Space

Planetary Resources launches experimental asteroid prospector

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The Arkyd-6 is a six-unit CubeSat designed to test asteroid prospecting technology
Planetary Resources
The Arkyd-6 is a six-unit CubeSat designed to test asteroid prospecting technology
Planetary Resources
Arkyd-6 deployment as seen from its booster
ISRO

We may not be living in the age of asteroid mining (yet), but asteroid prospecting has come a step closer with news that Planetary Resources' Arkyd-6 satellite has successfully reached orbit.

The six-unit CubeSat lifted off on Friday from the Indian Space Research Organization's (ISRO) Satish Dhawan Space Center in Southern India atop a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) as a secondary payload. The spacecraft is designed as a technology demonstrator for key components of a future asteroid survey craft, Arkyd-301.

According to the Washington State-based firm, the Arkyd-6 successfully separated from the fourth stage of the Indian-built booster 30 minutes after launch and is now in a Sun-synchronous orbit. It is active and sending back data to mission control.

Built from off-the-shelf hardware, Arkyd-6 is Planetary Resources's second technology satellite, following the smaller A3R that was launched from the International Space Station (ISS) in 2015. The Arkyd-6's mission is to test 17 different components, including power generation, attitude control, instrument operation, and communications. Though the satellite is designed to operate autonomously, it continues to send telemetry back to Earth.

Arkyd-6 deployment as seen from its booster
ISRO

But the star of the mission is the onboard mid-wave infrared (MWIR) imager, which operates in the 3 to 5 micron infrared band and uses bespoke optics to collect pixel-level data for the remote detection of water molecules. According to Planetary Resources, this is the world's first commercial MWIR instrument to be used in space, and will be used aboard the Arkyd-301.

"If all of the experimental systems operate successfully, Planetary Resources intends to use the Arkyd-6 satellite to capture MWIR images of targets on Earth's surface, including agricultural land, resource exploration regions, and infrastructure for mining and energy." says Chris Voorhees, Chief Engineer, Planetary Resources. "In addition, we will also have the opportunity to perform specific celestial observations from our vantage point in low Earth orbit. Lessons learned from Arkyd-6 will inform the company's approach as it builds on this technology to enable the scientific and economic evaluation of asteroids during its future Space Resource Exploration Mission."

The video below discusses the Arkyd-6 mission.

Source: Planetary Resources

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1 comment
notarichman
mining water in space will be important, but what does the satellite use to detect minerals?