UHCC Project Imua Payload: PIP

                       RockSat-X 2015

Honolulu—Kapi‘olani—Kaua‘i—Windward Community College

                      Hawai‘i Space Grant Consortium

 

Project Imua Mission 1 involved the development of a small payload named PIP ("Project Imua Payload") that carried a UV spectrometer and IMU detectors. This Mission participated in RockSat-X 2015. PIP was launched into space on a sub-orbital trajectory from NASA Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia on August 12, 2015. This was the first payload launched into space by the University of Hawaii system.

Click below to see a 360-degree view of the PIP payload.

 

Payload specs

     Dimension of Housing: approximately 8.25" x 8.25" x 4.5"

     Weight with baseplate: 14.8 lbs

     Material: aluminum 6061, teflon and lead ballast

Instruments & Other Assignments:

     •  Ultraviolet Spectrometer with Cosine Receptor (KauCC)

     •  Photosensor array for monitoring sun's orientation (HonCC)

     •  IMU [9-axis motion detector with pressure device] (HonCC)

     •  Print Circuit Board (KapCC)

     •  Integration, Testing and Coordination (WinCC)

Name: PIP

     •  acronym for "Project Imua Payload”

Pip also refers to a “seed” — which is representative of the newly established four-campus UHCC enterprise that constitutes Project Imua. Additionally, according to the Urban dictionary, PIP indicates “something that tends to be annoyingly difficult, yet still irresistibly likeable.”

   

Launch of RockSat-X 2015

RockSat-X Launch Photo 1

 

 

RockSat-X Launch Photo 2

 

RockSat-X Launch Photo 3

 

 

RockSat-X Launch Photo 4

 

RockSat-X Launch Photo 5

 

RockSat-X Launch Photo 6

 

RockSat-X Launch Photo 7

 

                                         RockSat-X 2015 Teams

RockSat-X 2015 Team

 

Project Imua Home

last updated 2-10-22