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Sierra Nevada Supports Communications Experiment on ISS
by Staff Writers
Sparks NV (SPX) Aug 24, 2012


File image.

Over a month ago, Japan's HTV3 cargo carrier launched atop a Japanese H-II rocket delivering an innovative software-defined radio experiment to the International Space Station (ISS). This new ISS facility, known as the Space Communications and Navigation (SCaN) Testbed, utilizes Sierra Nevada Corporation (SNC) Space Systems' developed antenna pointing system. Initial reports indicate the system is operating as designed.

The NASA SCaN Program is responsible for providing communications and navigation services to space flight missions throughout the solar system.

Using a new generation of Software Defined Radios, the SCaN Testbed, developed by the NASA Glenn Research Center, will perform a variety of communications, networking and navigation experiments in the realistic environment of space.

These experiments will advance space communication technologies in support of future NASA missions and other U.S. space endeavors.

SNC supplied the integrated antenna pointing system, which incorporates the SNC open-loop, microstepping technology. This system has also successfully flown on Deep Impact, Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, Suomi NPP and several commercial remote sensing platforms.

"This is another excellent example of a successful collaborative program between SNC and NASA," said Matt Johnson, space technologies director of programs for SNC's Space Systems.

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Related Links
Sierra Nevada Corporation's Space Systems
Station at NASA
Station and More at Roscosmos
S.P. Korolev RSC Energia
Watch NASA TV via Space.TV
Space Station News at Space-Travel.Com






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Moscow (UPI) Aug 22, 2012
Europe's ATV-3 unmanned supply spacecraft has raised the International Space Station's orbit to about 261 miles, a mission control spokesman said Wednesday. The successful orbital readjustment follows a failed attempt Aug. 15 when the ATV-3's engines shut down prematurely because of an increase in temperature on one of the units, leaving the ISS short of its intended orbital height, RIA ... read more


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