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AEROSPACE
NASA launches miniature satellite designed by Indian teen
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (Sputnik) Sep 27, 2019

file illustration only

The miniature satellite was successfully launched from NASA's Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility in the US state of New Mexico early Tuesday and achieved an altitude of 38 km.

The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has launched a miniature satellite designed by a 17-year-old Indian student to the edge of the space.

The satellite named "RamanSat 2" and measuring 4 cm x 4 cm x 4 cm, has been developed by a budding astronomer, Aabhaas Sikka, who is currently studying mechanical engineering in Delhi, the media reported on Wednesday.

The experiment, which is intended to make the exploration of space safer for humans and satellites, consisted of a balloon carrying "RamanSat 2".

The balloon was successfully launched from NASA's Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility in New Mexico early Tuesday, and achieved an altitude of 38 km.

Carrying state-of-the-art equipment, the satellite is made to measure radiation from the sun and space reaching the Earth.

Proud of the 17-year old's achievement, people took to Twitter to share the news and congratulate Sikka.

?To interest more students in space, NASA conducts an international space competition titled "Cubes in Space" in partnership with a US-based non-profit organisation called idoodledu inc.

The competition provides an opportunity for students to build their experiments, out of which the chosen ones are flown to space.

This year, of the total of 350 experiment proposals were submitted by participants from around the world, 160 were selected to be flown by NASA.

"RamanSat 2" was developed during his internship with SPACE-India, a New Delhi-based organisation working in the field of astronomy, space education and technology. His project was selected from India.

In 2017, a high school team from India's Chennai city developed a satellite that was launched by NASA as part of the same project. The satellite was named after late former Indian president Dr. A. P.J Abdul Kalam.

After successfully launching a lunar orbiter as part of its "Chandrayaan 2" lunar project in August, the India Space Research Organisation is preparing for a manned space mission, "Gangayaan", in 2022.

Source: Sputnik News


Related Links
Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility
Aerospace News at SpaceMart.com


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AEROSPACE
NASA's BITSE Solar Scope Is Ready for Balloon Flight Over New Mexico
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Aug 27, 2019
NASA and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute, or KASI, are getting ready to test a new way to see the Sun, high over the New Mexico desert. A balloon - large enough to hug a football field - is scheduled to take flight no earlier than Aug. 26, 2019, carrying beneath it a solar scope called BITSE. BITSE is a coronagraph, a kind of telescope that blocks the Sun's bright face in order to reveal its dimmer atmosphere, called the corona. Short for Balloon-borne Investigation of Temperature ... read more

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