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Students test 'space postal service' during Foton mission
 
10 May 2007

YES2 experiment prepared at ESTEC
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 HI-RES JPEG (Size: 878 kb)
A student works on YES2 in the vibration facility at ESA's research and technology centre, ESTEC, in Noordwijk, the Netherlands.

YES2, the second Young Engineers Satellite, is a student experiment that was prepared, built and tested at ESA's research and technology centre, ESTEC, in Noordwijk, the Netherlands. Almost five hundred students from all over Europe have worked on the experiment. Following launch with Foton-M3 in September 2007, the Fotino re-entry capsule will be deployed on the end of a thirty kilometre tether. At exactly the right moment the mini-Foton is released from the end of the tether. The slingshot places the capsule on a path to re-enter the Earth's atmosphere. It will be the first time that a tether has been used to return a payload from space. The flight is intended to demonstrate how such a tether can be used to change a satellite's orbit without attitude control systems or rocket engines.

Credits: ESA - A. Le Floc'h

 
  Technical demonstration
 
YES2 team members
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 HI-RES JPG (Size: 1371 kb)


Credits: Fabio de Pascale, Michiel Kruiff
 
  Fotino
 
YES 2


Credits: Delta-Utec
 
  Kite rope
 
YES2 will fly on ESA's Foton-M3 mission
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 HI-RES JPEG (Size: 974 kb)
YES2, the second Young Engineers Satellite, is a student experiment that was prepared, built and tested at ESA's research and technology centre, ESTEC, in Noordwijk, the Netherlands. Almost five hundred students from all over Europe have worked on the experiment. Following launch with Foton-M3 in September 2007, the Fotino re-entry capsule will be deployed on the end of a thirty kilometre tether. At exactly the right moment the mini-Foton is released from the end of the tether. The slingshot places the capsule on a path to re-enter the Earth's atmosphere. It will be the first time that a tether has been used to return a payload from space. The flight is intended to demonstrate how such a tether can be used to change a satellite's orbit without attitude control systems or rocket engines.

Credits: ESA - A. Le Floc'h
 
 
Related articles
Wind-up Tests For YES2 TetherYES2 passes critical design review
Related links
The YES2 project
 
 
 
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