Eojin Kim, Ji-Hyeon Yoo, Hee-Eun Kim, H. Seo, K. Ryu, J. Sohn, Junchan Lee, J. Seon, Ensang Lee, Dae‐Young Lee, K. Min, K. Kang, Sang-Yun Lee, Juneseok Kang
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Initial Operation and Preliminary Results of the Instrument for the Study of
Stable/Storm-Time Space (ISSS) on Board the Next Generation Small Satellite-1
(NEXTSat-1)
This paper describes the initial operations and preliminary results of the
Instrument for the study of Stable/Storm-time Space (ISSS) onboard the microsatellite
Next Generation Small Satellite-1 (NEXTSat-1), which was launched on December 4, 2018
into a sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude of 575 km with an orbital inclination angle
of 97.7°. The spacecraft and the instruments have been working normally, and the results
from the observations are in agreement with those from other satellites. Nevertheless,
improvement in both the spacecraft/instrument operation and the analysis is suggested to
produce more fruitful scientific results from the satellite operations. It is expected
that the ISSS observations will become the main mission of the NEXTSat-1 at the end of
2020, when the technological experiments and astronomical observations terminate after
two years of operation.
期刊介绍:
JASS aims for the promotion of global awareness and understanding of space science and related applications. Unlike other journals that focus either on space science or on space technologies, it intends to bridge the two communities of space science and technologies, by providing opportunities to exchange ideas and viewpoints in a single journal. Topics suitable for publication in JASS include researches in the following fields: space astronomy, solar physics, magnetospheric and ionospheric physics, cosmic ray, space weather, and planetary sciences; space instrumentation, satellite dynamics, geodesy, spacecraft control, and spacecraft navigation. However, the topics covered by JASS are not restricted to those mentioned above as the journal also encourages submission of research results in all other branches related to space science and technologies. Even though JASS was established on the heritage and achievements of the Korean space science community, it is now open to the worldwide community, while maintaining a high standard as a leading international journal. Hence, it solicits papers from the international community with a vision of global collaboration in the fields of space science and technologies.