2015-02-01

AMSAT NEWS SERVICE

ANS-032

The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-

mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite

Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space

including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur

Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,

launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio

satellites.

The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur

Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.

Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:

ans-editor at amsat.org.

In this edition:

* Fox-1 "In The Bag"!

* 15 Schools Move Forward Into The Next Stage of ARISS Selection

* iCubeSat 2015 - 4th Interplanetary CubeSat Workshop

* January/February 2015 AMSAT Journal is Complete

* Design The Next AMSAT Satellite!

* SSTV transmissions from the International Space Station

* Dick Flagg, AH6NM, Receives YASME Award

* NASA OSSI Online Career Week

* ELaNa-X Cubesats Launched From Vandenberg on January 31

*

* ARISS News

* Satellite Shorts From All Over

SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-032.01

ANS-032 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins

AMSAT News Service Bulletin 032.01

>From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD.

DATE February 1, 2015

To All RADIO AMATEURS

BID: $ANS-032.01

Fox-1 "In The Bag"!

Fox-1, the first Fox-1 series satellite (a.k.a. Fox-1A to the AMSAT

Engineering Team) completed the final required testing January 16

through 23.

The tests included the launch provider required "DITL" (Day In The

Life) and "environmental testing" subjecting the CubeSat to Vibration

and Thermal Vacuum Bakeout, the latter two sometimes referred

together as "shake and bake".

DITL is required to show that Fox-1 will not deploy her antennas nor

transmit any signals prior to a minimum of 45 minutes after she is

deployed from the PPOD into orbit. The test was conducted at the

"Fox Labs" QTH of Jerry Buxton NØJY on January 16. Bob Fitzpatrick

KB5SQG assisted on site with Jonathan Brandenburg KF5IDY and Kevin

Bishop KG7NSD supporting via GoToMeeting. It was a somewhat suspense

filled test waiting for 45 minutes hoping nothing will happen,

followed by another 11 minutes hoping something will happen.

Everything performed as expected and the test was a success, with

transmit antenna deployment at 56 minutes 21 seconds, receive antenna

deployment at 56 minutes 32 seconds, and first transmission at 59

minutes 12 seconds.

On Monday January 19 Fox Engineering Team members Bob Davis KF4KSS,

Burns Fisher W2BFJ, and Jerry Buxton NØJY traveled to Orlando FL to

conduct the "shake and bake" at Qualtest.

Upon arrival Fox-1 was tested, inspected, and integrated into the

TestPOD at the hotel and then the team traveled to Qualtest.

Assisted by Lou McFadin W5DID, photographed by Dave Jordan AA4KN and

observed by Ed Krome K9EK the vibration testing took place on

Wednesday January 21 with frequencies and amplitudes that simulate

the ride Fox-1 will be experiencing on the Atlas V rocket during

launch, tested in all three (X,Y,Z) axes. After the "shake" a Short

Functional Test and Aliveness Test were conducted, and Fox-1 worked

like a charm!

Thursday January 21 Fox-1 was put into the thermal vacuum bell jar

to be subjected to a 12 hour pre-soak at high altitude and

temperature near the required test temperature in order to remove any

rough contaminants that might harm the ion pump used during the

"bake" procedure. Friday the 22nd Fox-1 went through the launch

required Thermal Vacuum Bakeout which sustains a vacuum <1E-4 torr at

a specified temperature for 6 hours in order to thoroughly remove any

contaminants that might be left over from construction and handling

and which could cause problems once the satellite and materials are

exposed to the vacuum of space. Given the vacuum actually achieved

during the process, we are very happy that Fox-1 was a "clean

machine" even prior to the start of the procedure! Once the "bake"

was complete Fox-1 was allowed to cool to near room temperature and

then subjected to the same Short Functional Test and Aliveness Test

as done on arrival in Florida and after the vibe test. Once again,

Fox-1 worked as it should and was officially declared ready for

launch!

While it is somewhat anti-climactic, Fox-1 was then carefully placed

in an anti-static bag and will remain there until delivery and

integration into the PPOD which is scheduled for mid-March 2015.

