Agency Be the first to catch a signal from Fly Your Satellite! from space! 21/04/2016 10401 views 25 likes

It is time to start listening to space. To celebrate the launch of the three Fly Your Satellite! student-built CubeSats into low Earth orbit, ESA’s Education office challenges the amateur radio community to listen out for the tiny satellites.

The first three radio amateurs to send a recorded signal from either AAUSAT4, E-st@r-II or OUFTI-1 will receive a prize from ESA's Education Office. The satellites have been launched onboard the Soyuz VS-14 flight from the European Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana on 25 April at 23:02 CEST. Together with CNES’ Microscope scientific satellite, they were auxiliary payloads in the launch of ESA’s Earth observation satellite Sentinel-1B, the main passenger on this flight.

Fit checks for the CubeSats’ P-POD on ASAP-S Soon after being deployed into their final orbit, the CubeSats will begin transmitting signals to Earth that can be picked up by anyone with common amateur radio equipment. ESA challenges anyone to record the signal and send it to cubesats@esa.int, and to the CubeSat team. For each CubeSat, the first email received for which the signal is confirmed to belong to the CubeSat will be awarded with the following prizes: ESA Fly Your Satellite! poster

ESA Education goodie bag

Scale 1:1 3D printed model of a CubeSat

Radio Contact Information:

Please consult the following links to obtain specific information for radio contact for each of the three CubeSats. AAUSAT4 Downlink frequency 437.425 MHz For more HAM radio information see here and here.

Contact: aausat4 @ space.aau.dk E-st@r-II Downlink frequency 437.485 MHz For more HAM radio information see here.

Contact: cubesat.team @ polito.it OUFTI-1 Downlink frequency 145.980 MHz For more HAM radio information see here.

Contact: oufti-1 @ ulg.ac.be

What your email should contain: Sound recording of the CW beacon

Your Name

Callsign

Snailmail address for QSL

Reception time of CW beacon

CW beacon decoded

Location

A few lines about your equipment More information about Fly Your Satellite! can be found here.