Abstract
1U CubeSats often use the 430-MHz band for communication due to their size and power limitations, and half-wavelength dipole antennas are employed. A 430-MHz-band dipole antenna requires a deployable structure for a 1U CubeSat. However, a 1U CubeSat has a small volume margin for redundant systems, so the antenna deployment system can be a single point of failure. In this paper, the 1U CubeSat structure itself was used as an antenna. As a sub-mission of the BIRDS-4 project, three 1U CubeSats (GuaraniSat-1, Maya-2, and Tsuru) demonstrated this antenna structure. The results of the ground tests showed a maximum gain of −5.7 dBi with the flight model. These satellites were deployed from the International Space Station on 14 March 2021. Radio signals were alternately transmitted from the dipole antenna and the structure antenna onboard Tsuru for on-orbit demonstration on 15 December 2021, and the received signal strength on the ground was compared using RTL-SDR, SDR# and several codes. The ground station was able to receive both dipole and structure CW signals. The received power strength indicates that a gain of −8.1 dBi is being demonstrated with the structure antenna.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Signal Processing,Control and Systems Engineering
Reference15 articles.
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