Battery will be charged by the umbilical but no other handling,

changes, testing, or function can be performed as once she passed the

environmental testing Fox-1 officially became "hands off".

As previously announced launch is scheduled for late August 2015.

Official photos and more information will be included in an upcoming

AMSAT Journal. If you are on Facebook, the AMSAT North America

Facebook page has some photos that were uploaded during the

environmental testing.

[ANS thanks NØJY and the Fox-1 Engineering Team for the information.]

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15 US Schools Move Forward Into the Next Stage of ARISS Selection

Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT) and the American Radio

Relay League (ARRL), US managing partners of Amateur Radio on the

International Space Station (ARISS), are pleased to announce that 15

of the schools/organizations that submitted proposals during the

recent proposal window have been accepted to move forward into the

next stage of planning to host a scheduled contact with crew on the

ISS during 2015. This is a significant step in ARISS' continuing

effort to engage young people in Science, Technology, Engineering,

and Math (STEM) activities and raise their awareness of Human Space

Flight. ARISS-US was encouraged by the high level of interest in the

education community evidenced by the significant number of submitted

proposals and the quality of the submissions.

The ARISS program anticipates that NASA will provide 12 scheduling

opportunities for US host organizations for the May - December 2015

time period. These 15 schools/organizations must now complete an

acceptable equipment plan that demonstrates their ability to execute

the ham radio contact. Once their equipment plan is approved by the

ARISS technical team, the final selected schools/organizations will

be scheduled as their availability and flexibility match up with the

scheduling opportunities offered by NASA. ARISS does not expect to be

able to schedule all 15 schools on the list.

The schools and organizations are:

Bay View Elementary School, Burlington, WA

Corpus Christi Catholic School, Chambersburg, PA

Daggett Montessori School K-8, Fort Worth, TX

Dearborn Public Schools, Dearborn, MI

Grady High School Robotics Team, Atlanta, GA

Kopernik Observatory & Science Center, Vestal, NY

Maconaquah School Corporation, Bunker Hill, IN

Moon Day/ Frontiers of Flight Museum, Dallas, TX

New Mexico Military Institute, Roswell, NM

Pima County 4H/Vail Vaquero's 4H Club, Tucson, AZ

Space Jam 9, Rantoul, IL

Ste. Genevieve du Bois Catholic Elementary School, Warson Woods, MO

Tulsa Community College, NE Campus, Tulsa, OK

United Space School, Seabrook, TX

West Michigan Aviation Academy, Grand Rapids, MI

[ANS thanks ARISS-US for the above information]

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iCubeSat 2015 - 4th Interplanetary CubeSat Workshop

26 - 27 May 2015, Imperial College London, United Kingdom

iCubeSat 2015, the 4th Interplanetary CubeSat Workshop, will address

the technical challenges, opportunities, and practicalities of

interplanetary space exploration with CubeSats. The workshop provides

a unique environment for open wide ranging practical collaboration

between academic researchers, industry professionals, policy makers

and students from around the world developing this new and rapidly

growing field.

Technical Program

Talks and round tables will focus on three themes: technology,

science, and open collaboration. The program will also include

unconference sessions to provide additional opportunities to engage

with the interplanetary CubeSat community and potential

collaborators. Talks and supporting material will be streamed and

archived on the conference website. A lively social program in and

around summertime London will be arranged for participants and their

guests.

Abstract Submission and Dates

Talks on astrodynamics, attitude control and determination systems,

citizen science, communications, landers, launch opportunities, open

source approaches, outreach, payloads, policy, power systems,

propulsion, reentry systems, ride-shares, science missions, software,

standardization, structures, systems engineering and other related

topics are all welcome.

1st June 2014 Registration opens at http://iCubeSat.org/registration/

1st April 2015 Abstract upload deadline via
http://iCubeSat.org/submit-an-abstract/

15th April 2015 Notification of abstract acceptance

22nd May 2015 Presentation (and optional paper) upload deadline

Please confirm your interest in presenting or attending as soon as

possible (to assist us size the venue) by completing the registration

form at http://iCubeSat.org/registration/

Exhibition

CubeSat specialists and other vendors are invited to contact
for details of exhibition opportunities.

