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Colorado Inner Radiation Belt Experiment - Wikipedia CIRBE's primary mission objective was to study the formation and decay of inner radiation belt electrons and to determine the intensity and dynamic variations of these particles [1]
home - CIRBE The CIRBE (Colorado Inner Radiation Belt Experiment) satellite is a 3U (10cm x 10cm x 30cm) CubeSat with the mission of allowing scientists to gain a better understanding of the formation of the inner radiation belt electrons as well as determine where these particles come from and how they behave
CIRBE - Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics The Colorado Inner Radiation Belt Experiment 3U SmallSat goal is to gain a better understanding of the formation of the inner radiation belt electrons as well as determine where these particles come from and how they behave
Instrument Description - CIRBE The Colorado Inner Radiation Belt Experiment, or CIRBE, was launched on April 15th, 2023, into a sun-synchronous orbit with a 97 4 o degree inclination and a 509 kilometer altitude
CIRBE CubeSat finds new radiation belts after solar storm NASA is highlighting new research from the Colorado Inner Radiation Belt Experiment (CIRBE) CubeSat Designed at built at CU Boulder and LASP, CIRBE is conducting sophisticated, fine-grain measurements of the Van Allen Belts
NASA CubeSat Finds New Radiation Belts After May 2024 Solar Storm CIRBE was designed and built by LASP at the University of Colorado Boulder and was launched through NASA's CubeSat Launch Initiative (CSLI) The mission is sponsored by NASA's Heliophysics Flight Opportunities for Research and Technology (H-FORT) program
Science News spotlights cubesat research - University of Colorado Boulder Research from the Colorado Inner Radiation Belt Experiment (CIRBE) CubeSat is being showcased by Science News Designed at built at CU Boulder and the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, CIRBE is conducting sophisticated, fine-grain measurements of the Van Allen Belts