The contractual agreement covering the development and launching UBAKUSAT was signed between the Japanese government and the Istanbul Technical University on 8 September 2016, in Ankara. UBAKUSAT is a nanosatellite built by students of Istanbul Technical University's Faculty of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Space Systems Design and Test Lab. Technical support was provided by Turkey's Ministries of Transportation, Communication and Maritime in collaboration with the Japan Aerospace and Exploration Agency and Kyushu Institute of Technology. The satellite has an amateur radio and a linear transponder. UBAKUSAT's linear transponder is similar to the TURKSAT-3USAT satellite which was launched on 26 April 2013. UBAKUSAT is the second satellite to have been built by students of SSDTL. The first was ITUpSAT1 which was launched into low Earth orbit about above Earth, on 23 September 2009 by a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle rocket. On February 23, 2018, was delivered to Japan Aerospace and Exploration Agency officials at Tsukuba Space Center in Ibaraki. The satellite then underwent several tests at the space centre to simulate conditions that will be faced in space.
Launch
On 2 April 2018, the satellite was carried on the InternationalSpace Station on board a Falcon-9 rocket with help from the National Aeronautic and Space Administration. It was deployed from the space station into its orbit from the KIBO module on 11 May 2018. Its launch coincided with that of the 1KUNS-PF from Kenya and Irazú from Costa Rica. All three CubeSats carry amateur radio payloads with Irazú and 1KUNS-PF have telemetry beacons while UBAKUSAT carries a linear transponder for amateur radio. All three satellites were deployed into space from the Kibo module of the ISS by Japanese astronaut Norishige Kanai. UBAKUSAT is expected to orbit the earth for a duration of between six and twelve months before de-orbiting.
Purpose
UBAKUSAT was launched into space with the aim of providing voice communications for amateur radio stations around the world. The satellite has an experimental TAMSAT Simplesat card onboard which relays data about space radiation to ground stations. The card is being used in an experiment to assess its space radiation measuring technology.