Sunday Tribune

Musk’s Spacex gives SA a lift to orbit

NATHAN CRAIG nathan.craig@inl.co.za

THE Transporter-3 mission from Elon Musk’s Spacex lifted off on Thursday with three nanosatellites locally produced with enhanced monitoring capabilities at the US space force station in Cape Canaveral.

In a first for South Africa, a trio of locally produced Maritime Domain Awareness Satellites (MDASAT) was launched in accordance with government’s efforts to track and monitor the country’s maritime traffic.

They are able to detect, identify and monitor vessels in near real-time in support of SA’S maritime domain awareness as well as marine life.

Musk said the technological advancements of today would lead to a brighter future among the stars.

“You want to wake up in the morning and think the future is going to be great, that’s what being a spacefaring civilisation is all about. It’s about believing in the future and thinking that the future will be better than the past. I can’t think of anything more exciting than going out there and being among the stars.”

At 10.25am Eastern Standard Time, the partially reusable two-stage-to-orbit medium-lift vehicle, Falcon 9, launched Transporter-3.

During the live feed of the launch, you could witness the launch in realtime. It took nine minutes following the launch of the rocket, before returning on a landing pad, a fair distance from the launch site.

Spacex reliability engineering manager Kate Tice relished the occasion during the broadcast of the successful launch.

“The Falcon 9 has landed for the 10th time. This marks our 102nd overall recovery.”

This was Spacex’s third dedicated Smallsat Rideshare Programme mission that allowed commercial entities and countries across the globe to pay Spacex to transport their space crafts.

Onboard were 105 commercial and government space crafts that varied from a range of sizes with some described as smaller than a canned drink to the size of a shoebox or a washing machine.

Minister of Higher Education, Science and Innovation Blade Nzimande said over the years of development the three MDASAT cost R27 million.

“This will further cement the county’s position as an African leader in small satellite development, and help us to capture a valuable share of a niche market in the fast-growing global satellite value chain,” he said.

He added that there was a lack of space professionals and engineers which prompted the department and the National Research Foundation to initiate a human capital development programme at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology under the French South African Institute of Technology cube satellite (Cubesat) programme.

On a small scale, the country has been involved in space activities since the dawn of the space age in 1957 and even assisted with the Apollo programme that put a man on the moon.

Justin Witten, engineering manager for the SA National Space Agency, said they provided system engineering support, that is everything from engineering requirements to participating in the design reviews.

“Their purpose is to monitor the legitimacy of maritime vessels, but crime is indeed a major problem, and satellites can assist with change detection perhaps, but the temporal resolution will have to be pretty high that means that you will have to be watching everything, or hotspots all the time,” he said.

Witten said another way could be a requirement that every person be fitted with an automatic transponder so that the authorities know where everyone is all the time.

Nasa was contacted for comment but declined as they had no affiliation with the Spacex project.

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2022-01-16T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-01-16T08:00:00.0000000Z

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