A distant, partly-shadowed Earth, as viewed from a 6 000 km-altitude orbit. This unusual image was acquired using an extremely miniaturised camera about the size of the edge of a 20 cent coin – a miniscule technology experiment aboard ESA’s shoebox-sized TRISAT-R CubeSat.
TRISAT-R project manager Iztok Kramberger of the University of Maribor explains: “This tiny camera measuring less than two cubic millimetres in size took a picture of an object measuring approximately one trillion cubic kilometres – our beautiful planet Earth – from thousands of kilometres away.”
A CubeSat made from three standardised 10-cm boxes, TRISAT-R is Slovenia’s second space mission, which flew on Europe’s inaugural Vega-C launch last year to the relatively inhospitable environment of medium-Earth orbit, at 6000 km up. The mission’s orbital path takes it right through the heart of the ionosphere – an electrically active layer of Earth’s atmosphere – as well as the inner Van Allen radiation belt.
This allows TRISAT-R to test a suite of radiation-detection payloads. In addition, the TRISAT-R team embarked a pair of tiny cameras, with lenses made from clear borosilicate glass to provide limited radiation resistance, mounted directly onto 320×320 pixel image sensors. See one here.
Dr. Kramberger adds: “The resulting picture of Earth is very low resolution as these highly miniaturised cameras were not intended to perform terrestrial imaging, plus TRISAT-R satellite employs magnetorquers for its attitude control, so that precision pointing is difficult to achieve.
“Our main interest has been in capturing examples of the ‘Black Sun effect’ – commonplace in terrestrial digital imaging, where over-saturation of pixels can cause very bright areas to appear dark. We have succeeded in these investigations, but have also been lucky enough to acquire images like these.”
ESA supported the manufacturing, assembly and testing of TRISAT-R through the ‘Fly’ element of its General Support Technology Programmme, opening up in-orbit demonstration opportunities for European companies.
Located in its unique and challenging orbit, TRISAT-R’s commissioning phase is due to conclude later this month, encompassing 16 months of successful in-orbit operations.
Are you involved with CubeSat and small satellites, or want to know more about how their use is transforming the space sector? Sign up for next year’s 4S Small Satellites Systems and Services Symposium. Jointly organised by ESA and French space agency CNES, this latest symposium in the long-running series will take place in Palma de Mallorca on 26-31 May 2024.