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Satnews Daily
April 12th, 2017

An International Space Project Places South Africa on the Satellite Industry Map


The South African satellite industry is taking yet another step forward as a player in the international satellite arena with the launch of two South African built nanosatellites from Cape Canaveral in Florida expected to occur within the next few days.

 

Two nanosatellites (smallsats), ‘nSight1,’ designed and manufactured by Cape Town-based SCS Space, a member of the SCS Aerospace Group, and ‘ZA-Aerosat,’ designed and manufactured by CubeSpace of the Stellenbosch University, are to be launched  as part of a batch totaling 28 nanosatellites from 23 different countries.

As of this writing, the current information provided by United Launch Alliance (ULA), the launch service provider, is that the Atlas V and Cygnus OA-7 launch is set for April 18, 2017, at 17:11 South African time (11:11am EDT), following a number of rescheduled events due to ground equipment readiness. Their initial destination is the International Space Station (ISS), where they will be unloaded by the ISS crew and transferred to deployers with the help of robotic arms. The satellites will eventually be deployed into LEO over a period of 30 to 60 days as the ISS orbits the Earth.

The SCS Space nSight1 satellite project is a joint investment by SCS Aerospace Group and Pinkmatter Solutions who supplied the ground segment software. The satellite was designed, integrated and tested by engineers from the Space Advisory Company and assembled in the clean room of NewSpace Systems, both part of the SCS Aerospace Group. A key part of the mission of the satellite is to allow for the testing of the newly developed SCS Gecko Imager  as well as Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University's patented Radiation Mitigation VHDL Coding Technique.

The satellites are part of the QB50 project funded by the European Union and managed by the von Karman Institute to conduct research in the lower thermosphere between 200 to 380 km altitude. The data collected from this experiment over a period of 18 months will be used to complement current atmospheric models especially applicable to reentry trajectories of spacecraft.  All these smallsats will eventually burn up at the end of their operational lifetimes.

SCS Space is a subsidiary of the SCS Aerospace Group, Africa’s largest privately owned satellite concern. Other participants in the project are Pinkmatter Solutions, Space Advisory Company, NewSpace Systems, Stellenbosch University, CubeSpace, Simera Technology Group, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University and the Amateur Radio Society.