
By Lucila Sigal
BUENOS AIRES, April 1 (Reuters) - An Argentine-built microsatellite, the only one from Latin America selected for NASA's return to the moon, will test experimental navigation systems and measure radiation far beyond Earth's orbit when it flies on the Artemis II mission.
The shoebox-sized satellite, known as ATENEA, is one of four international payloads chosen by NASA from proposals submitted by nearly 50 countries to accompany Artemis II, the first crewed lunar mission in more than half a century, which was scheduled to lift off later on Wednesday. The others are from Germany, Saudi Arabia and South Korea.
Developed by the engineering faculty at the University of Buenos Aires, with support from Argentina's national space agency CONAE and other scientific institutions, ATENEA will travel roughly 72,000 kilometers (44,739 miles) from Earth, well beyond the planet's protective magnetic field.
Argentina's project director Fernando Filippetti said the mission offers a rare chance for Argentine scientists to study conditions in deep space, where radiation levels are far higher and more volatile than in low-Earth orbit.
"Even though Argentina is better known for football, our space agency CONAE has built satellites of extremely high complexity, of world-class standard," Filippetti said, speaking by phone from Cape Canaveral, Florida.
The satellite will focus on measuring radiation exposure and test whether faint signals from Earth's GPS satellites can be harnessed to navigate far from the planet.
"This represents a unique opportunity to test and measure parameters in deep space," Filippetti said.
ATENEA will attempt to capture data with the aim of laying the groundwork for a future space-based GPS capable of determining a spacecraft's position far from Earth.
Argentina's space sector had quietly developed technology of global standard, despite limited resources, Filippetti said.
Libertarian President Javier Milei's government has sharply cut public spending since taking office in late 2023, with funding reductions hitting many state institutions, including CONAE.
NASA's launch with four astronauts will begin a 10-day flight around the moon, marking the most ambitious U.S. space mission in decades and a major step toward returning humans to the lunar surface before China's first crewed landing.
(Reporting by Lucila Sigal; Writing by Cassandra Garrison; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Merz visit highlights new strategic, and strained, Germany-Israel bond - 2
The Land Rover Freelander Is Back—But It’s No Longer a Land Rover - 3
Iran-backed Iraqi militias attack Kurdistan over 450 times since beginning of war - 4
Private sector revives the climate disaster database Trump tried to squash - 5
UK to hold fresh pork, other affected Spanish products at border amid African swine fever outbreak
Instructions to Distinguish the Wellbeing Dangers Related with 5G Pinnacles
This widow influencer is using jokes to cope after her husband's death. It's OK if people don't get it.
U.S. to drop childhood vaccine recommendations as it looks to Denmark, Washington Post reports
SpaceX launches Starlink satellites on its 150th Falcon 9 mission of the year
Photos of amputees in Gaza, struggling to survive after losing limbs to Israeli airstrikes
Australian State Triggers Emergency Powers Amid Fuel Crisis
Flying without a Real ID? That'll soon cost you $45, TSA says.
Wait, it's 'Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone'? Why the new HBO series name is significant to Americans
10 Setting up camp Shelters That Offer Both Excellence and Isolation











