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CubeSats are fascinating learning tools for space

hazrmard

This takes me down a memory lane! For my undergrad capstone project, we made a cubesat tracker for our university's satellite using a RPi/Arduino/Software-defined-radio to receive transmissions every time it passed over us. I cringe a little looking at the code now - but it worked!

I agree, cubsats are a wonderful way, for college students even, to tinker with space(-adjacent) tech.

https://github.com/hazrmard/SatTrack

firesteelrain

I have launched raspberry pi based PicoBalloons and had one fly for over a year at 40k ft. They are remarkably resilient.

I have used CubeSats in LEO to make amateur radio contacts. AMSAT is trying to get one to MEO/HEO. New cubesats are being released frequently

vodou

I've always wondered how well these RPi based cubesats really work in space. Really hard to find out. Also, people (naturally) aren't always eager to talk about failed projects. Maybe some people here on HN have experiences to share?

jdiez17

There are many Raspberry Pis on the International Space Station (AstroPis). They're subject to a similar amount of space radiation as CubeSats in LEO, and they work just fine. There's also an increasing trend of building CubeSat On-Board Computers (OBCs) as some form of Linux System-on-Module (these would traditionally be microcontrollers). I think Raspberry Pis (especially the Compute Modules) are quite suitable for Payload Data Handling (PDH) systems, although I've personally had a chance to launch a RPi chip yet.

tensorlibb

It's beyond cool you can pretty cheaply get cube sats on Space X rockets too