Location

The fourth Interplanetary CubeSat Workshop will be held on the

Imperial College South Kensington campus, London, United Kingdom on

Tuesday, May 26th and Wednesday May 27th, 2015.

For more details please visit the conference website at
www.iCubeSat.org

[ANS thanks CubeSat mailing list for the above information]

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January/February 2015 AMSAT Journal is Complete

The January/February 2015 AMSAT Journal is complete and has been

sent to the

print shop.

In this issue you'll find ....

+ AMSAT Announcements - 2015 Symposium in Dayton, Ohio

+ Apogee View by Barry Baines, WD4ASW

+ Fox-1A Flight Model Passes Environmental Testing (with photos)

+ There's an App for That: Smart Phone Applications for Satellites

by Mark D. Johns, K0MDJ

+ New Column: Orbital Debrief for January/February

by Paul Stoetzer, N8HM

+ 4M: a Moon mission by Ghislain Ruy, LX2RG

+ Ballistically Reinforced Communications Satellite (BRICSat-P):

The Enhancement of the APRS Amateur Radio Network Through

Micropropulsion by Ensign Christopher Dinelli, et al

+ Report from the 2014 AMSAT Space Symposium and Annual Meeting

in Baltimore

+ Support our 2014 Prize Donors!

+ The AMSAT Space Symposium Photo Gallery

+ Recognition and Thanks to Our Dedicated Volunteers in 2014

Look for this issue to arrive in your mailbox in the next few weeks.

As always, please send your articles, operating photos, and

announcements to

the Journal mailbox at or to .

[ANS thanks the AMSAT Journal Team, Bernhard, VA6BMJ; Douglas,

KA2UPW/5;

Howard, K3JPH; Joe, KB6IGK; JoAnne, K9JKM for the above information]

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Design The Next AMSAT Satellite!

At the 2014 AMSAT Space Symposium AMSAT Vice President - Engineering

Jerry Buxton announced the plan for the next generation of AMSAT

satellites. "The door is open for everyone, to submit their ideas.

AMSAT Engineering has a long term strategy and this is the first

step."

The Engineering long term strategy includes the following goals

* Advancement of amateur radio satellite technical and communications

skills

* Enhance international goodwill

* Grow and sustain a skilled pool of amateur radio satellite engineers

* Establish and maintain partnerships with educational institutions

* Develop a means to use hardware common to all opportunities

With respect to the last goal Jerry said "Within the bounds of the

type of satellite it takes to achieve any of the various orbit

opportunities, let's consider in those plans the possibility of

developing a platform that can suit any and all orbits. Perhaps a

modular CubeSat, using a common bus as we did in Fox-1, which gives

great flexibility in building and flying different sizes and

configurations of CubeSats with simple common-design hardware

changes."

Submissions should be thorough and contain the following

information. The purpose of the proposal is not just in suggesting

an idea; being an all-volunteer team AMSAT needs your help in

carrying out the idea.

Design

Implementation - CubeSat platform

Estimated timeline

Cost - volunteer resources, commercial (COTS) units

Launch - how does it get to orbit

Strategy - how it fits into AMSAT's Engineering long term strategy

As mentioned above the idea should be based on the CubeSat platform.

This is the standard through which we will look for launches in the

foreseeable future.

In considering your proposal, Jerry encourages you to contact him,

using Subject: Design the Next AMSAT Satelleite), for

more details on the criteria.

A guidebook to the criteria is now available for download at
http://tinyurl.com/ANS032-SatelliteGuide.

In particular, if you plan to include a university as a partner to

provide experiments or other support and you are not representing

that university, please contact Jerry for assistance in working with

our existing partners or establishing a new partnership.

"Being amateur radio operators, it is easy for us to fall into a

particular trap because of our history of communicating with other

amateurs throughout the world" says Jerry. "Specifically, most people

who are not already involved in the world of satellite technology are

unaware of or simply overlook the provisions of the current ITAR and

soon to be EAR export rules particularly with regard to deemed

exports which requires governmental permission to discuss satellite

projects with foreign nationals."

