Abstract
The United States is experiencing a renaissance in interest in space due to the advent of new lowercost small spacecraft. New launch entrants, such as Interorbital Systems, promise to lower launch cost levels. Many developers also benefit from free-to-developer launch services from NASA or the ESA. Unfortunately, existing commercial off the shelf (COTS) CubeSat hardware is priced based on amortization of design costs across low-sales volume. A lack of trained staff in any one of the numerous disciplines required for spacecraft design or other resources required for in-house development restricts entry into the small satellite industry to those who can afford expensive COTS hardware or pay for significant design expenses. With entry-level satellite hardware still priced in the six-figure range, limited market growth is expected even as the average CubeSat launch cost continues to decline. A new archetype could lower barriers to entry for building small satellites. A free, public-domain architecture for building a small satellite could allow low-cost, in-house satellite development. Under this paradigm, the expenses for initiating a small satellite program are limited to component and launch vehicle costs. The proposed framework allows for broad access to small satellite hardware, greatly increasing the size of the small satellite developer community. In the context of the small satellite market, freely offering plans to construct an entry-level satellite will court new non-traditional actors into building space hardware for launch on commercial and government small satellite launchers. The low-cost, high flight rate possible with the next generation of launch systems affords operators the freedom to experiment and innovate in a risktolerant environment. Successfully demonstrating products and services utilizing low-risk, publicdomain plans will stimulate demand for mature and more capable flight systems in the retail marketplace. If technical schools, community colleges, universities, small businesses and even amateurs can enter into the small satellite ecosystem, at an affordable entrance price, a positive spiral of increasing demand and decreasing cost may be created over time. A free, public domain satellite architecture may, thus, open the door to sustained growth and commercial opportunity for the small satellite industry.
Highlights
CubeSats serve as excellent tools to aid in education and the development of experience in the space domain
The ITAR changes could make it easier for the same to happen with educationally built satellites. With these commercial and federal efforts in the works to re-duce the cost of launching a CubeSat, it is reasonable to assume that launch costs will be drastically reduced in the few years
It is important to reduce CubeSat and other nanosatellite costs for two important reasons: First, the emerging industry of low cost launches for smaller form factor satellites are dependent on increased demand for launches of such payloads for commercial success and viability
Summary
CubeSats serve as excellent tools to aid in education and the development of experience in the space domain. A few thousand students have been involved in the development and launch of over 50 cube satellites in the last 15 years [1]. While this is ample reason to call CubeSats an educational success, the fact of the matter is that the relative high cost of developing CubeSats acts as a barrier to entry. There are a plethora of students, professionals, businesses, and amateurs that might want to engage in the space industry, through low-cost satellites, but they are currently faced with three major obstacles
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