Shoebox satellite
Researchers in Tübingen have developed the technology behind a new satellite-based mission called HERMES (High Energy Rapid Modular Ensemble of Satellites) that will capture gamma-ray bursts and help to localize their sources more precisely. This involves a minicomputer for a system of crystal and silicon detectors. It detects gamma rays and transmits the data via telecommunication satellites to Earth for evaluation.
Alongside scientific research, astrophysicists at the University of Tübingen develop their own technology in-house, which is remarkable for a university. The HERMES detector system is onboard a nanosatellite called SpIRIT (Space Industry Responsive Intelligent Thermal): Not much larger than a shoebox, it weighs 11.5 kilos, and was developed at the University of Melbourne – in collaboration with the Italian Space Agency (ASI) and the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF).
On December 2, 2023, the miniature satellite launched aboard a two-stage rocket from a base in California and entered orbit 513 kilometers above the Earth. The SpIRIT nanosatellite with the HERMES detector on board is the first of seven planned nanosatellites with the same detector system that will be flown over the next year, forming the HERMES Scientific Pathfinder Constellation.
The University of Tübingen is a member of the consortium led by INAF and the Italian Space Agency. “We followed the satellite launch via a livestream and kept our fingers crossed,” recounts astrophysicist Dr. Alejandro Guzmán, a member of the six-person development team from Tübingen. “It was a tense moment. Years of work have gone into the satellite and if something goes wrong, you can’t just stop it to repair it.”
But they didn’t have to wait long for confirmation that the satellite was in the correct orbit. The ground station in Australia and amateur networks worldwide soon reported that the signal transmission was working. Currently, SpIRIT is in a commissioning phase due to last several weeks, which is intended to demonstrate whether the satellite and the research technology on board function flawlessly in space. After that, the research mission will begin.