calliope is one of the first TubeSats. Headed by Alex Antunes, it will make measurements of Earth's ionosphere and translate its measurements into a midi file which will be sent back down to Earth. You can keep up with progress on Project Calliope blog or see the presentation given at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Washington DC.
I think this is a great project and hope it succeeds (I am speaking both of Interborbital Systems and Project Calliope). I was at the Satellite Educator's Association meeting last fall and they had a booth promoting TubeSats. I had dinner with a the woman at the booth (I can't remember her name) and she was very enthusiastic and had big plans. I was a little skeptical, but hoping they can succeed where others have failed. I will say she did a great job of answering all my skeptical questions giving me hope they could make it. They are expecting their first launch in the first quarter of 2011, so we will find out soon.
Good luck Project Calliope. I look forward to hearing some music from space!Reprinted with permission from the Half-Astrophysicist Blog.
2 comments:
I don't know why my brain works the way it does... Eight thousand dollars and it burns up in space in a couple months. They must have restrictions, keeping people from sending their ashes/remains into space? Talk about going out with a bang!
I can think of a neighbor I'd like to launch and then let burn up, but he weighs too much.
Post a Comment