While all amateurs are invited to submit ideas, U.S. amateurs must

take particular care of they choose to become involved in a

collaboration which includes individuals from other countries. It is

permissible to receive ideas and proposals from outside the U.S., but

it is not permitted for U.S. Persons to export or share design ideas

with other countries unless they have taken the proper steps to

insure compliance with ITAR and deemed export rules.

Additionally, those wishing to work on proposals should use care in

presenting themselves in their contacts. While the goal is for AMSAT

to build and launch the satellite, it is not an AMSAT project until

it is accepted by the AMSAT Board of Directors. It is acceptable to

represent yourself as members of a project team that plans to submit

a proposal to AMSAT for a future satellite project, as the AMSAT name

is well known.

"It is not our intention that ideas be submitted to AMSAT-NA which

would be more appropriately handled by an AMSAT organization in a

country where AMSAT is established. AMSAT-NA is seeking ideas from

amateurs in North America and will certainly consider ideas from

amateurs in countries which do not have an established AMSAT

organization or relationships with an existing AMSAT organization."

The deadline for submissions is May 30, 2015. After the submission

date the ideas will be screened for completeness and then reviewed by

a board consisting of the AMSAT Engineering Team, AMSAT Senior

Officer and Board of Directors representatives, and aerospace

industry members. The review board may modify or consolidate ideas

and will consider which meet the criteria to become a project based

on feasibility, cost, and the ability to bring value to the amateur

satellite community. The review process is expected to be completed

in September 2015.

For those ideas selected to become a project which satisfy the

requirements for an ELaNa launch, the idea authors will be asked to

work with the AMSAT Engineering Team on an ELaNa proposal.

The Engineering Team will then work on the details of execution for

the selected project(s) and present a proposal to the AMSAT Board of

Directors in October 2015 for final approval to begin work. Once

approved, any ELaNa proposals will be submitted in November 2015 and

the project(s) will move forward.

Now is the time for YOU to begin working on the next AMSAT satellite!

[ANS thanks AMSAT Engineering for the above information]

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SSTV transmissions from the International Space Station

The Russian ARISS team plan to activated SSTV from the ISS on

Saturday January 31 and will cintinue on Sunday February 1, 2015.

Expected SSTV mode will be PD180 on 145.800 MHz with 3 minute off

periods between transmissions. A total of 12 different photos will be

sent during the operational period. This is the second series of

pictures to be transmitted.

Start time would be around 10.00 UTC on January 31 and 9.00 UTC on

February 1. The transmissions should terminate around 21:30 UTC each

day.

[ANS thanks Gaston ON4WF for the above information]

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Dick Flagg, AH6NM, Receives YASME Award

Champion of integrating Amateur Radio and space science is honored

for achievements

ARISS (Amateur Radio on the International Space Station) is pleased

to share the news that the 2015 Yasme Excellence Award has been

presented to Dick Flagg, AH6NM, for his contributions to the success

of the ARISS program and other efforts in support of Amateur Radio

and space science-related initiatives.

The Yasme Award is given to outstanding individuals who have served

the Amateur Radio community in areas of technical advancement,

operating arts and good will. Recipients are chosen by the not-for-

profit Yasme Foundation. ARISS, which gives students the opportunity

to ask questions of astronauts on board the ISS (International Space

Station) via Amateur Radio, aims to spark an interest in science,

technology, engineering and math (STEM) subjects and careers among

young people while simultaneously serving as an introduction to

Amateur Radio.

