A tiny satellite aims to extend radiation studies conducted by CERN into space.
The cubesat-sized CELESTA (CERNÂ Latchup Experiment STudent sAtellite) is scheduled to launch on Wednesday (July 13) aboard a new European rideshare rocket, called Vega-C. Blastoff is expected (opens in new tab) at 7:13 a.m. EDT (1213 GMT or 8:13 a.m. local time at the launch site in French Guiana), according to the European Space Agency.
Perched above four stacked stages on the booster, the satellite will fly to the center of the inner Van Allen radiation belt, which is a zone of magnetically trapped particles circling above our planet.Â
Related: 10 years after the discovery of the Higgs boson, physicists still can’t get enough of the ‘God particle’
In this region of high-energy particles, CELESTA seeks to measure radiation’s effects on electronics in a cost-effective way, the project website stated (opens in new tab).Â
For CERN (the European Council for Nuclear Research), the project will extend its existing radiation and fundamental physics work into space shortly after the Large Hadron Collider restarted in April, following a three-year hiatus for upgrades.Â
The link between LHC and CELESTA is tight, as the satellite will launch a radiation detector already tested in the extreme environment of the particle accelerator.
The technology is called RadMon, which monitors radiation levels in LHC, CERN officials stated (opens in new tab) in a November 2018 press release discussing the satellite’s testing.
“By using RadMon sensors to measure radiation levels in low-Earth orbit, CELESTA will test if RadMon could be used in space missions that are sensitive to radiation, ranging from telecom satellites to navigation and Earth-observation systems,” the press release (opens in new tab) added.
Vega-C, a successor to Vega, includes a new “small spacecraft mission service,” which — absent a larger satellite on the rocket — could fit about a dozen small satellites at once within a fairing, ESA said in 2019.Â
The agency has said the rocket may be eventually used alongside a reusable spacecraft, Space Rider, that could fly payloads to space and glide them on to a runway using a robotic space-shuttle type vehicle.
This first Vega-C launch will have as its principal payload an Italian space agency (ASI) experiment called Laser Relativity Satellite 2 (LARES-2). The satellite will seek to confirm aspects of Einstein’s general relativity in spaceflight, ASI stated (opens in new tab).
Riding to space alongside LARES-2 will be CELESTA and five other cubesats, with the smaller satellites all built by European universities and research establishments, ESA officials said.
Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) and on Facebook (opens in new tab).Â