 Owen Garriott, W5LFL was the first person to carry a ham radio into space.  He tried to get a ham radio on the earlier Skylab mission, but NASA rejected.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Amateur Radio Technician Class Element 2 Course Presentation ELEMENT 2 SUBELEMENTS T1 - FCC Rules, station license responsibilities T2 - Control operator.
Advertisements

PowerPoint Show by Emerito
The International Year of Astronomy and Amateur Radio.
International Space Station. What is ARISS? The ARISS program is a cooperative venture of NASA, the ARRL and AMSAT and other international space agencies.
Greater New Orleans Section May Dinner Meeting w/ Joe Tanner May 7 th, 2014.
By Ian Lambert. Centuries of Exploration For hundreds of years, the telescope was the main way to observe the moon. The first advancement past the telescope.
International Space Station People living in space just above your head! Look up at the right time and you’ll see them, just 220 miles up!!!
LESSONS OF THE RUSSIAN-US COOPERATION IN SPACE LESSONS OF THE RUSSIAN-US COOPERATION IN SPACE Yevgeny Zvedre Senior Counselor of the Russian Embassy Senior.
INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION -Colby Nortz.
Rockets and Satellites
Space Exploration Tools Rockets Space Shuttle Artificial Satellites Space Probes International Space Station Telescopes.
Technician Licensing Class Talk to Outer Space Page 99 to 104.
The Race for Space Space History The Race for Space
Exploring Space Radiation from Space. Energy travels through space in the form of waves. Mechanical waves cannot travel through empty space. A sound wave.
Tony Monteiro, AA2TX VP, Engineering AMSAT Forum Dayton Hamvention 2011 AMSAT FOX.
2 AR Reading until 10:29. Student Planner May 4, 2015 Place this in the proper place SkyMap worksheet due May 6. You need planner, notes, pen/pencil Mercury.
Spaceships! And other space tech…. The first rockets The Chinese were the first to experiment with gunpowder and fireworks. They first used them for ceremonies.
ISS-HAM Slow Scan Television (SSTV) Project A joint AMSAT-NA And MAREX-NA Project.
THE GREAT SPACE RACE TIMELINE a scientist named Tsiolkovsky started testing rockets he didn't construct a single rocket but designed hundreds.
SPACE EXPLORATION TIMELINE By: Domingo Simon. Russian rocket scientist Konstantin Tsiolkovsky publishes The Exploration of Cosmic Space by Means of Reaction.
SPACE TRAVEL Space, the final frontier Astronaut  A person that is trained to be a pilot, navigator or scientist in space.
Technician Licensing Class Talk to Outer Space Lake Area Radio Klub Spring 2012.
ARISS meeting ESTEC 2014 ARISS Europe - Space Agency Support for Educational Outreach Francesco De Paolis – IKØWGF.
ARISSat-1 ARRL and TAPR Digital Communications Conference September 16, 2011.
T IMELINE P OWER POINT By: Elizabeth Sanders Tsiolkovsky started testing rockets in Publication of Principia Russian rocket scientist.
Race to Space!. Wernher von Braun: Father of Space Exploration Along with other German scientists, developed the first rockets during and after World.
Pages  Voice communications, EchoLink and IRLP Information is transmitted between stations via the Internet using Echolink. EchoLink allows.
Life on Alpha Home in space Space station. Alpha orbits at 386 kilometers above the earth.
How Do Spacecraft Travel to Space Photos March 8, 1994 Cape Canaveral, Florida Kennedy Space Center NASA.
The Space Shuttle On January 5, 1972, President Nixon announced that NASA would proceed with the development of a reusable low cost space shuttle system.
Mrs. W. Smith Throughout time man has dreamed of space travel. Science fiction movies and books are full of tales about travel to other planets.
Exploration Timeline  April 24, 1990  Launch of Hubble Space Telescope  Space Shuttle Discovery lifts off for mission STS-31, carrying the Edwin.
Exploration Timeline By: Richard Hunter  April 24, 1990  Launch of Hubble Space Telescope  Space Shuttle Discovery lifts off for mission STS-31,
The History of Space Exploration
Unit 4 Lesson 3 History of Space Exploration Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Exploration Timeline Jazzlynn Gamble. Konstantin Tsiolkovsky Born 1857; Died 1935; Lived in Russia He did his scientific research in air balloon building,
America will send a new generation of explorers to the moon aboard NASA’s Orion crew exploration vehicle. After that, on to MARS!!!
Chapter 13 Section 3 – pg 515 Exploring Space Today.
SuitSat-1 A Unique Satellite By Gould SmithWA4SXM By Gould Smith, WA4SXM.
Exploring Space 6.E.1.3 Summarize space exploration and the understandings gained from them.
History of Space Exploration Earth Science Mrs. Baker.
In this term we have been learning about space and if there is any body out there. We will explain what we have found out.
EILEEN COLLIONS born November 19,1956(56) Emira, New York.
NSF North Mississippi GK-8
The History Of Space Exploration Chapter 6 Lesson 2 Page 214.
 NASA History A look through the years. Beginnings  NASA was created by congress on October 1, 1958 as a way of competing with the Soviet Union at the.
2 AR Reading until 10:29. Student Planner May 8, 2015 Place this in the proper place Vocabulary Test Monday You need planner, notes, pen/pencil, spacecraft.
11.3 The Exploration of Space and Technologies used for Space Exploration Human understanding of Earth and its place in the universe has evolved as technology.
SPACE: THE FINAL FRONTIER Sputnik 1 October 4, 1957 First man-made object to orbit Earth, launched by the U.S.S.R., and remains in orbit until January.
Is there anybody out there?
Unit 4 Lesson 3 History of Space Exploration
WILL WE LIVE IN SPACE?.
1-3 notes Spacecraft.
Space Exploration Telescope: a device built to observe distant objects by making them appear closer. (Italian scientist Galileo used a telescope to look.
Space Station-The International Space Station is a satellite that serves as a home for the crew while they perform scientific research and experiments.
Space, the final frontier
SPACE Mission Badge 9/17/2018.
Scientist Connection By: Sarah, Jakob, Jack.
ATLANTIS: The Final Mission PowerPoint Show by Emerito
Space Travel Present & Future
History of Space Exploration
Amateur Radio Satellite History: Project OSCAR and AMSAT
That can be found in orbit around Earth
Technician Licensing Class
Tim Smith, N1TI - Mattapoisett, MA
Place this in the proper place Vocab quiz Thursday. Study
Exploring Space 6.E.1.3 Summarize space exploration and the understandings gained from them.
Topic 8 – People in Space.
Ground Stations and Radio License
Presentation transcript:

