Cape Times

SA’s mini-satellite has a big role to play

- OKUHLE HLATI okuhle.hlati@inl.co.za

SOUTH Africa’s ZACube-2, the continent’s most advanced nanosatell­ite, has made internatio­nal headlines after its launch into orbit from Russia on Thursday morning.

Streamed live, the nanosatell­ite blasted off at 4.07am together with other small satellites from the US, Japan, Spain, and Germany.

ZACube-2, a miniaturis­ed satellite called a CubeSat, is orbiting Earth and monitoring natural and man-made disasters and other emergencie­s in real-time.

This was the 30th satellite launched by an African country.

Science and Technology Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi-Ngubane hailed the Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) team that helped build the satellite.

“The launch of ZACube-2 represents a significan­t milestone in the nation’s ambition to becoming a key player in the innovative utilisatio­n of space science and technology in responding to government priority areas. This is the most technologi­cally advanced nanosat that will provide critical informatio­n for our oceans economy (Operation Phakisa).

“I am particular­ly excited that the satellite was developed by some of our youngest and brightest minds under a programme representi­ng our diversity, in particular black students and young women,” Kubayi-Ngubane said.

The project, which is funded by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), supports Operation Phakisa.

Kubayi-Ngubane said the department had invested R16.5 million at CPUT for the project and this was a start to facilitate the implementa­tion of the National Developmen­t Plan.

Weighing just 4kg, the ZACube-2 is South Africa’s second nanosatell­ite to be launched into space and three times the size of its predecesso­r, TshepisoSa­t.

In 2013 CPUT made history with the launch of ZACube-1, South Africa and Africa’s first nanosatell­ite.

ZACube-2 will also monitor ships along the South African coastline.

CPUT’s acting deputy vice-chancellor Research, Technology and Innovation, Professor Marshall Sheldon, said: “Initiative­s like ZACube-2 are helping to attract more learners to careers in space engineerin­g and, as it does, the abundance of ingenuity, creativity and entreprene­urship that pulsates through the youth of South Africa becomes ever-more apparent.”

 ??  ?? SINCE ZACube-1, CPUT has reprised its history-making nanosatell­ite technology with the ZACube-2, the most advanced South African CubeSat, launched with the Russian Soyuz Kanopus mission from Siberia, Russia, on Thursday.
SINCE ZACube-1, CPUT has reprised its history-making nanosatell­ite technology with the ZACube-2, the most advanced South African CubeSat, launched with the Russian Soyuz Kanopus mission from Siberia, Russia, on Thursday.

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