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PHASMA

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the CubeSat mission. For the genus of insects, see Phasma. For the fictional character, see Captain Phasma. For the Italian artist, see Fasma.
European CubeSat mission
PHASMA
The Transporter-15 Mission which launched PHASMA along with several other satellites
OperatorGreece Libre Space Foundation, Hellenic Space Center,
European Space Agency
COSPAR ID LAMARR: 2025-276DH
DIRAC: 2025-276DJ
Mission duration6 months, 13 days (in progress)
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft type2x 3U CubeSat
Start of mission
Launch date28 November 2025, 18:44 UTC
RocketFalcon 9 Transporter 15
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeSun-synchronous
← MICE-1
ERMIS →

PHASMA is a radio frequency spectrum monitoring and space-based situational awareness mission developed by the Greek non-profit organisation Libre Space Foundation (LSF) with support of EU and ESA.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] The mission consists of two identical 3U CubeSats named LAMARR (after Hedy Lamarr) and DIRAC (after Paul Dirac) flying in close proximity of each other.[7] They were both launched on the SpaceX Falcon 9 flight Transporter-15 in November 2025.[8] [9] [10] [11]

The goals of the mission are to quantify the global use of radio frequency spectrum, to locate sources of interference, to detect possible violations of signal transmission, as well as to monitor signal transmissions from other satellites.[1] Initial reports from 2023 stated that the mission would consist of three CubeSats,[12] but their number was later brought down to two.[7] The mission is supported by ESA's Greek CubeSat In-Orbit Validation programme[13] and the Libre Space Foundation received 2 million euros for its development.[1]

See also

[edit ]

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ a b c "Libre Space Foundation's 2 Million Euros PHASMA project with ESA for development of three open-source CubeSats – SatNews". news.satnews.com. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
  2. ^ Chourmouziadis, Yannis (2024年10月22日). "Open Space: Open Source for Innovating Beyond Earth | Interoperable Europe Portal". interoperable-europe.ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
  3. ^ Energy, | Innovation | Tech | (2023年09月06日). "Libre Space Foundation: from Athens to outer space". Greek News Agenda. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
  4. ^ Kulu, Erik. "Phasma". Nanosats Database. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
  5. ^ PHASMA: Monitoring the Electromagnetic Spectrum from Above
  6. ^ "PHASMA". Libre Space Foundation. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
  7. ^ a b "Three further ESA-supported Greek CubeSats ready for launch". connectivity.esa.int. 2025年09月25日. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
  8. ^ "Greece joins space nations with launch of five microsatellites | eKathimerini.com". www.ekathimerini.com. 2025年11月29日. Retrieved 2025年11月30日.
  9. ^ "Transporter-15". Supercluster. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
  10. ^ "SpaceX Transporter 15 (Dedicated SSO Rideshare) Falcon 9 Block 5 Rocket Launch". Space Launch Schedule. 2025年11月19日. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
  11. ^ "Transporter 15 | Falcon 9 Block 5 | Next Spaceflight". nextspaceflight.com. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
  12. ^ "ESA backs Greek firms' and universities' CubeSats". www.esa.int. 2023年06月20日. Retrieved 2025年11月29日.
  13. ^ "Greek CubeSats ready for assembly". www.esa.int. Retrieved 2025年11月14日.
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