Google+ SpaceTravelFoundation: 2014-09-07

September 9, 2014

Cubsats inadvertently released from ISS

Dear readers and followers,


few days ago, September 4th, two more of Planet Lab’s shoebox-sized Earth imaging satellites launched them selves from aboard the International Space Station (ISS), the latest in a series of technical mysteries involving a commercially owned CubeSat deployer located outside Japan’s Kibo laboratory module.

Credit image: NASA

Station commander Steve Swanson was storing some blood samples in one of the station’s freezers Friday morning when he noticed that the doors on NanoRack’s cubesat deployer were open, announced +NASA . Flight controllers at the Johnson Space Center in Houston determined that two CubeSats had been inadvertently released. “No crew members or ground controllers saw the deployment. They reviewed all the camera footage and there was no views of it there either,” said NASA mission commentator Pat Ryan..

The satellites, owned by San Francisco-based Planet Labs, are part of a planned 100-member network designed to collect images of the entire Earth every 24 hours. So far, 12 of 32 CubeSats delivered to the space station aboard a Cygnus cargo ship in July have been deployed, including four launched inadvertently, said NanoRacks spokeswoman Abby Dickes. In addition to the two Planet Labs satellites launched Thursday night, two more of the company’s satellites were released accidentally August 23th, a NASA status report shows.

Credit image: NASA

The latest inadvertent deployment followed unsuccessful attempts Wednesday night to return NanoRack’s CubeSat dispenser to service. Troubleshooting efforts included Jiggling, the small robotic arm holding the dispense in an attempt to get its doors to open, Ryan added.
Flight control teams are assessing whether to bring the deployer back inside the station or to try to release the remaining CubeSats still awaiting launch.

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