Abstract

CubeSats are widely used by universities and research institutions all over the world. Their popularity is generally attributed to the use of low-cost components, free student labor and simple design. They have been shown to encourage Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) students to become involved in designing, implementing and testing a real functioning spacecraft system. Projects like this encourage students from different disciplines to team up to design and build CubeSats, providing interdisciplinary work experience. Participating students vary in their expertise in developing such systems. Some will work on the project for years while others are not willing to spend two or three consecutive semesters developing a CubeSat project. Despite their simplicity in design and low cost, CubeSats are considered great engineering systems for exploring space. Nevertheless, a large number of CubeSat projects fail due to having an unclear mission, ambiguous system requirements and a lack of documentation. Students need to have a clear vision of how to build a real CubeSat system that can be launched and that can function in space. Thus, this paper proposes engineering methodologies and tools to help students develop CubeSat systems. These tools can help students with planning, collecting, eliciting and documenting the requirements in a well-defined manner. This paper focuses on student-driven CubeSat projects designed by students and faculty members. Additionally, data is presented in this paper to identify the challenges and needs of CubeSat developers. Plans for future work are also discussed.

Highlights

  • The idea of designing a small cube-shaped spacecraft was initiated by Bob Twigg and JordiPuig-Suari in 1999 [1]

  • This paper focuses on student-driven CubeSat projects designed by students and faculty members

  • This paper only focuses on the reasons of failure of the early stages of student-driven CubeSat projects

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Summary

Introduction

The idea of designing a small cube-shaped spacecraft was initiated by Bob Twigg and JordiPuig-Suari in 1999 [1]. CubeSats were initially designed for educational purposes: to help students to become acquainted with the space environment [2] Swartwout termed these university-class. CubeSats in 2018 and what types of CubeSats are most commonly used It shows that 325 one-unit (1U) CubeSats were launched from 166 educational institutions in 47 countries [4]. Despite this high demand for CubeSat development, the failure of CubeSat systems is high. CubeSats are miniature satellites that are widely used for exploring space in low-Earth orbit. These small satellites were initially designed for Jordi university education purposes: Polytechnic [1]

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