[ba.general] SURFER: A Stanford University Student Satellite Project wants YOU!

lyang@scherzo.UUCP (11/23/87)

		STUDENT SATELLITE PROJECT SEEKS DONATIONS 
		      OF TEST AND DESIGN EQUIPMENT!

   Graduate and undergraduate students in Stanford University's Small
Satellite Program are currently designing and prototyping an experimental
scientific satellite called SURFER (Stanford University Radio Frequency 
Emissions Receiver) to be deployed on the Space Shuttle in 1991 along with 
the Tethered Satellite System (TSS-1) mission.  

The project urgently needs development and test equipment of all kinds.  
Firms, government agencies or individuals with surplus electronic equipment, 
computers, spacecraft test equipment, relevant software, etc. are encouraged
to donate such equipment to the SURFER satellite team at Stanford.  We expect 
that such equipment donations would be eligible for tax benefits.   


		    PUBLICITY AND A CHANCE FOR ACCESS
		   TO OUTSTANDING ENGINEERING STUDENTS.  

Be part of the SURFER team!  The satellite will likely fly during Stanford's 
Centennial Celebration in 1991-92, with much attendant publicity. The students 
on the SURFER team are Stanford's best engineers, and are pioneering innovative 
engineering designs as well as gaining extensive teamwork experience.  
Interested parties are invited to call us or visit our facilities. 


	EQUIPMENT/FACILITIES NEEDED BY THE SURFER SATELLITE PROJECT
	-----------------------------------------------------------

	1. ELECTRICAL TEST AND DEVELOPMENT EQUIPMENT
		8086 Assembler/Development System
		Audio Waveform Generator
		Data Books (TI/Intel, etc.)
		De-soldering equipment
		Development system
		IBM-compatible computer
		Logic analyzer
		Multimeters
		Ohm-meter
		Oscilloscope, analog & digital storage
		Power Supplies (5V @5Amp, 6V, +/- 12 V @ 5 Amp)
		PROM programmer
		Software for digital design (MacIntosh/IBM)
		VHF field strength meter
		VHF signal generator

	3. MECHANICAL TEST AND DEVELOPMENT EQUIPMENT
		Shake table
		Small Thermo-Vac Chamber
		CAD/CAE equipment
		Video Camera and ancillary equipment (slow-motion?)
		Zero-G Simulator

	4. SOFTWARE
		Schematic Capture/Design/Simulation (MacIntosh,IBM,uVAX)
		CAD, Dynamic & Thermal Analysis software
		Test bench/experiment-control software
		Simulation, graphics
		Other software potentially useful on IBM, Mac, VAX, SUN
		
	5. COMPUTER EQUIPMENT
		IBM-compatible Microcomputers
		IBM peripherals (hard-disks,experiment-control cards, etc.)
		IBM software (analysis, lab controllers, simulators)
		MacIntosh Microcomputers (Plus, 512K, SE, MacII)
		MacIntosh peripherals (hard-disks, printers, etc.)

Any other donations will be gratefully accepted, as well as contributions 
in the form of on-site access to your facilities/equipment.  Please pass 
this notice on to your colleagues, other departments, and anyone else 
interested. 

		HOW TO CONTACT THE SURFER SATELLITE TEAM.  

You may contact the SURFER student team at (415)-723-2945 (SURFER office), 
or (415)-328-1771 (after hours).  Our FAX number is (415)-723-0010 (please 
be sure to include OUR name and phone number on the FAX cover sheet). 

Our address is: 	SURFER Satellite Project
			c/o STARLab, Durand 202
			Stanford University
			Stanford, CA 94305

 			EMAIL: LYANG@SUN.COM

Specialized inquiries may be directed to Burton Lee (Deputy Manager), David 
Lauben (Electrical Team Leader), or Scott Williams (Mechanical Team Leader). 
Thank you very much for your interest and help.
-----

Postscript: Project Description and work in progress:

		       SURFER and MISSION BACKGROUND.

The SURFER satellite project is faculty-advised and student-managed. 
All research and design (both electrical and mechanical) is being done by 
undergraduate and graduate students. Total cost of design and construction 
is estimated at around $1 million. NASA has provided $50,000 support for 
initial design activities, but to take it to functional prototype level 
will require much more resources which must come from other organizations.  

SURFER is a 120 lb., 15" high, 17" diameter passively stabilized satellite
designed to measure plasma characteristics and electromagnetic waves radiated 
from the 20 km Tethered Satellite System (TSS-1).  SURFER will be ejected from 
a Get-Away-Special canister prior to tether deployment and drift from 1 to 
100 km behind the Orbiter during the TSS-1 experiment.  SURFER has a mission 
lifetime of about 50 hours and will remain in orbit several months before it 
enters the Earth's atmosphere and burns up.

ELECTRONICS & COMMUNICATIONS SUBSYSTEMS.  Items of immediate concern include 
the telemetry/command and data processing systems.  These consist of a VHF 
(137MHz) radio link and distributed-CPU data processing system on-board the 
Orbiter.  The radio link must support a 20 Hz - 20 kHz analog waveform and
16 kbit/sec digital stream.  Once on-board the Orbiter, the data processing 
system must convert the analog waveform to digital form, and combine it with 
the 16 kbit/sec stream, MET time code, and free-flyer range data for transfer
to a high capacity data storage unit located in the Orbiter bay.  A real time 
two-way command link for Satellite re-configuration is also planned.  We intend 
to adapt terrestrial handheld technology for the short-term space mission, and 
modify some high-capacity data storage unit to survive the launch loads and 
mission environment.

Additional work is currently being done on the Spacecraft power system, 
science instrument design, spin-ejector prototype, dynamical simulation, 
thermal analysis, and mission planning. 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--Larry Yang [lyang@sun.com,{backbone}!sun!lyang]|   A REAL _|> /\ |  _   _   _ 
  Sun Microsystems, Inc., Mountain View, CA      | signature |   | | / \ | \ / \
    Hobbes: "Why do we play war and not peace?"  |          <|_/ \_| \_/\| |_\_|
    Calvin: "Too few role models."               |                _/          _/