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Aerospace Engineering Commons

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Space Mission Design

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Full-Text Articles in Aerospace Engineering

Consideration Of The Use Of An Origami Style Solar Panel Array For A Space Solar Power Generation Satellite, Landon Klein, Tristan Plante, Alex Holland, Benjamin Kading, Jeremy Straub, David Whalen Apr 2015

Consideration Of The Use Of An Origami Style Solar Panel Array For A Space Solar Power Generation Satellite, Landon Klein, Tristan Plante, Alex Holland, Benjamin Kading, Jeremy Straub, David Whalen

Jeremy Straub

Since the beginning of the space race, space exploration has been an important part of America’s technological develop-ment. The notion of a power-intensive [1] mission to Mars, which utilizes 3D printing has been proposed. Space Solar Power can supply energy for this mission. This paper presents an Origami solar panel, based on work by [2], that can supply power to an outpost on Mars.


Stemsat: An Iss Cubesat Program Based On Spare Parts, Anders Nervold, Josh Berk, Jeremy Straub Apr 2013

Stemsat: An Iss Cubesat Program Based On Spare Parts, Anders Nervold, Josh Berk, Jeremy Straub

Jeremy Straub

With the national government’s focus on driving STEM-education, it is important to provide hands-on ave-nues where students can engage with, and accumulate ex-perience working directly with projects within their fields of interest. The Student Technology Emersion Satellite (STEMSat), provides an avenue for students to become in-volved in CubeSat design and development with only mi-nor hardware and monetary resources, and without being dependent on a launch.

STEMSats are CubeSat satellites that are created from spare parts, residual tools and equipment, obsolete mate-rials, and other types of trash aboard the ISS. A list of all the excess items available for such a …


The Open Prototype For Educational Nanosats: Fixing The Other Side Of The Small Satellite Cost Equation, Josh Berk, Jeremy Straub, David Whalen Mar 2013

The Open Prototype For Educational Nanosats: Fixing The Other Side Of The Small Satellite Cost Equation, Josh Berk, Jeremy Straub, David Whalen

Jeremy Straub

Government supported nano-satellite launch programs and emerging commercial small satellite launch services are reducing the cost of access to space for educational and other CubeSat projects. The cost and complexity of designing and building these satellites remains a vexing complication for many would be CubeSat aspirants. The Open Prototype for Educational NanoSats (OPEN), a proposed nano-satellite development platform, is described in this paper. OPEN endeavors to reduce the costs and risks associated with educational, government and commercial nano-satellite development. OPEN provides free and publicly available plans for building, testing and operating a versatile, low-cost satellite, based on the standardized CubeSat …