OSSI-1 explained

OSSI-1
Mission Type:Research/amateur radio
Website:http://opensat.cc/ (archived)
Cospar Id:2013-015B
Satcat:39131
Spacecraft Type:1U CubeSat
Manufacturer:Home made
Launch Mass:950g
Dimensions: cube
Launch Date: UTC
Launch Rocket:Soyuz 2-1a
Launch Site:Baikonur 31/6
Launch Contractor:Roskosmos
Decay Date:30 June 2013
Orbit Epoch:14 May 2013
Orbit Reference:Geocentric
Orbit Regime:Low Earth
Orbit Inclination:64.9 degrees
Orbit Period:92.6 minutes
Apsis:gee

OSSI-1 (standing for Open Source Satellite Initiative-1) was an amateur radio satellite launched in 2013 with Bion-M No.1. Bion-M was launched into orbit at 10:00 UTC on April 19, 2013, from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, with 6 small satellites, including OSSI-1. OSSI-1 detached from Bion-M at 16:15 UTC.

OSSI-1 is the pet project of Hojun Song, a South Korean artist and amateur radio operator. He worked on it for seven years, designing and building the satellite using off-the-shelf components rather than equipment that had been certified for use in space. The most expensive aspect of the project was the launch, which cost US$100,000.

OSSI-1 was a 1U CubeSat with 100mm sides, weighing 950g. It uses an Arduino microcontroller, a lithium-ion battery and a J mode UHF/VHF transceiver.

The satellite had a Morse code beacon transmitting "OS0 DE OSSI1 ANYOUNG" on 145.980 MHz and 4 LED lights with a total power of 44 watts to flash Morse code messages, using an open protocol. The project developers announced on 24 April 2013 that they had not yet received a signal from the satellite and were concerned that the Two-line element set they were using to locate the satellite might be wrong.

According to Korean amateur radio organisation KARL, Hojun Song had some difficulties launching a satellite as a private individual, connected to registering with space bodies and being allocated broadcast frequencies by the international telecoms regulator the ITU. A law requires knowledge of the launch date two years in advance which he was not able to give as he was sharing a launch with other experimental satellites. The amateur radio bands are nearly full but to use other bands would require more expensive specialist equipment and technical skills. In 2011 OSSI-1 signed a contract with a French nano satellite company for a turnkey launch service in order to secure a launch date.

The satellite re-entered the Earth's atmosphere on 30 June 2013. Source code for the satellite is available on GitHub.[1]

References

  1. Web site: Ossicode - Overview. GitHub. 2021-02-02. 2021-04-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20210419010046/https://github.com/ossicode. live.

[2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11]

External links