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ARRL Satellite Bulletin ARLS005 (2014)

SB SPACE @ ARL $ARLS005
ARLS005 Amateur Radio Transponder Will Accompany Japanese Asteroid
Mission into Deep Space

ZCZC AS05  
QST de W1AW  
Space Bulletin 005  ARLS005
From ARRL Headquarters  
Newington, CT  September 2, 2014
To all radio amateurs

SB SPACE ARL ARLS005
ARLS005 Amateur Radio Transponder Will Accompany Japanese Asteroid
Mission into Deep Space

According to a news report, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
(JAXA) Hayabusa 2 asteroid mission, now scheduled to launch in
December, will carry the Abyss 2 (Shin'en 2) Amateur Radio
satellite. A 17 kg, 50 cm diameter polyhedron, Shin'en 2, built by
students at Kyushu Institute of Technology, makes extensive use of
carbon-fiber reinforced plastic materials that can be bonded by heat
to reduce its weight and the number of hardware fasteners. In
addition to a Mode J linear transponder for Amateur Radio
communication, Shin'en 2 will include CW and WSJT beacons. The
inclusion of the transponder will offer an opportunity for
earthbound radio amateurs to test the limits of their communication
capabilities.

"For confirming the operational status of the spacecraft in deep
space, the know-how of the Moon-reflecting communication technology
can be applied. By using an Amateur Radio service transponder,
amateur stations can communicate with each other when the spacecraft
is in near-Moon orbit," a project outline on the Shin'en 2 website
explains. "Beyond this distance, signal detection by Morse code and
telemetry data transmitted from the spacecraft will be performed."
The project is expected to help pave the way for future lunar rover
missions.  The outline is on the web at,
http://kit-okuyama-lab.com/en/sinen2/sinen2-outline/ .

Hayabusa 2 will make a round trip to the C-type asteroid 1999 JU3,
arriving at the asteroid in mid-2018. It then would survey and take
samples of the asteroid before departing in December 2019, and
return to Earth in December 2020.

Shin'en 2 will be placed into an elliptical orbit around the Sun and
travel into a deep space between Venus and Mars. Its inclination
will be almost zero, which means Shin-En2 will stay in the Earth's
equatorial plane. The distance from the Sun will be between 0.7 and
1.3 AU (an astronomical unit is 149,597,871 km).

The IARU-coordinated frequencies for Shin'en 2 are: CW beacon,
437.505 MHz; WSJT telemetry, 437.385 MHz; Inverting SSB/CW
transponder, 145.940-145.960 MHz uplink (LSB)/435.280-435.260 MHz
downlink (USB). The project also is hoping to gather listener
reports.

The ARTSAT2:DESPATCH satellite will be on the same launch. The
satellite, a joint project by students at Tama Art University and
Tokyo University, will carry a 30 kg "deep space sculpture"
developed using a 3D printer, as well as an Amateur Radio payload, a
CW beacon in the 435 MHz band.

At its maximum operational distance, it will be some 3 million km
(1.86 million miles) from Earth about a week after launch.
NNNN
/EX

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