IceCube | |
Names List: | Earth-1 |
Image Alt: | Deployment of IceCube |
Mission Type: | Technology demonstration |
Operator: | NASA Goddard Space Center |
Cospar Id: | 1998-067LN[1] |
Satcat: | 42705[2] |
Spacecraft Type: | CubeSat |
Manufacturer: | NASA |
Dimensions: | 10cm x 10cm x 30cm |
Launch Rocket: | Atlas V 401 |
Launch Site: | Cape Canaveral Space Launch Complex 41 |
Launch Contractor: | United Launch Alliance |
Deployment From: | International Space Station (ISS) |
Disposal Type: | Re-entry |
Decay Date: | October 3, 2018 |
Orbit Reference: | Geocentric |
Orbit Regime: | Low Earth |
Orbit Inclination: | 51.64° |
Instruments: | 883 GHz radiometer |
IceCube, also known as Earth-1,[3] was a 3U CubeSat satellite[4] funded and developed by NASA.[5] [6] Its goal was to demonstrate and map ice clouds through the use of its 883 GHz radiometer.
IceCube was built to map ice clouds globally. It had a submillimeter radiometer to overcome the limitation of ice particles in clouds being opaque in the infrared and visible spectrums.[7] It was made to demonstrate a 833-gigahertz submillimeter-wave receiver as part of a technology demonstration mission.[8]
IceCube was a Sun-pointing spin-stabilized 3U CubeSat with two solar panel arrays. In its compact form, it occupied a volume of 10 x 10 x 30cm.[9]
IceCube had a 883 GHz radiometer allowing the penetration of cloud layers and measurement of ice mass. At 883 GHz, radiation is highly sensitive to scattering allowing it to interact with ice in the clouds.
See main article: article and Cygnus OA-7.
Cygnus OA-7 launched on April 18, 2017 as the seventh flight of the Cygnus spacecraft to the ISS as under NASA's Commercial Resupply Services program.[10] The Cygnus spacecraft docked with the ISS on April 2, 2017.[11]
IceCube was deployed from the ISS via the Nanoracks CubeSat Deployer along with several other CubeSats on May 16, 2017.[12] It re-entered the Earth's atmosphere on October 3, 2018, ending its mission.