The Philippine Scientific Earth Observation Microsatellite (PHL-Microsat) was a satellite program carried by the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) of the Philippines in cooperation with the Tohoku and Hokkaido University of Japan.

Quick Facts Program overview, Country ...
PHL-Microsat
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Program logo
Program overview
CountryPhilippines / Japan
OrganizationDepartment of Science and Technology
University of the Philippines
Hokkaido University
Tohoku University
PurposeMicrosatellite development and operation
StatusCompleted
Program history
Duration2014–2018
Successes3
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Background

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Inside the PEDRO Center.

Hokkaido University and Tohoku University of Japan initiated a project to send 50 microsatellites into space by 2050. The project will photograph aftermaths of natural disasters, partnering with governments, universities and other organizations based in Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Mongolia, Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. Two satellites are commissioned for the Philippine government.[1][2]

Diwata-1 is the first satellite of the venture and is also a part of the Department of Science and Technology's Philippine Scientific Earth Observation Micro-Satellite (PHL-Microsat) Program[3] which was initiated in December 2014 by the government agency.[4] The satellite is an updated version of the Raijin-2, which was developed by the two Japanese universities.[5] The satellite was deployed from the International Space Station on April 27, 2016.[6] Diwata-1 was replaced by Diwata-2 sometime in 2018.

The Philippine Department of Science and Technology (DOST) announced on June 29, 2017 that two CubeSats or nanosatellites will be launch in 2018.[7] One of these satellites was Maya-1, a nanosatellite developed under the Kyushu Institute of Technology-led Birds-2 project, was launched to space. The equipment is the first nanosatellite of the Philippines and is also placed under the PHL-Microsat program. It is to be deployed from the ISS sometime in August 2018,[8] On August 10, Maya-1 was deployed from the ISS along with satellites from Bhutan and Malaysia.

The PHL-Microsat program was officially succeeded by the STAMINA4Space Program in August 2018. The last satellite launched under the PHL-Microsat program, Maya-1 was decommissioned in November 2020.[9][10]

Phases

The project is divided into five sub-projects or phases.[11]

More information Project No., Objective ...
Project No.Objective
1Development of Diwata-1 and Diwata-2 microsatellites
2Development of a ground receiving station
3Data processing, archiving and distribution subsystem development
4Calibration and validation of remote sensing instruments
5Remote sensing data product development
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Mission summary

More information Designation, Launch ...
DesignationLaunchDeploymentSummary
DateSiteVehicleDateSiteVehicle
Diwata-1March 23, 2016 Cape Canaveral SLC-41 Atlas V 401April 27, 2016ISS Kibo moduleFirst microsatellite of the Philippines
Diwata-2October 29, 2018 Tanegashima Space Center LA-Y H-IIAReplacement of Diwata-1
Maya-1June 29, 2018 Cape Canaveral SLC-40 Falcon 9 Full ThrustAugust 10, 2018ISS Kibo moduleFirst nanosatellite of the Philippines.
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References

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