@prefix skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> .

<https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concept/736ef795-ec95-415f-b10a-456366f8a185>
  skos:definition """FedSat is an Australian scientific microsatellite mission, a
58cm cube weighing approximately 50 kg. It was launched in early
2002 from Japan by Japan's National Space Development Agency.

The purpose of FedSat is to:

Establish Australian capability in microsatellite technologies
Develop expertise necessary for sustaining those industries and
profiting from them

Test and develop Australian-developed intellectual property
Provide a research platform for Australian space science,
communication and GPS studies.

FedSat was developed by the Cooperative Research Centre for
Satellite Systems, which combines the resources and skills of 12
Australian organizations. Contributions from each of the partner
organizations are doubled by the Commonwealth Government, under
its Commonwealth Government's Cooperative Research Center?s
Program. The total budget of the Centre is approximately
&#3660 million over 7 years, with &#3620 million of that
allocated for the FedSat mission. Much of FedSat was developed
in Australia by the CRCSS. Three of the six main payloads have
been fully developed by the CRCSS, and the other three have been
supplied by overseas organizations in consultation with the
CRCSS.  The satellite platform, the structure that houses and
maintains the payloads, is being provided by overseas
organizations. CRCSS engineers could have developed an
Australian platform, but given the time available from
project-start to launch, that was not practical. CRCSS opted to
contract an overseas platform supplier, avoiding the need to
reinvent established technologies.  Payloads:

1. GPS Receiver: The GPS, Global Positioning System, is an
American network of satellites that transmit radio signals
containing time and orbit-position codes. GPS receivers decode
the signals, and by comparing signals of up to 4 satellites with
known positions, they can derive their own locations by
triangulation. The system was designed for mainly military use,
but now GPS provides many scientific and civilian applications.

2. NewMag: The NewMag magnetometer is a very sensitive and
rapid-sampling device for measuring the strength of the Earth's
magnetic field. Earth is like a big bar magnet, with magnetic
field lines emerging from the poles and far out into
space. FedSat's polar orbit crosses all these lines, so NewMag
can effectively gain a window into the whole magnetosphere
region. NewMag can also measure vibrations simultaneously with
ground- based magnetometers, so investigating the dynamics of
the magnetosphere (changes in it shape due to variations in the
Sun), and study magnetospheric wave-propagation.

3. High performance computing: The FedSat high performance
computing payload is the world's first use of reconfigurable
computing technology in space. Reconfigurable computers permit
change of their physical circuits via software control; new
physical circuits can be installed into a reconfigurable
computer module by remote command. For spacecraft, this
technology means that satellites can be rewired without having
to retrieve them.

4. Ka-band transponder: The FedSat Ka-band transponder is
designed to handle the new experimental high- frequency and
high-capacity Ka part of the radio spectrum. The transponder
processes signals to and from the ground in the frequency
band. The transponder incorporates CRCSS-designed Gallium
Arsenide monolithic microwave circuits; FedSat will space
qualify these for the first time.

5. Baseband processor The baseband processor provides on-board
computer processing of the Ka- and UHF- band payloads. It has
been designed and built by the CRCSS, to operate as a low power
single modem with flexible operation. It will also provide the
channel for satellite operations commands.

6. UHF communications payload: The Ultra High Frequency band
payload will introduce a new type of packet data service for Low
Earth Orbiting satellites to obtain environmental data. For
example, ocean buoys may transmit their data using this means to
orbiting satellites, which are retransmitted back to the lab for
analysis.

7. CD ROM: FedSat also carries a compact disc mounted on the
side, containing the audio messages members of the Australian
public recorded to go into space from March to August 2000. The
disc also contains a copy of the song From Little Things, Big
Things Grow, by Paul Kelly, with kind permission of the writers
(Kev Carmody/Paul Kelly) and publishers (Larrikin Music,
Mushroon Records).

Additional information available at
"http://www.crcss.csiro.au/overview.htm"
and
"http://www.crcss.csiro.au/launch/launch.html"

[Summary provided by CSIRO]"""@en ;
  skos:prefLabel "FEDSAT"@en ;
  skos:inScheme <https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concepts/concept_scheme/platforms> ;
  skos:broader <https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concept/1506fb17-7ac4-44ce-bde5-074885bdb2d2> ;
  a skos:Concept .

<https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concept/1506fb17-7ac4-44ce-bde5-074885bdb2d2>
  skos:prefLabel "Navigation Platforms"@en ;
  a skos:Concept ;
  skos:narrower <https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concept/736ef795-ec95-415f-b10a-456366f8a185> .

