The amateur radio satellite ARISSat-1, deployed from the ISS on August 3, fell silent on Wednesday, January 4, as it re-entered the Earth’s atmosphere.
The ARISSat website shows the last telemetry was captured at 06:02:14 UTC on Jan. 4 with these temperatures:
IHU PCB 75°C
PSU 76°C
RF 88°C
Batt 55°C
RF Enc 67°C
The full telemetry data can be seen at http://www.arissat1.org/
Mike Repprecht DK3WN reports that Tetsurou Satou JA0CAW captured telemetry at 05:59 UTC. Mike says it’s remarkable that the last voice message heard was from Yuri Gagarin. See the last data on Mike’s SatBlog http://www.dk3wn.info/p/
Konstantin Vladimirovich RN3ZF listened for the satellite at 08:42 UTC using an AMSAT-UK FUNcube Dongle with WRplus. On the FUNcube Yahoo Group he says “the telemetry was absent, voice messages were not legible, very silent and interrupted. Most likely, I saw last minutes in the life of the satellite.” He continued monitoring but did not detect any further signals from the satellite. He has made available his final ARISSat-1 recordings in WRPlus format at:
http://doris.kiev.ua/rn3zf/kedr/
http://doris.kiev.ua/rn3zf/kedr/WRplus_20120104_084230Z_145940kHz.wav
http://doris.kiev.ua/rn3zf/kedr/WRplus_20120104_085129Z_145940kHz.wav
Note the files are large.
Education has been a large part of the ARISSat project and on the FUNcube Yahoo Group Simon Kennedy G0FCU says he was glad he was able to receive good signals and SSTV pictures last week for his daughter to take to school as part of her project on Space.
Listen to a recording by Mineo Wakita JE9PEL made at 01:22-01:27 UTC, Jan 4, 2012, Ele 7 W-WN-N, 145.950MHz FM over Japan when it would have been at an altitude of about 175 km http://www.ne.jp/asahi/hamradio/je9pel/20104ar2.mp3
A graph showing the descent of ARISSat-1 can be seen at http://www.qsl.net/py4zbz/arissat.htm#r
SSTV pictures taken by ARISSat-1 can be seen at http://www.amsat.org/amsat/ariss/SSTV/
AMSAT Bulletin Board (AMSAT-BB) http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/tools/maillist/
Dec. 30 – ARISSat-1 Getting Hotter: http://www.uk.amsat.org/2011/12/30/arissat-1-getting-hotter/
AMSAT-UK publishes a colour A4 newsletter, OSCAR News, which is full of Amateur Satellite information.
OSCAR News – Free Sample Issue.AMSAT-UK Membership-Join Here



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Interesting coincidence – possibly arrisat 1 burning up.. http://wiki.nasa.gov/cm/blog/Watch%20the%20Skies/posts/post_1325622824385.html?x=40#comments
A mathematician of Ursa’s fireball research group, Esko Lyytinen, gives a preliminary estimate that the phenomenon appeared over Narva in Estonia at the height of about 95km and vanished from sight around Heinola in southern Finland at the height of about 45-50km.
http://yle.fi/uutiset/news/2012/01/great_fireball_spotted_over_southern_finland_3150671.html