The cube-shaped nanosatellite measures just 10 centimetres (4 inches) per side.
Astrocast
A nanosatellite developed by Swiss start-up Astrocast was launched into space Monday at a SpaceX rocket launch in California. Following a test phase, the shoebox-sized device will be used to better monitor infrastructure and facilities, including those in remote areas.
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The demonstration satellite is the first from Astrocast, a spin-off of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL), and will be used to test an Internet-of-ThingsExternal link (IoT) system that connects millions of objects all over the Earth’s surface.
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Nanosatellite could make data tracking more affordable
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Despite it’s small size, the device still has all the features of a standard satellite.
A type of cube-shaped nanosatellite measuring just 10 centimetres (4 inches) per side, Astrocast’s device went into orbit along with some 70 other satellites aboard the Falcon 9 rocket from SpaceX, which is owned by the Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
The satellites were gradually put into a sun-synchronous polar orbit at an altitude of 575km in the hours following take-off.
After the test phase, the EPFL spin-off’s system will be used to monitor infrastructure and facilities, such as water purification operations in African villages, remotely and cost-effectively. The machines will have an internal communication module that will send water consumption and status data several times per day.
A second satellite of the same type will be deployed from India in January, and the company plans to launch another 80 satellites into orbit by 2022.
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A Swiss satellite in space
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The University of Bern collaborated with the European Space Agency to create a new satellite that will be off to discover new planets in 2019.
Swiss satellite in record-breaking Indian space launch
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SpacePharma, a Swiss company based in Courgenay in canton Jura, had entrusted a five-kilogram (11-pound) nano-satellite to the Indian space agency, which successfully launched it into space today at 09:28 local time (04:58 Swiss time). Never have so many satellites been launched in a single attempt. In total, the Indian space launch vehicle PSLV-C37 carried…
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