Engineering:Passive Inspection CubeSat

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Passive Inspection CubeSats (PIC-A & PIC-B)
Mission typeTechnology Demonstration
OperatorBrigham Young University
COSPAR ID2021-002
WebsiteBYU Advanced Spacecraft Group [1]
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft type1U CubeSat each
ManufacturerBrigham Young University
Dry mass1.35 kg each
PowerSolar cells, batteries
Start of mission
Launch date17 Jan 2020 (2020-01-17Z) UTC
RocketLauncherOne
Launch siteMojave Air and Space Port, California , United States
ContractorVirgin Orbit
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeLow Earth
Pericircular altitude500 km
Apocircular altitude500 km
Inclination60.69
 

Passive Inspection CubeSats, or PICS, is a technology demonstration spacecraft mission utilizing two CubeSat miniaturized satellites, identified as PIC-A and PIC-B. The project was developed by students at Brigham Young University (BYU) as part of NASA's Educational Launch of Nanosatellites (ELaNA) initiative beginning in 2016.[1][2] The satellites are outfitted with cameras to be able to get a 360-degree view to visually assess the exterior of other spacecraft and detect possible damage. BYU professor David Long termed the project a "spacecraft selfie cam."[3][4]

PIC-A and PIC-B were originally scheduled to be launched in 2018, but launch was delayed until 2021. PICs was successfully launched into orbit along with eight other CubeSats during Virgin Orbit's Launch Demo 2 on January 17, 2021. In Virgin Orbit's first successful air-launch-to-orbit, the Boeing 747-400 Cosmic Girl carried a LauncherOne orbital rocket from Mojave Air and Space Port to the Pacific Ocean, where LauncherOne separated from the aircraft and achieved orbit.[5]

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