Flagg first supported the SAREX (Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment)

program, the pre-cursor of ARISS, on the 1990 STS-35 mission, with

Astronaut Dr. Ron Parise, WA4SIR (SK), on board. Flagg helped pioneer

the telebridge concept for Dr. Parise's mission, which is now an

operational capability for ARISS. The telebridge enables school

students to talk to on-orbit crew members through amateur radio

ground stations that are not co-located at the school but are linked

to the school through a phone line connection. His pioneering work on

the telebridge concept has allowed hundreds of schools to contact the

ISS when conditions, such as ground obstructions or high buildings,

would have prevented the contact. Flagg provided critical SAREX

support by helping students communicate with Dr. Parise and other

astronauts on STS-35 using the telebridge ground station he pioneered

in Hawaii. Since then, Flagg has been involved in more than 115

contacts to the Shuttle and ISS from the ARISS Hawaii telebridge

ground station located at Sacred Hearts Academy in Honolulu, an all-

girls school where he emphasized STEM through student involvement in

the contacts.

The award also recognized Flagg's contributions to the NASA Radio

Jove educational outreach program, which has introduced radio

telescope kits to nearly 2,000 student groups and radio amateurs

around the world.

"While it was indeed an honor for me to receive this award from the

Yasme Foundation," says Flagg, "I feel that I am accepting it for

both the ARISS and Radio Jove teams. Congratulations to all of you."

For more on the Yasme Foundation and the Yasme Award, visit
www.yasme.org.

For more on the ARISS program, visit www.ariss.org. You may also

join ARISS on Facebook and follow it on Twitter: @ARISS_status.

[ANS thanks Dave AA4KN and YASME for the above information]

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NASA OSSI Online Career Week

The NASA One Stop Shopping Initiative, or OSSI, is hosting the NASA

OSSI Online Career Week Feb. 10-12, 2015. This online event will

connect you with NASA, science, technology, engineering and

mathematics, or STEM, employers and top graduate programs nationwide.

Engage with representatives from all 10 NASA centers to learn about

internship, scholarship and fellowship opportunities available at

NASA. Interact with recruiters from top STEM employers, and explore

internship and job opportunities in the private sector. Learn about

highly ranked STEM graduate programs and network with admissions

officers from the comfort of your home, dorm, smartphone or tablet.

Register for one or all events and launch your career today!

NASA OSSI Online Career Week Live Events

-- NASA Internships, Fellowships and Scholarships Day -- Feb. 10,

2015 (1-5 p.m. EST)

-- STEM Industry Day -- Feb. 11, 2015 (1-5 p.m. EST)

-- STEM Graduate Programs Fair -- Feb. 12, 2015 (1-5 p.m. EST)

Starting on February 9, you will be able to research participating

organizations and explore opportunities listed. Complete your

profile, and prepare a few questions for the centers, companies or

graduate programs you are interested in. During the live events, you

will engage in one-on-one text-based conversations directly with a

recruiter or admissions officer at those organizations. You can share

your background, experience and resume and ask questions. Maximize

your time in the event by getting in line to chat with

representatives from more than one center, company or university at a

time.

To attend, please register at http://nasaossi.brazenconnect.com/.

For more information, please contact nasaossi at hsf dot net.

[ANS thanks NASA Education Express Message for Jan. 29, 2015 for the

above information]

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ELaNa-X Cubesats Launched From Vandenberg on January 31

Mike Rupprecht, DK3WN, reported on his SatBlog

(http://www.dk3wn.info) that the Saturday, January 31 Delta II launch

from Space Launch Complex 2 at Vandenberg Air Force Base carrying the

Soil Moisture Active Passive, or SMAP, satellite also included a

secondary payload with ELaNa cubesats. The main payload and secondary

payload were deployed successfully.

Cubesat Downlink

----------------- -------------------

Firebird-II FU3 437.405 MHz 19k2 FSK

Firebird-II FU4 437.230 MHz 19k2 FSK

GRIFEX 437.485 MHz 9k6 FSK

Exocube (CP-10) 437.270 MHz 9k6 FSK

(source DK3WN http://www.dk3wn.info/p/?pT555)

Jan, PE0SAT described his receiving and decoding configuration on his

website:
http://www.pe0sat.vgnet.nl/2015/grif...e-and-decoded/

The University of Michigan released updated software to decode GRIFEX

packets:
http://exploration.engin.umich.edu/blog/?p%55

Mike, DK3WN shows screen captures of receiving Firebird-II FU3 and

FU4 at:
http://www.dk3wn.info/p/?pT977

[ANS thanks Mike, DK3WN and Jan, PE0SAT for the above information]

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ARISS News

+ A Successful contact was made between Japan Broadcasting

Corporation (NHK)"Masakame event" Tokyo, Japan event and Astronaut

Samantha Cristoforetti IZØUDF using NA1SS. The contact began 2015-01-

24 14:21 UTC and lasted about nine and a half minutes. Contact was

direct via JK1ZRW. ARISS Mentor was 7M3TJZ. 8 questions were

answered and approximately 200 people were in attendance. The event

was covered by NHK TV station.

