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ST5

past Mission

Type

Space Technology

Launch

March 22, 2006

Location

Earth orbit

Objective

Demonstrate and flight qualify innovative technologies and concepts for application to future space missions

A 90-day mission primarily focused on flight-testing miniaturized satellites in the harsh environment of space, and evaluating their ability to make research-quality scientific measurements.

ST5

ST5 was a mission born of the New Millennium Program, which was established to identify, develop, build, and test innovative technologies and concepts for application to future missions. Specifically, ST5 tested methods for operating a small number, or constellation, of spacecraft as a single system. The mission also evaluated the ability to collect high-quality measurements in the harsh environment of the magnetosphere, the magnetic bubble encasing and protecting the earth. The ST5 mission consisted of three small satellites or micro-sats, each about the size of a wedding cake and weighing 55 pounds.

Taking to orbit in a “string of pearls” formation, the ST5 satellites demonstrated the ability to position micro-sats to perform simultaneous multi-point measurements of the earth’s magnetic field. They contributed to an early understanding of the magnetosphere’s dynamic nature. Ultimately, ST5 paved the way for future multi-satellite missions such as MMS (Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission), the Van Allen Probes, and THEMIS (Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms). The 90-day mission was completed in June 20, 2006.

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