Music From Space: DIY Satellite Will Capture Sounds of Ionosphere

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For a space geek, the ultimate do-it-yourself project would be building a satellite in your basement. Astronomer and writer Sandy Antunes is doing just that, but there's an artsy side to this project, as well. His satellite, called

Project Calliope,

will collect data from the ionosphere and send it back to Earth in sound-based MIDI files, allowing music to be created from space. "It'll be an ionospheric detector transmitting sonifiable data back to Earth," said Antunes. "Conceptually, it's a musical instrument in space, played by space rather than just after-the-fact sonified."

Antunes decided to embark on this project after the

commercial space company InterOrbital

began offering small DIY, soda-can-sized picosatellites for the reasonable price of $8,000 – which includes the launch.

One of the major reasons for doing the project is to prove that anyone can build a satellite in their basement – although Antunes admits it is also a fairly cheap midlife crisis expenditure, especially when his boss at the

Science 2.0 blog,

Hank Campbell, decided to pitch in half of the price.

[caption id="attachment_81695" align="aligncenter" width="461" caption="The skeleton of the Antunes' satellite, assembled. Cat is for scale. Credit: Sandy Antunes. "]

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"When people ask, 'where did you get your idea?' that misses the mark," Antunes told Universe Today. "The question should be, 'What idea do you have?' We're at the point now where a single hobbyist can send something into orbit to do something useful. I think this is a new space age way of thinking. I'd like to see if this inspires people to do something cooler than me. To me that is what science is all about."

Antunes is documenting his experiences on his blog,

The Sky By Day.

"I'm making mistakes so that other people won't have to make them," he said. "Hopefully I can make the path will be easier for others."

Plus, Antunes hopes to answer the big question of what space sounds like. The sun interacts with the Earth's magnetic field in the ionosphere, creating all sorts of activity; there are also changes in temperature and light.

"People don't know what space sounds like," he said. "You walk to ocean and close your eyes and you can hear the roar of the waves, the rushing of water, the moments of quiet; and you can get a good idea of what activity is going on. But we don't know have an idea of the activity of space, or the ionosphere, where this satellite is going. Sonifying the ionosphere will give people an idea of the ebb and flow of it – how there are constant events going on, sometimes catastrophic-type events but there is also a quiescent stage."

When the data comes back to Earth, Antunes will give musicians free rein. "Musicians can take it and rework it, much like how musicians have ambient noise, nature sounds, or whale songs in a piece," Antunes said, "but in this case they can take sounds from the ionosphere. We are making it royalty free so anyone can use it."

[caption id="attachment_81694" align="aligncenter" width="250" caption="The packaged components for InterOrbital's $8,000 DIY satellite. Credit: Sandy Antunes."]

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Antunes said working with the pre-packaged

TubeSat Personal Satellite Kit i

s different than what he initially imagined. The Hubble Space Telescope, it is not.

"It has a power system that's basically two lithium AA batteries hooked together, a little stick of gum computer chip, and some very fragile solar cells," Antunes said. "I thought it would be hard science and tricky engineering and unsolved problems, but everything I'm getting is off the shelf. The sensors are plug-ins, so the primary work is integrating things. So there are very different problems from what I thought, but this tells me that you don't have to have a PhD to put up a satellite."

The current liftoff date for the first InterOrbital Tubesat launch is March or April of 2011. The company has built the rocket engines and they are now doing testing and test firings.

Antunes knows that testing a rocket has a lot of ambiguity, and he anticipates some delays, as even when he has been part of a NASA project, he has never had a launch go on time. This being the first launch of InterOrbital's commercial satellite venture, if it blows up, Antunes will get a chance to refly his satellite.

Project Calliope will go into a short-term polar orbit, and last about 6-12 weeks, so it is a short term experience, Antunes said.

But he will be tweaking his satellite right up until delivery.

"I wanted to do something that NASA cannot, and that a University wouldn't, combining art and science," Antunes said. "I like the idea of flying something in space whose purpose is to make music until it dies-- music from science."

Listen to Antunes on the 365 Days of Astronomy explain why his small satellite will not hit you on the head.

Nancy Atkinson

Nancy Atkinson

Nancy Atkinson is a space journalist and author with a passion for telling the stories of people involved in space exploration and astronomy. She is currently retired from daily writing, but worked at Universe Today for 20 years as a writer and editor. She also contributed articles to The Planetary Society, Ad Astra (National Space Society), New Scientist and many other online outlets.

Her 2019 book, "Eight Years to the Moon: The History of the Apollo Missions,” shares the untold stories of engineers and scientists who worked behind the scenes to make the Apollo program so successful, despite the daunting odds against it. Her first book “Incredible Stories From Space: A Behind-the-Scenes Look at the Missions Changing Our View of the Cosmos” (2016) tells the stories of 37 scientists and engineers that work on several current NASA robotic missions to explore the solar system and beyond.

Nancy is also a NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador, and through this program, she has the opportunity to share her passion of space and astronomy with children and adults through presentations and programs. Nancy's personal website is nancyatkinson.com