Technology Category
- Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) - Backup & Recovery
- Sensors - GPS
Applicable Industries
- Aerospace
- Renewable Energy
Applicable Functions
- Product Research & Development
Use Cases
- Smart Campus
- Virtual Training
Services
- System Integration
- Training
About The Customer
The Swiss Academic Space Initiative (ARIS) is an educational association of around 400 students from ETH-Zurich, the Zurich University of Applied Sciences, the University of Zurich, the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, the Zurich University of the Arts and the University of Applied Sciences Rapperswil. The students voluntarily work together to develop aerospace technology in the area of launch vehicles, recovery systems, satellites, and other space-related technology. They participate in international student competitions and aim to place a small-scale satellite in orbit using an in-house developed bi-liquid launcher within the next decade.
The Challenge
The Swiss Academic Space Initiative (ARIS), an educational association founded by students from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETH-Zurich) in 2017, is training future engineers and project managers for the growing aerospace market. The association, which now includes students from six different Swiss universities, aims to place a small-scale satellite in orbit using an in-house developed bi-liquid launcher within the next decade. To achieve this, ARIS needs to conduct in-orbit experiments and research, and regularly participate in international competitions with other aerospace engineering student organizations. However, the launch and recovery of spacecraft are significantly affected by Earth's weather conditions, including temperature, wind speed and direction, rain, hail, lightning, cloud cover, and electric fields. ARIS needed accurate weather data to conduct flight simulations, assess initial conditions in the launch area, and estimate the rocket's highest height, landing location, and the danger zone for people on the ground.
The Solution
Meteomatics, a provider of weather data, stepped in to support ARIS's projects. In 2022, Meteomatics sponsored ARIS by providing weather data for two main projects: Helvetia and Periphas. For the Helvetia project, which aimed to fly a 4 kg payload to 9 km and recover all parts safely for reuse during the Spaceport America Cup competition, the team used data from Meteomatics' weather API to monitor the atmospheric conditions at the launch location, date, and time for a trajectory simulation. They used historical data to assess the danger zone for the first launch during preparation and consulted forecasts a few days before the competition to estimate where the rocket would land and how high it would fly. For the Periphas project, which aimed to design, test, implement, and launch a guided recovery system, the trajectory of the rocket from launch to landing was calculated using Meteomatics' wind data.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
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