+ A Successful contact was made among Istituto Salesiano "G.

Bearzi", Udine, Italy; Intercultura Onlus, Milano, Italy and

Astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti IZØUDF using NA1SS. The contact

began 2015-01-31 08:38:59 UTC and lasted about nine and a half

minutes. Contact was telebridged via K6DUE.

ARISS Mentor was IKØWGF. 13 questions were answered. 400 were in

attendance at Salesiano "G. Bearzi" and 100 at Intercultura Onlus.

Upcoming ARISS Contact Schedule

Scuola Media Locatelli-Oriani, Milano, Italy and Scuola Secondaria

di Primo Grado "Bachelet", Cernusco sul naviglio, Italy are expected

to make contact with Astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti IZØUDF on 2015-

02-05 10:37:35 UTC. The contact is scheduled as a Telebridge via

W6SRJ. The ISS downlink should be audible over portions of the

Western United States.

Presentation Scuola Media Locatelli-Oriani

The middle school Locatelli Oriani is located in the center of

Milan, just a few steps from the planetarium. It's part of the

comprehensive institute Pisacane and Poerio: two buildings with

primary school and middle school. All the activities, both from

educational and didactical point of view are primarily focused on

well-being of students. The educational proposal, following the

ministerial indication, has been enriched by educational trips,

schools trips, sports days, concerts, music, theatre and dance as

well as themed initiatives in science, languages and art. Among these

there are KET and PET (in-depth courses about foreign languages),

summer holidays abroad, participation to the math games held by

Bocconi university and "Scatti di scienza" (photographs and movies

competition about science made by students).

The school was involved also in Mission X 2012 and, together with

Rai Scuola (the national TV), have been realized a documentary movie

for the ministerial project "Salute".

There is the student council, two students per class elected by the

others. They meet monthly to discuss and propose new ideas and

initiatives on how to improve the school and develop solidarity,

community spirit and recognition of human and civil rights. Since

several years the council is taking care of children remote adoption,

together with humanitarian organizations.

Presentation of Scuola Secondaria di Primo Grado "Bachelet"

The school V. Bachelet is a natural continuation of the educational

work begun in 1981 by some parents and teachers, founding the

Elementary School "The Aurora", they were attempting to create a

school in a cooperative solidarity-based education. Since 2006 the

Institute Aurora-Bachelet is twinned with the Little Prince Primary

School in Nairobi and since September 2012 is based in the brand new

facility located in Via Buonarroti in Cernusco S/N.

The students from the third classes followed, over the last few

years, an articulated astronomy course marked by significant moments:

realization of a book to celebrate the 40th Moon landing anniversary,

visit the astronomical observatory in Cernusco S/N, see the live

event between Pope Benedict XVI and the ISS, meet ESA astronaut Paolo

Nespoli, meet the professor Amalia Ercoli Finzi from Milan

University, meet mr. Valerio Nassi and his hand-made space models and

meet eng. Marco Molina (Selex ES) who introduced in several lessons

the human space exploration and robotic space exploration (specially

focused on Rosetta mission).

Preparing for the school contact with ESA astronaut Samantha

Cristoforetti, eng. Marco Molina introduced to students all the

details about her Futura mission and provided an autographed

Samantha's potrait picture.

The schools will alternate questions during the contact. The English

translation of the anticipated questions include:

1. Elena: We know that in space is possible to grow plants, but how

do you put water and how do you prevent topsoil from floating

around?

2. Diana: Is, the precise schedule on the ISS, a constraint or a

needs for you?

