The country’s Maya-5 and Maya-6 cube satellites (cubesats), the second batch of Philippine university-built cubesats, were successfully launched to the International Space Station (ISS) on Monday night, June 5, according to the Philippine Space Agency (PhilSA).
Maya-5 and Maya-6 flew onboard the SpaceX Falcon 9 for the 28th commercial resupply mission.
As reported by PhilSA, the CubeSats, weighing approximately 1.15 kilograms each, will move along an orbit similar to the space station at an altitude of approximately 400 kilometers once they are released into space.
They were made in space technology to have hands-on expertise with satellite development.
Maya-5 and Maya-6 (Courtesy of STAMINA4Space)
In addition, it is also designed to increase the use of domestic capabilities by switching to locally accessible components, boards, and structural frameworks. “The Maya-5 and Maya-6 CubeSats are a technology demonstration and educational platform developed for remote data collection through Store-and-Forward (S&F) Mechanism, similar to its predecessor from Kyutech’s 4th Joint Global Multi-Nation Birds Satellite (BIRDS-4) Project, Maya-2, which was decommissioned on 5 July 2022,” they added. Both cubesats were created with the help of the Department of Science and Technology, PhilSA, UP Diliman, and Japan’s Kyushu Institute of Technology as part of the STAMINA4Space (Space Technology and Applications Mastery, Innovation, and Advancement) Program. (Rhowen Del Rosario)
Maya-5 and Maya-6 (Courtesy of STAMINA4Space)
In addition, it is also designed to increase the use of domestic capabilities by switching to locally accessible components, boards, and structural frameworks. “The Maya-5 and Maya-6 CubeSats are a technology demonstration and educational platform developed for remote data collection through Store-and-Forward (S&F) Mechanism, similar to its predecessor from Kyutech’s 4th Joint Global Multi-Nation Birds Satellite (BIRDS-4) Project, Maya-2, which was decommissioned on 5 July 2022,” they added. Both cubesats were created with the help of the Department of Science and Technology, PhilSA, UP Diliman, and Japan’s Kyushu Institute of Technology as part of the STAMINA4Space (Space Technology and Applications Mastery, Innovation, and Advancement) Program. (Rhowen Del Rosario)