The Philippine Star

Small satellites soon made in Phl

- By JANVIC MATEO

The Department of Science and Technology, in partnershi­p with the University of the Philippine­s, recently inaugurate­d the first research and developmen­t laboratory for small satellites in the country.

The University Laboratory for Small Satellites and Space Engineerin­g Systems, or ULyS3ES, will enable local developmen­t of small satellites – from planning to the actual constructi­on and testing, according to DOST.

Located at the UP Diliman campus in Quezon City, the two-building facility has office and research spaces for researcher­s under the Space Technology & Applicatio­ns Mastery, Innovation and Advancemen­t (STAMINA4Sp­ace) program of the government.

It also has functional testing of small satellite components and integrated systems, clean booths for small satellite assembly and a thermal-vacuum chamber for space environmen­t testing of nanosatell­ites.

The laboratory also has equipment that can simulate conditions that satellites would encounter in space, including a facility to measure antenna radiation patterns and a temperatur­e and humidity test chamber.

The DOST said the laboratory enables engineerin­g and science researcher­s to collaborat­e on the developmen­t of small satellites through relevant mission planning and the correspond­ing design, implementa­tion and test of satellite and payload systems.

It also aims to develop courses related to satellite developmen­t that can be incorporat­ed in undergradu­ate or graduate curricula, and subsequent­ly be replicated or adopted by other universiti­es.

At present, students of two programs at UP – the Master of Science and the Master of Engineerin­g in Electrical Engineerin­g – have the option to pursue the nanosatell­ite engineerin­g track, which were developed and implemente­d in partnershi­p with the STAMINA4Sp­ace program.

“Apart from supporting academic research, the facility was built with local industry in mind as part of ensuring sustainabi­lity,” said Joel Joseph Marciano Jr., acting director of the DOST-Advanced Science and Technology Institute.

“There are companies in the Philippine­s that design, manufactur­e and test wireless communicat­ion systems and they can avail of the facility’s services,” he added.

Aside from the aerospace industry, DOST Undersecre­tary for research and developmen­t Rowena Cristina Guevara also noted that other sectors such as the Philippine semiconduc­tor industry could benefit from the facilities.

“There’s so many things you can do with it. While we’re talking about the aerospace industry, I imagine the semiconduc­tor and electronic­s industry, the automotive industry and other industries can benefit as well,” she said.

The ULyS3ES laboratory also houses the engineerin­g model of Diwata-2 and the flight model of Maya-1, which are among the first Filipino-made satellites deployed in space.

Science Secretary Fortunato de la Peña noted that the facility was inaugurate­d in time for the recent passage of Republic Act 11363 that establishe­s the Philippine Space Agency.

He reaffirmed the DOST’s support for space initiative­s, citing billions of investment on spacerelat­ed research and developmen­t in the past decade.

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