3. Gaia: Thanks to microgravity, the ISS is a barrier-free

environment: do you think space could be considered the new

frontier especially for people with disabilities?

4. Maria: Looking at the Sun rising so many times a day is affecting

in some way your body and mind? Which are the most important body

modification you feel in microgravity?

5. Andrea: Are the computer used in space different from what we use

on earth? Which operating system do they have?

6. Davide: How did you discover your passion for astronomy? Did you

remember people or events that helped to?

7. Alessandro: Node 2 and 3 have been built in Italy. Do you feel

home moving inside these modules?

8. Lia: How do you spend your free time, if you have it, on the ISS?

9. Rebecca: Would you take part in a trip to Mars and back?

10. Andrea: Which people and things do you miss most while living on

ISS? How is the life in orbit with just a few people? Do you feel

alone?

11. Filippo: We see that you share your experience from the

beginning and you still do from there: do you plan to write a book

at your return to Earth?

12. Laura: Despite your very long training, did you see things on

the ISS that you would never imagined?

13. Filippo: What will you bring back to Earth both physically and

mentally?

14. Daniela: Which activities and experiments are you performing on

the ISS?

15. Alessia: What was the detail that impressed you most on the ISS?

16. Sergio: How and what do you eat in space? Which are your

favourite foods and what is the flavour?

17. Vincenzo: Is it more difficult doing activities without the

effect of weight?

18. Claudia: Did you see the historical landing of Rosetta on a

comet? If yes, what was your feeling?

19. Loredana: Coming back to Earth, wow are you going to get back

used again to weight and gravity, coming back to Earth?

20. Anishta: Do you think it would be possible living in space for

normal people like us as students?

21. Anna: What was your feeling after the launch, as soon as you

realized of being in space?

22. Matteo: Did you have troubles on the ISS up to now? If yes, what?

[ANS thanks ARISS, Charlie AJ9N, David AA4KN for the above

information]

Television Report about ARISS, Produced by Italian RAI-3 TV

The ARISS contact performed Friday January 9, 2015 with three

Italian schools was reported extensively by the "Spaziolibero"

television program, sponsored by the Italian parliament.

Emanuele D'Andria I0ELE, President AMSAT Italia, Francesco De Paolis

IK0WGF, secretary AMSAT Italia and Piero Tognolatti I0KPT did an

outstanding job presenting ARISS and Amateur Radio to the general

public.

The program - in Italian - is presently available at:

http://tinyurl.com/ANS032-ARISSonTV

The video narration gives visibility to the ARISS program, ARISS

school contacts and HAMTV.

Congratulations to our Italian colleagues for outstanding public

relations!

[ANS thanks Gaston, ON4WF, for the above information]

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Satellite Shorts From All Over

+ Upcoming NASA Educator Professional Development Webinars

NASA Educator Professional Development (EPD) presents free webinars

open to all educators. Join NASA Education Specialists to learn about

activities, lesson plans, educator guides and resources to bring NASA

into your classroom. Visit the NASA EPD website for more information

and to register for any upcoming webinars at
https://paragon-tec.adobeconnect.com...-event-catalog

[ANS thanks NEON - NASA Educators Online Network for the above

information]

+ Test Flight for Privately Funded LightSail Spacecraft

Lightsail flies in May...

Planetary Society Blog Page:
http://tinyurl.com/ANS032-BlogLightsail

Planetary Society Press Release
http://preview.tinyurl.com/ANS032-ReleaseLightsail

[ANS thanks the Planetary Society for the above information]

+ This homebrew satellite antenna project looks quite do-able:
http://www.dxzone.com/cgi-bin/dir/jump2.cgi?ID0585

[ANS thanks JoAnne K9JKM and DXZone for the above information]

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/EX

In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the

President's Club. Members of the President's Club, as sustaining

donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-

tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT

Office.

Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership

at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students

enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-

dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.

Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership

information.

73,

This week's ANS Editor,

EMike McCardel, KC8YLD

kc8yld at amsat dot org

_______________________________________________

Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA
http://amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans

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