UNITE CubeSat reaches 100 days in orbit, a milestone for student-build satellites
May 13, 2019
The University of Southern Indiana student-built UNITE CubeSat has been officially in Earth's orbit 100 days and has transmitted data back to Earth from orbit every day since its January 31 deployment.
The first spacecraft built and flown by a public institution in the state of Indiana and funded in part by NASA's Undergraduate Student Instrument Project (USIP), UNITE has been confirmed by NASA to be the only academic satellite built and flown into space and/or orbit as part of the USIP. According to a recent study, only 45% of CubeSat units last longer than 60 days in service.
Additional funding for the project was provided by the USI Foundation, the Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education and the Indiana Space Grant Consortium. The UNITE CubeSat was built and is operated by undergraduate students with advisement from Dr. Glen Kissel, associate professor of engineering. The satellite's tri-fold mission is to measure plasma levels in the lower ionosphere, record its own internal and exterior temperatures and measure its orbital decay as it reenters the Earth's atmosphere at the end of its mission.
For more information, visit http://usispace.com/ or contact Kissel at (812) 461-5417.
Previous CubeSat stories:
USI students, professors celebrate successful UNITE CubeSat deployment
USI CubeSat team honored with resolution at Statehouse
USI student-built UNITE CubeSat successfully launched, en route to International Space Station