Australian Training Center for Small Satellites selects Saber Astronautics for its first spaceflight mission.
29th July 2019

Saber Astronautics is pleased to announce the awarding of a satellite operations contract with the newly established Training Center for CubeSats, UAVs and Their Applications (“CUAVA”). The CUAVA program includes multiple CubeSat space flights over the next four years and is funded under a $5m research grant with the Australian Research Council.

Under this contract, Saber Astronautics supports flight software, satellite integration, test, and missioncontrol. Saber Astronautics will provide 3 Months of continual spacecraft operations of the first 3kg satellite, called “CUAVA-1” from their “Responsive Space Operations Center” (RSOC) mission control centers in Sydney Australia and Boulder Colorado. Saber Astronautics also support the CUAVA partners intraining on new methods of space operations.

Professor Iver Cairns, the Director for CUAVA, said, “This is a very exciting opportunity for both CUAVA andSaber Astronautics. Together we are going to develop a spacecraft control, data management and ground-station solution that links to our new spacecraft software. This could also provide a template for many future Australian space projects. It is an example of two Australian entities coming together to develop an Australian solution to a global problem.”

CUAVA-1 carries experiments developed by researcher teams from multiple universities and partner organisations. Experiments also include commercial products from several Australian local suppliers thathave never flown before.

Dr Jason Held, Saber Astronautics CEO notes the challenges ahead come with rewards “CubeSats are small, susceptible to damage, and prone to failure so the willingness to take a risk and learn-by-trying is what innovation is all about. The reward is high because a successful flight will qualify several new Australian products for the space industry. That’s exciting.”

The contract also involves assistance to ground station development, which will help pave the way forward for standardised operations for multiple Australian and international spacecraft – using existingand future ground station networks and standardised protocols.

“We encourage amateur radio operators around the World to tune in and receive data from CUAVA-1”, notes Saber’s lead avionics engineer Mr. Andreas Antoniades. “Our infrastructure will allow for maximum international engagement and increases the chances for successful downlink, particularly in the first fewdays of launch”.

Officially opened by Senator for New South Wales, the Honorable Arthur Sinodinos AO on the 17th June2019, CUAVA aims to rapidly improve Australian CubeSats and form a key part of Australia’s future space development. Key projects include research that has commercial potential in the small satellite marketsuch as plasma thrusters, Gigabit/s communication, and snap-together CubeSat systems. The Center is also focused on novel, miniature, world-leading imagers for satellites and UAVs, as well as variable spacecraft drag devices based on Saber’s home-grown ‘DragEN Deorbit Tether’ Technology

For more information on CUAVA and its mission, please visit https://www.cuava.com.au/ and contact info@cuava.com.au.




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Saber Astronautics’ mission is the democratization of space, reducing barriers to space flight, and making space as easy as driving a car. Saber uses next-generation space mission control software developed by an experienced team of space operations, systems control, UX, and robotics experts. Saber brings together the latest techniques in human factors, artificial intelligence, and dynamic 3D data visualization to make it easy for spacecraft operators to monitor, fly, and rapidly diagnose faults in spacecraft systems.