National Space Activities Commission
The National Space Activities Commission is the civilian agency of the government of Argentina in charge of the national space programme.
History
Sociedad Argentina Interplanetaria
During the 1940s, Teófilo Tabanera organized a group of foreign and Argentine specialists as the Sociedad Argentina Interplanetaria, SAI. Tabanera's efforts ensured that Argentina was the first Latin American nation to create a spaceflight organisation and in 1952 was one of the founding members of the International Astronautical Federation. Argentine Aldo Cocca was a pioneer in space law and helped originate the idea of space being the common heritage of humankind, later enshrined in United Nations treaties of the 1960s.Comisión Nacional de Investigaciones Espaciales
In 1960, Tabanera was named head of the newly created Comisión Nacional de Investigaciones Espaciales "CNIE", a forerunner agency founded in 1960.CNIE worked with the Argentine Air Force's Instituto de Investigaciones Aeronáuticas y Espaciales to develop a number of indigenous multistage high-altitude sounding rockets and missiles. Argentina was the first country in Latin America to send an object into space using an indigenously developed rocket.
In October 1968, a committee of French studies visited the airport to conduct a survey and trace maps and planes, planning to carrying out a bi-national project called EOLO that involved launching from three bases in Argentina, small super pressure balloons which would be interrogated by a satellite during its flight. Once checked the appropriate soil conditions, in April of the following year, the Command-in-Chief of the Argentine Air Force formally requested to the Mendoza provincial State a grant the loan of a portion of land located in the north side of the airport, to establish the station. As requested, the province gave the land required as free loan extended for five years. After that time, the remaining facilities would be taken by the local government.
The program, from the CNIE's side, was initially managed from the Argentine Air Force Condor Headquarters in Buenos Aires by EE Ingeniero Enrique Setaro. Upon the starting of the operational phase of the program the CNIE replaced him with an Air Force officer.
During the 1970s, Argentina regularly launched the American two-stage solid-propellant Castor rocket up to 500 kilometers altitude. This rocket carried international experiments for several countries.
In the 1970s the CNIE signed an agreement with the French Centre National d'Études Spatiales to create and implement the EOLO Program. It would involve the launch of 500 stratospheric air balloons into the Earth's stratosphere to study the dynamics of air displacement.
The stratosphere is the second major layer of Earth's atmosphere, just above the troposphere, and below the mesosphere. The stratosphere is stratified in temperature, with warmer layers higher and cooler layers closer to the Earth; this increase of temperature with altitude is a result of the absorption of the Sun's ultraviolet radiation by the ozone layer.
Condor Program
In the 1980s, Argentina took part in a multinational effort to develop the Condor missile. Under United States pressure, the Condor program was cancelled in 1991. The associated development and production facilities at Falda del Carmen were closed down, the Fabrica Militar de Aviones, which concentrated on development of surveillance satellites for Earth resource and environmental monitoring.Comisión Nacional de Actividades Espaciales
The present commission was created on 28 May 1991, during the government of Carlos Menem, after the cancellation of the military Condor missile program in an attempt to move all the commission efforts to civilian purposes. It received the Air Force aerospace facilities in Córdoba and Buenos Aires of the former CNIE, as well as some of the civil personnel involved in the cancelled project.Since the 1990s the new commission signed agreements with NASA and European agencies and has developed a number of Earth Observation satellites, including SAC-A, the failed mission SAC-B, and the SAC-C launched in 2000 and still operating.
The administration of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner renationalizes Fabrica Militar de Aviones in 2009 and the Falda del Carmen facility has been reactivated to support the development of the new Tronador II rocket. Defense missile and rocket development has been restarted under the umbrella of CITEFA.
