AMSAT Makes Plea to Keep Greencube in Service

AMSAT has made a plea to Sapienza Space Systems and Space Surveillance Laboratory to postpone its scheduled shutdown of the digipeater aboard the amateur satellite known as GreenCube, or IO-117. The satellite was scheduled to be decommissioned on the 5th February 2024.

Radio operators around the world have been making use of its digipeater for QSOs for more than a year, including those for the high-profile TX5S DXpedition on Clipperton Island in the Pacific Ocean. AMSAT said this marks the first activation in three decades of Clipperton Island via amateur satellite.

opened worldwide long-distance contacts via amateur radio satellite that had not been possible since the loss of AMSAT-OSCAR 40 in 2004.
— Quote Source

In a 25th January 2024 letter requesting the decommissioning's postponement, AMSAT's president Robert Bankston, KE4AL, reminded S5Lab's Green Cube team that amateur satellites such as AMSAT-OSCAR 7 often enjoy extended lifetimes. The still-active OSCAR 7 was launched in 1974. AMSAT committed itself to involvement in helping manage GreenCube in cooperation with AMSAT Italia, S5Lab and other AMSAT organisations.

AO-92 Satellite Reaches end of Life

Fox-1D (AO-92) was an AMSAT CubeSat satellite that operated for just over 6 years in orbit and proved to be a popular option for amateur radio satellite operators through its FM transponder. In addition to the transponder, the versatile satellite contained several payloads including an L-band converter, an experimental camera, and a MEMS GYRO experiment.

With aging batteries, the satellite could no longer operate reliably and was mostly inoperable in recent months. The satellite reentered earth's orbit on 3rd February 2024.

Read more about distance records set with AO-92 and view a gallery of images captured from the experimental camera - https://www.amsat.org/tlm/showImages.php?id=4

The First Amateur Radio Station on the Moon, JS1YMG, is Now Transmitting

The First Amateur Radio Station on the Moon, JS1YMG, is Now Transmitting

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) successfully landed their Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (SLIM) on 19th January 2024. Just before touchdown, SLIM released two small lunar surface probes, LEV-1 and LEV-2.

LEV-2 collects data while moving on the lunar surface, and LEV-1 receives the data.

The JAXA Ham Radio Club (JHRC), JQ1ZVI, secured amateur radio license JS1YMG for LEV-1, which has been transmitting Morse code on 437.41 MHz since 19th January 2024. The probe uses a 1 W UHF antenna with circular polarization and is transmitting "matters related to amateur business."

Read More