Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

World's Smallest Satellite 'KALAMAT' Built By Indian Teens Launched By NASA

IANS, 22 Jun, 2017 01:24 PM

    NASA has successfully launched the world's smallest and lightest satellite built by Indian students from its Wallops Island facility.

     

    As per reports, the satellite named after the former President and nuclear scientist Dr APJ Abdul Kalam is dubbed 'KalamSat'.

     

    Weighing just 64grams, the satellite was designed and built by 18-year-old Rifath Sharook along with six other teammates.

     
     

    In the pictures below tweeted, the students were seen rejoicing after the launch of the satellite. Take a look!

     

    The satellite, which is lighter than a smartphone and made of reinforced carbon fibre polyme, operated for 12 minutes in a micro-gravity environment of space after its flight.

     

    “The main role of the satellite will be to demonstrate the performance of 3D-printed carbon fibre”, Sharook, a 12th-grade student from Tamil Nadu’s Pallapatti town, was quoted as saying earlier.

     

    This is the first time that an Indian student's experiment has been carried out by NASA.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Man Arrested For Uploading 'Deadpool' To His Facebook Page

    Man Arrested For Uploading 'Deadpool' To His Facebook Page
    FRESNO, Calif. — Federal prosecutors say a man was arrested in central California for allegedly uploading the Marvel film "Deadpool" to his Facebook page days after its February 2016 release.

    Man Arrested For Uploading 'Deadpool' To His Facebook Page

    Pregnant Women Should Control Lust, Shun Non-Veg: Indian Govt Booklet

    Pregnant women should control lust, hang “beautiful” pictures on the wall and shun non-vegetarian food if they wish to have a healthy baby, a booklet released by the government’s AYUSH Ministry says.

    Pregnant Women Should Control Lust, Shun Non-Veg: Indian Govt Booklet

    Don't Call Pupils 'Genius', It's Not Gender-Neutral: Cambridge Lecturers Told

    Don't Call Pupils 'Genius', It's Not Gender-Neutral: Cambridge Lecturers Told
    Cambridge University academics are being told to avoid using words like "genius", "flair" and "brilliance" when assessing students' work because they are associated with men and "carry assumptions of gender inequality", according to a varsity lecturer.

    Don't Call Pupils 'Genius', It's Not Gender-Neutral: Cambridge Lecturers Told

    Q&A with Bard on the Beach Director, John Murphy

    Q&A with Bard on the Beach Director, John Murphy
    For developing playwrights, Shakespeare's work is incredibly instructive – how he imbeds action in the lines, his over all play structure, his use of dramatic irony, etc. It's all there and no one has ever surpassed him.

    Q&A with Bard on the Beach Director, John Murphy

    12-Yr-Old Girl Helps Deliver Baby Brother; Pictures Go Viral On Social Media

    12-Yr-Old Girl Helps Deliver Baby Brother; Pictures Go Viral On Social Media
    The pictures of the 12-year-old girl helping to deliver her baby brother were shared by a Facebook user Nikki Smith on June 8, and since then they have been breaking the Internet.

    12-Yr-Old Girl Helps Deliver Baby Brother; Pictures Go Viral On Social Media

    Madrid Puts Up Signs Banning 'Manspreading' - Sitting With Legs Wide Open - In Buses 

    Madrid Puts Up Signs Banning 'Manspreading' - Sitting With Legs Wide Open - In Buses 
    Madrid authorities started putting up signs banning the practice of ‘manspreading’ — opening one’s legs so wide you invade other’s seating space —on city buses as part of their new etiquette guidelines.

    Madrid Puts Up Signs Banning 'Manspreading' - Sitting With Legs Wide Open - In Buses