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Awarua Tracking Station

Coordinates: 46°30′47″S 168°22′33″E / 46.512945°S 168.375952°E / -46.512945; 168.375952
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Awarua Tracking Station, with 3.5m diameter tracking antenna deployed.

Awarua Satellite Ground Station (formerly Awarua Tracking Station) is an Earth station built initially to support the European Space Agency Ariane 5 ES ATV (Automated Transfer Vehicle) launch campaigns. Located in New Zealand, it was developed by Venture Southland, a joint committee of the Invercargill City Council, Southland District Council and Gore District Council.[1][2]

The site on Awarua Plains was chosen because of its high latitude, low horizons and isolation from sources of radio interference. It has a fibre-optic broadband link to the Internet.[3]

The station was first used in 2008 to track Jules Verne,[4] and subsequently four more Automated Transfer Vehicles servicing the International Space Station.

The station now supports many of the well known names in the small-sat world.

46°30′47″S 168°22′33″E / 46.512945°S 168.375952°E / -46.512945; 168.375952

Work with Planet Labs

In 2014 the Awarua Satellite Ground Station was chosen by Planet Labs to download some of the data from their 28 earth observation satellites called Flock-1.[5] A 7-meter radome was constructed at the site to house the satellite dish that would download the data from the satellites.[5]

References

  1. ^ Space Research Projects Archived 2010-12-18 at the Wayback Machine on Venture Southland website, viewed 2011-04-06
  2. ^ Venture Southland on Venture Southland website, viewed 2011-04-06
  3. ^ NZ space link seen as a showcase for satellite imaging Archived July 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine by NZPA, retrieved from Yahoo News website on 2011-02-15
  4. ^ One giant step into space for Southland on Stuff.co.nz website, retrieved 2011-04-11
  5. ^ a b Pioneering earth observation project comes to Southland on Venture Southland's website, retrieved 2014-12-02