2020-2021 Competition: Nanosatellites - Competition Winners
The 2020-2021 Satellite Design Competition invited students to design, construct and operate a nanosatellite payload system with the objective to acquire as much information from an analogue lunar nanosatellite mission. Students created a payload concept, trading off performance parameters, and passed through a rigorous review process with panels of experts within the space industry. The competition aimed to reach out to students from multiple scientific fields, including, but not limited to, electrical engineers, mechanical engineers and computer science engineers. The following student teams took first, second and third place in this year’s competition.
First Place: CranSEDS Team
CranSEDS Team Report: Vicinity
The CranSEDS team of 11 students designed the cubesat Vicinity for this year’s competition. On the one hand, the project focuses on designing Vicinity to identify and analyse the environmental characteristics of the Mystery Room. The CubeSat will be hanged with a hook from a rope suspended from the Mystery Room ceiling and will be able to rotate along the rope axis for 30 minutes, taking the maximum amount of data possible. For that, payload sensors configuration will be optimised according to the room dimensions. Real mission characteristics as launch vibrations, thermal insulation, radiation, or the use of solar panels are not considered; while gravity and hook interface friction is addressed. The sources to be detected by Vicinity are thermal, electromagnetic, optical and light sources.
On the other hand, the theoretical lunar mission will be simulated using the AGI software System Tool Kit (STK) and OPENCOSMOS APP1. The payload of the CubeSat will be different from Vicinity sensors, according to the orbit trajectory and lunar landmarks locations. The CranSEDS Satellite Team has designed Vicinity not only for this competition but also taking into account design benefits on the CubeSat industry and sustainability. The design is modular, being able to adapt the 3U CubeSat to different internal configurations. This allows the CubeSat to be adapted to any payload and to be reusable, being more sustainable. Read More
The CranSEDS team featured 11 members: Gema Arboleya Martinez, Jack Bowden, Irina Bulgaru, Maria Carillo Barrenechea, Edouard Demers (technical leader), Paul Gondras, Mafred Hamburgo Fragoso, Juan Fran Lopera Zafra, Josep Marsellach Pujolràs, Joel Mura, Senthil Murugan Palaneappan, Ibrahima Mbaye, Akshay Parthiban, Miguel Ortiz Rejón, Ilias Sigalas and Toshan Vaid.
The team was mentored by Mark Muktoyuk.
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Upcoming Podcasts
The three winning teams from the 2020-2021 will be featured in a Making Leaders podcast series! Look for updates on the podcast page shortly.