Copernical Team
SENER
SENER is a private engineering and technology group founded in 1956 specialized in technological solutions.
For the space industry, SENER has developed from its beginnings mechanisms and mechanical systems that cover almost all the needs of the Flight Segment. Moreover, SENER supplies essential items for completing successful missions, such as Attitude or Control Systems (AOCS) and Guidance, Navigation and Control systems (GNC). All this is backed up with technical solvency, successfully proven with more than 20 satellites and spacecrafts currently operating with SENER equipment on board. In fact, SENER has a major history of meting deliveries, with which it has achieved a reputation for quality and reliability in Space.
Princeton Satellite Systems
Princeton Satellite Systems, Inc. is a company specializing in aerospace control and simulation technology.
Princeton Satellite Systems is actively developing state-of-the-art technology for launch vehicles and spacecraft navigation. The areas of expertise include control, estimation, optimization and simulation. The company has numerous government contracts.
Princeton Satellite Systems sells commercial software including control toolboxes for MATLAB™, stand-alone simulations, and software libraries for real-time software.
Braxton Technologies
Braxton Technologies offers a wide variety of products and professional services for government and commercial applications in the fields of:
- Command & Control
- Telemetry
- Planning & Scheduling
- Simulation
The Global Positioning System (GPS) Program's launch, early-orbit, operations, and disposal command and control functions are currently performed by Braxton's ACE Premier™ product suite.
The ACE Premier™ architectural framework provides an infrastructure of configurable applications, tools and simulators that reduce cost and accelerate deployment of command and control systems.
UCL Department of Space & Climate Physics
The UCL Department of Space & Climate Physics, incorporating the Mullard Space Science Laboratory, Surrey, is one of the UK's largest university space science group and a leader in interdisciplinary space science initiatives.
UCL is the University College of London.
The department offers a unique environment at the forefront of space science research. Scientists, students and engineers design, build and test cutting-edge space-borne instruments and analyse the data they return. Our scientists set future science agendas through exploitation of current assets and design of future space missions to advance our knowledge of the Universe. Close contact with space agencies such as ESA and NASA and with industrial research teams promotes the development of transferable skills, thereby enhancing job prospects.
Centre for Space Medicine
The Centre for Space Medicine (CSM) is part of the University College London (UCL).
The CSM focuses on both the facilitation of human space exploration and the improvement of quality of life on Earth through open innovation and cross-disciplinary application of techniques and technology.
The Centre is inherently interdisciplinary in nature involving BioMedical, Cognitive, Robotics/Engineering, Information Technology and Space Sciences domains.
GOLD mission
The mission, known as the Global-scale Observations of the Limb and Disk, or GOLD, involves imaging Earth's upper atmosphere from a geostationary orbit some 22,000 miles above the planet.
The mission is expected to have a direct impact on the understanding of space weather like geomagnetic storms that alter the temperature and composition of Earth's atmosphere, which can disrupt communication and navigation satellites, affecting everything from automobile GPS and cell phone coverage to television programming.
The GOLD mission is part of NASA's new Heliospheric Explorer Program designed to provide space observations to study Earth's ionosphere and thermosphere. The mission is slated for launch in 2017.
Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS)
The Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS) is an instrument onboard the ICESat satellite.
This instrument will determine the distance from the satellite to the Earth's surface and to intervening clouds and aerosols. It will do this by precisely measuring the time it takes for a short pulse of laser light to travel to the reflecting object and return to the satellite. Although surveyors routinely use laser methods, the challenge for ICESat is to perform the measurement 40 times a second from a platform moving 26,000 km (16,000 mi) per hour. In addition, ICESat will be 600 km above the Earth and the precise locations of the satellite in space and the laser beam on the surface below must be determined at the same time.
Satish Dhawan Space Centre (Sriharikota spaceport)
The Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC) is the launch centre for the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO).
It is located in Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh, 80 km north of Chennai. Originally called Sriharikota High Altitude Range (SHAR, an acronym ISRO have retained to the present day) and then Sriharikota Launching Range, the centre was renamed in 2002 after the death of ISRO's former chairman Satish Dhawan.
International Astronautical Federation (IAF)
The International Astronautical Federation (IAF) is a worldwide space advocacy body with 246 members, including all key space agencies, companies, societies, associations and institutes across 62 countries.
Over 40 administrative and technical committees support the Federation in its mission to advance knowledge about space and to foster the development of space assets by facilitating global cooperation.
At its annual International Astronautical Congress (IAC) and other thematic conferences, the IAF brings its multidisciplinary and international network to life.
The IAF was created in 1951 to foster the dialogue between scientists around the world and support international cooperation in all space-related activities,
Astrogenetix Inc.
Astrogenetix Inc was formed to commercialize biotechnology products processed in the unique environment of microgravity.
Astrogenetix is a subsidiary of Astrotech Corporation.
Through expertise gained by sending NASA science experiments into space, Astrogenetix is well positioned to help commercialize products derived from microgravity discoveries. Astrogenetix is a commercial biotechnology company using the unique environment of microgravity to develop novel therapeutic products, Astrogenetix is working on saving lives on Earth by developing products in space.
Astrogenetix offers as well a turn-key platform for pre-flight sample preparation, flight hardware, mission planning and operations, crew training and certification processes needed within the highly regulated and complex environment of manned space flight. Astrogenetix is one of the commercial entities to hold a Space Act Agreement with NASA for use of the International Space Station (ISS), a designated U.S. National Laboratory, for research, development and industrial processing purposes. This agreement, along with Astrogenetix relationship with various universities and government agencies and departments, gives Astrogenetix the ability to process valuable products in space to be commercialized on Earth.