Shri Shakti Satellite
👉The college’s 12 students
with support from faculty had developed the satellite, Sri Shakti sat, at
around Rs.2 core.
👉The satellite would be a part
of the UNITYSat, which would also include satellites built by two other institutions
– one in Chennai and another in Nagpur,said its chairman S. Thangavelu at a
press meet held here on Wednesday.
👉The journey to develop the
satellite started around 10 years ago when the college started postgraduate
courses in VLSI and a few other disciplines and after a few other education
institutions launched satellites.
👉In the run-up to building the
satellite, students and faculty from various disciplines worked together,
experimented, went back to learning a few basic concepts and in the process the
college had gained immensely in that it now wanted to offer papers on building
satellites.
👉The college had also learnt
techniques to improve the teaching-learning process, Mr.Thangavelu added.
👉K. Gopalakrishnan, academic
and governing council member, said the satellite was for technology
demonstration – to study on-board command, data handling, electronic power and
communication system at low earth orbit. The satellite weighed around 500 gm
and would be pushed into orbit by ISRO’s PSLV C-51.
👉ISRO scientists had helped
the college develop the satellite and would launch it at no cost. The space organization
had also helped the college in testing the satellite for various parameters.
👉Mr. Gopalakrishnan said most
of the components the college had used to build the satellite were bought off
the shelf and were manufactured in the country. Likewise, the college had also
used open source software.
👉Mr. Thengavelu said the
college had also built a ground station to communicate with the satellite. ISRO
Chairman K. Sivan would inaugurate the station from Bengaluru on Thursday.
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