 Owen Garriott, W5LFL was the first person to carry a ham radio into space.  He tried to get a ham radio on the earlier Skylab mission, but NASA rejected it because it was too late in the development of the program.  With the help of ARRL (the American Radio Relay League) and AMSAT (the Amateur Radio Satellite Corporation), ham radio was finally allowed in STS-9 in W5LFL was allowed to bring 2 HTs, one as a spare.  W5LFL was limited to 1hr/day on the air—he could not interfere with mission activities.

This is a photo of the initial radio station amateur equipment while it was being tested. After testing, the equipment was stowed aboard space shuttle Atlantis for delivery to the international space station during STS

 Richard Garriott, son of Owen Garriott, was aboard the ISS in October 2008 and made many QSOs with amateur radio operators and schoolchildren.  Because amateur radio operators’ favorite QSL cards are those from outer space, all hams that got a contact (too bad most of us weren’t hams then!) are extremely grateful he decided to go on the air.  He’s giving a talk on May 15 at the AMSAT/ TAPR Banquet during Hamvention 2009 in Dayton, Ohio.

 ARISS (Amateur Radio on the International Space Station) was founded in 1996 when delegates from major radio corporations, including AMSAT, signed a Memorandum of Understanding to form ARISS.  Their Memorandum also formed the ISS Ham team.  It helps eliminate all of the technicalities of the ham radios aboard the ISS.

 Through ARISS (Amateur Radio on the ISS), hams from around the country can listen (and sometimes even talk) to the astronauts aboard the ISS.  Of cou unless they happen to be tourists!  Of course, astronauts cannot spend all of their time talking on the radio…unless they happen to be tourists!  A tourist, is going to the ISS relatively soon—in May 27, even though he already went in March 26 (he’s a billionaire).  A tourist, Charles Simonyi, is going to the ISS relatively soon—in May 27, even though he already went in March 26 (he’s a billionaire).

 Through ARISS, schools can contact the ISS. When they do, the students can learn what life in space is like via questions. This will boost their interest in science, and we need more scientists.  It will also get more people to want to be a ham… which we also want!

 Next time you hear news about the ISS being up tonight, try to contact it (if the astronauts aren’t busy!) But hurry– it’s only up for 4 minutes. Backdropped against the Caspian Sea, this full view of the international space station was photographed by a crewmember onboard the Space Shuttle Discovery after the undocking of the two spacecraft. Image credit: NASA n/main/s114e7221_feature.html

 Tune to MHz (the mode is FM )– Space suit w/ ham radio transmitter.  Thrown into orbit 4/7/2009 by the ISS. Packed w/ transmitter+ 3 batteries  Will burn up in Earth’s atmosphere  Packed with old clothes to look like a real person.  It relays a secret message.

 AMSAT. AMSAT-Dayton Hamvention March April  ARRL. ARRL Web: Ham Radio Lets ISS Crew Members Connect with Schools Around the World. 18 April April  Clarke, Emily. AMSAT-the Amateur Radio Satellite Corporation. 30 March April  Harwood, William. "Tourist and 2 Others on Way to Space Station." The New York Times 26 March 2009  NASA. "STS-9 and Amateur Radio." NASA Educational Briefs (1983): 3-5.  NASA. Ham Radios in Space. 21 August April  NASA. International Space Station Reference. 9 April  NASA. STS-144e April 2009.