Meet the Indian teen who has developed world's smallest satellite for Nasa

KalamSat, developed by
Tamil Nadu's Rifath Sharook, will be launched by Nasa rocket on June 21
When the US’
National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) launches the world’s
smallest satellite KalamSat on June 21, it will be the first time ever that it
would be piloting an experiment by an Indian student. Developed by Rifath
Sharook, an 18-year-old boy, from Tamil Nadu’s Pallapatti town, KalamSat weighs
only 64 grammes.
‘KalamSat’,
named after India's nuclear scientist and former President, APJ Abdul Kalam,
will be launched from a Nasa facility in Wallops Island. Sharook’s project, the
first to be manufactured via 3D printing, got selected through a competition,
‘Cubes in Space', sponsored jointly by NASA and 'I Doodle Learning'. The
project aims to take the performance of new technology to space.
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Key features
of the miniature satellite
Sharook said
it would be a sub-orbital flight and after launch the mission span would be 240
minutes. The tiny satellite would operate for 12 minutes in a micro-gravity
environment of space. “The main role of the satellite will be to demonstrate
the performance of 3D-printed carbon fibre”, the Times of India quoted Sharook
as saying.
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