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Ïîèñêîâûå ñëîâà: þæîáñ áôìáîôéþåóëáñ áîïíáìéñ
KolbjÃårn Blix Dahle National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center (Arecibo Observatory)

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Kolbjorn Blix Dahle
Head of Marketing Department, AndÃåya Rocket Range


KolbjÃårn Blix Dahle is a former Officer in the Royal Norwegian Airforce. After 20 years working with fixed wing and helicopters he took the job as technical manager at the ALOMAR Observatory, AndÃåya, Norway in 2001. In 2007 he took the position as Head of Marketing at AndÃåya Rocket Range (ARR). From 2010 to 2011 he was Director of the UAS company ARANICA, partly owned by ARR. KolbjÃårn is married to Lill and they have 6 children, ranging from 23 to 5.

Abstract

2012 marks the beginning of the Norwegian space adventure, with the launch of the first sounding rocket, Ferdinand I, from AndÃåya Rocket Range August 18th, 1962. Since then, Norwegian space activity has grown, both at home and internationally. There have been large benefits for industry, for research and development, as well as society in general. Norwegian space activity is now represented on all continents, and is a large export industry. This national event will be celebrated at AndÃåya Rocket Range where a number of national and international guests will be invited. In its 50th year, AndÃåya Rocket Range and the Norwegian sounding rocket community is once again a rising star. After years of recess and declining funding for sounding rocket missions, two new projects were given â??good to goâ?? in December 2011 by the Norwegian Space Centre and the Norwegian Research Council.

ICI-4 will be the fourth sounding rocket project lead by Professor JÃåran Moen from the University of Oslo. The two-stage rocket will be launched from Ny-Ã:lesund at Svalbard, late 2013. The single-stage MAXIDUSTY I will mark the re-entry of TromsÃå University into the sounding rocket community. Launch will take place from AndÃåya during the summer of 2013. Both will be based on the Hotel Payload concept from AndÃåya Rocket Range, and they will be built, integrated and tested on-site at ARR. ARR is also working together with the Norwegian company NAMMO and the Norwegian Space Centre to investigate the possibility of establishing AndÃåya Rocket Range as a future mainland European launch site for small satellites. This will be a service dedicated to low, polar SSO satellites with a maximum height of 600km. The on-going investigations have payload weights of 10-40 kg as their main focus; rail launched using our proposed hybrid North Star Launch Vehicle and existing infrastructure at AndÃåya. First launch might take place in 2017.

Norway also has a well-functioning student satellite program â?' lead by AndÃåya Rocket Range. As we speak, three CubeSats are currently being worked at. The one closest to launch is the HiNCube made by Narvik University College. At the University of Oslo they are working at their 2U space weather demonstrator â?' CubeSTAR and in Trondheim, at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) their 2U CubeSat NUTS is taking shape.