Thursday, April 12, 2018

SSTV and the ISS: Space Based Fax Machine

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From time to time the International Space Station (ISS) will activate their Slow Scan Television (SSTV) transmitter.  April 12, 2018 was one of those times as the Russian crew commemorated  Cosmonautics Day.  Getting a SSTV image from the ISS is kind of like getting a FAX sent to you from a spaceship.  In the case of the captured image above the ISS was transmitting an audio signal to Earth on a frequency 145.800MHz with 25 Watts.  The signal is strong and lets anyone with some basic equipment receive and decode the image.
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For this capture we used:
- The Heavens Above website to predict the ISS pass.
- A Kenwood TH-D72A to receive the signal (could be a low cost ham radio or SDR).
- A DIY Yagi antenna (the signal was so strong this was probably not required).
- A small recorder to save the audio received.
- Software to decode the recorded audio into an image.  We used RX-SSTV.
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The whole process takes some planning and setup, but it's not that hard and it was rewarding to see the result.  If you want to hear what our image "sounds like" or test your decode SW then play this:

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The SSTV passes are scheduled from time to time.  Here are some of our captures:

December 2021:

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December 2020: 

 



 

 

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August 2020:

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June 2018:

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April 2018

 


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