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Published byLayton Barner Modified over 9 years ago
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Less is More S. R.Kulkarni Director, Caltech Optical Observatories Chairman, SIM-Lite Science Team
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Are we on the verge of a paradigm shift?
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Access to Space will get Cheaper Nearly a dozen space faring countries US, Russia, Europe China, Japan, India, Israel, In development: Iran, S. Korea, Brazil, Taiwan… Entry of private players Russia US
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Satellites by countries
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Telemetry is Inexpensive And the price will fall ….
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Some Trailblazars
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CHIPSAT “Cosmic Hot Interstellar Plasma Spectrometer” The only UNEX mission to date 63 kg satellite EUV spectrometer for diffuse ISM 2003-2008 (death due to budget)
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MOST (Canada) 60-kg satellite dedicated to precision photometry Demonstration of lightweight attitude system Official cost $10M (Launch cost $1M?)
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Brite-Constellation Nano-satellites (20-cm cube) Large FOV CCD camera (24 sq degree) Photometry of bright stars (4 mag) Expected launch date is 2011
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In the works: (nano)Jasmine 20 kg satellite 5-cm telescope 3-axis stabilized 1-micron imaging and astrometry Launch is now August 2011 (Cyclon-4)
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Challenge & Opportunity <60 kg in LEO X-ray monitors (always a winner) An instrument in support of ground facilties (PTF) UV Photometer NIR Photometer Precision Photometry on Demand Transit Eclipse Stare at Galactic Center, LMC, SMC, M31 etc
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Sub-orbital Ops: UVA/Drones Great advance in Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs, “drones”). No pilot and so reduced cost (and mass) “Eclipse-on-Demand” “Fly-to-suit Transit”
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