At least one "nanosatellite" was built by an elementary school.
Students in Lafayette began receiving radio signals early Monday from the satellite, which circles the world every 90 minutes, at 17,000 miles an hour.
This is Louisiana-Lafayette's third satellite launched as part of the program. The school's program is called CAPE, for the Cajun Advanced Picosatellite Experiment program aimed at preparing students for careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics.
The CAPE-1 satellite was built to show that the student team could design and build a satellite that could send radio signals back and could respond to signals sent from Earth. It was monitored for four months after its launch in 2007.
CAPE-2, launched in 2013, had fold-out solar panels, a text-to-speech transmitter and a "parrot repeater" that could record audio from Earth and broadcast it back to the sender. Another feature lets visitors to a children's museum hear their own voices coming back on a radio, as well as send text messages to the satellite. It was monitored for 11 months.
Rizwan Merchant, a NASA systems safety engineer who was assistant project manager for the CAPE-2 launch while a student at ULL and is now the CAPE team's industry mentor, said students will spend a few weeks "grabbing data from the satellite simply to assesses every feature and ensure it's all working properly."
Then CAPE team members and students majoring in areas including computer science, electrical engineering, mechanical engineering and physics will begin collecting and analyzing the information.
CAPE team member Nicholas Drozda, a senior mechanical engineering student, said the project let him prepare for an aerospace career while conducting research "that could lead to actual innovations in the field."
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