Teófilo Tabanera Space Center
The Teófilo Tabanera Space Center, or CETT, is located 30 km southwest from Córdoba, in a region called Falda del Carmen and houses the following installations:Cordoba Ground Station
Responsible for the tracking, command and control of the Argentine satellites, and for the ingestion, cataloging and archiving of satellite data products. CONAE's Córdoba Ground Station has been in operation since 1997. It has capacity for data reception and TT&C. Currently, it receives data from 12 international satellites, besides the data from Argentine missions. The National Space Program foresees the setting up of a second ground station in Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego Province, at the southern tip of Argentina, to enable the collection of data on the Antarctic continent.Mission Operation Center
Responsible for planning, commands elaboration and monitoring the Argentine satellites. Today the SAC-C Mission Operation Center is fully operative and SAC-D mission operation centre is being implemented in order to control the SAC-D/Aquarius satellites launched on 10 June 2011.Testing and Integration Facilities
Testing and Integration Facilities are specialized spaces where different components of space missions, such as satellites, spacecraft, and instruments, are tested, assembled, and integrated. These facilities play an important role in ensuring that the equipment and technology intended for space missions function properly and reliably.Institute for Advance Space Studies "Mario Gulich"
For the promotion of advanced knowledge and innovative use of space information, it also aims at developing highly skilled human resources. It has been named in honor of former CONAE physicist Mario Gulich, who conceived the first Argentine satellite for scientific applications: the SAC-B. Mr. Gulich died in 1994.Tronador II test site
CONAE built a rocket test site at Las Pipinas, Punta Indio Partido in the Buenos Aires Province, named "Polo Espacial de Punta Indio". It is intended to test the Vex rockets, technological demonstrators for the Tronador II launcher.Tronador II launch site
The Tronador launch site will be called "Complejo Argentino de Acceso Al Espacio", located at Puerto Belgrano Naval Base.Satellite systems
The national space program provides for two satellite series and both are devoted to Earth observation: one with main Argentine instruments in the optical range and the other one in the microwave range.SAC series
The SAC series has been developed by the CONAE together with the Argentine company INVAP and a number of local universities, in close cooperation with the NASA. It has also included the participation of Brazil, Denmark, Italy and Germany.In 2019, five Argentine satellites have been launched: SAC-A, a technological demonstration satellite, SAC-B, which was devoted to scientific research, SAC-C, the first Earth Observation Satellite of Argentina, SAC-D and SAOCOM 1A.
In this context, CONAE has joined efforts with NASA in the creation of the First International Earth Observation Constellation, with Argentine SAC-C and the U.S. Landsat 7, EO-1 and Terra missions.
The satellite launched by CONAE was SAC-D/Aquarius, which was launched on 10 June 10, 2011. It will carry the NASA-provided Aquarius mission for taking measurements of sea salinity which will contribute to the better understanding of the environment, together with CONAE-provided sensors which will contribute to monitoring possible fire focuses.
Past missions
- : 3 December 1998. Conceived to test systems and as a technological model. The satellite burned up upon entering the atmosphere on October 25, 1999.
- : 4 November 1996. The first Argentine scientific satellite, whose main goal was the study of solar physics and astrophysics. Launching problems prevented it from being deployed in orbit. As it was still attached to the rocket, it could not recharge its batteries through its solar panels and was only operated while the batteries lasted. The satellite re-entered the Earth's atmosphere on April 7, 2002.
- : 21 November 2000. Launched as part of the AM Constellation together with NASA's Landsat 7, TERRA and EO-1. Carried among other instruments a Multispectral Medium Resolution Scanner, a High-Resolution Technological Camera, a High Sensitivity Camera and the GPS Occultation and Passive reflection Experiment. All instruments were provided by CONAE except GOLPE, which was provided by NASA. On 15 August 2013 communication with the satellite was suddenly lost. It had completed its primary mission and far exceeded its original five-year planned life.
- SAC-D/Aquarius: SAC-D was launched on 19 June 2011. Part of a cooperation program between CONAE and NASA. It carries seven instruments to study the environment, and a technology demonstration.
- SAOCOM 1A: 8 October 2018 by a Falcon 9 of SpaceX. It is an Earth observation satellite.
Future missions
- SABIA-Mar 1 : launch in 2024. Satellite for the observation and information recollection on water and food on the Mercosur area, developed together with the Brazilian Space Agency.
- SAC-F: Unknown launch date.
SAOCOM series