WASHINGTON — Kayhan Space is offering a version of its space traffic coordination platform for universities, a move the company says is intended to help teach students best practices for sustainable space operations.
The Broomfield, Colorado-based company rolled out March 19 Pathfinder Classroom, a version of its Pathfinder system designed for use by universities. The system is intended to give student satellite programs access to space safety services while also serving as a learning tool.
“They don’t really teach conjunction assessment, collision avoidance, spaceflight safety as a course. You don’t go to school to learn these things,” said Araz Feyzi, chief technology officer and co-founder of Kayhan Space, in an interview. “Let’s solve the root of this problem and give them the tools that gives them the means to learn this particular, very niche area.”
Siamak Hesar, the chief executive and other co-founder of the company, has first-hand experience with the issue from his time as a student at the University of Southern California (USC), where he worked on a cubesat project. “When we were going through that process, our only concern was to build a cubesat and launch it,” he recalled, with no thought to issues like collision avoidance.
USC is the first school to sign up for Pathfinder Classroom. “Kayhan Space has opened the door to ensuring our space program is fully capable of flying our satellite missions safely and securely,” said Dave Barnhart, director of USC’s Space Engineering Research Center, in a statement. “Providing this as a service to university space programs not only helps predict best orbits prior to launch but instills the importance of assessing the space environment around Earth as students enter the industry and government to lead future missions.”
Kayhan is in discussions with several other universities about Pathfinder Classroom, which Feyzi and Hesar said is not just for schools building…
Read the full article here