IceCube (spacecraft)

IceCube, also known as Earth-1,[1] is a 3U CubeSat satellite[2] funded by NASA[3][4] deployed by the International Space Station on 16 May 2017.[3]

IceCube
CXBN-2 and IceCube being deployed by the NanoRacks CubeSat Deployer
ManufacturerNASA
Country of originUnited States
ApplicationsTechnology demonstration mission
Specifications
Spacecraft typeCubeSat
Related spacecraft
Derived fromCubeSats

Mission

IceCube was built to map ice clouds globally. It has a submillimeter radiometer to overcome the limitation of ice particles in clouds being opaque in the infrared and visible spectrums.[3][5] It was made to demonstrate a 833-gigahertz submillimeter-wave receiver as part of a technology demonstration mission.[1][2][6]

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gollark: We could just have some static HTML thing containing all the CSS/webring bits, and then I could have my build process fetch it.
gollark: I... see.
gollark: It would either be accursed anomalous JavaScript or an iframe.
gollark: I am not sure how this "webring" would work however, exactly.

See also

References

  1. Garner, Rob (2015-07-21). "IceCube Satellite No Longer On Ice". NASA. Retrieved 2019-08-06.
  2. "NASA IceCube: CubeSat Demonstration of a Commercial 883-GHz Cloud Radiometer". digitalcommons.usu.edu. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
  3. "IceCube - Satellite Missions - eoPortal Directory". directory.eoportal.org. Retrieved 2019-06-17.
  4. Oreopoulos, Lazaros. "IceCube". atmospheres.gsfc.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2019-06-17.
  5. Blumberg, Sara (2018-05-14). "Tiny Satellite's First Global Map of Ice Clouds". NASA. Retrieved 2019-06-17.
  6. Jenner, Lynn (2018-01-30). "NASA's Small Spacecraft Makes 1st 883-Gigahertz Global Ice-Cloud Map". NASA. Retrieved 2019-08-06.


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