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NINA. By Savannah Talkington. Italy Roma University Trieste University Florence University Bari University. Russia Cosmic Ray Laboratory, Moscow Engineering and Physics Institute. Collaborations. NINA 1 The Baikonur launch facility in Russia 10 th of July 1998 August 31 st , 1998.
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NINA By Savannah Talkington
Italy Roma University Trieste University Florence University Bari University Russia Cosmic Ray Laboratory, Moscow Engineering and Physics Institute Collaborations
NINA 1 The Baikonur launch facility in Russia 10th of July 1998 August 31st , 1998 NINA 2 The cosmodrome of Plesetsk in Russia July the 15th, 2000 Where Was I Hiding?
Goals • NINA has been built in order to investigate the nuclear and isotopic composition of low energy cosmic particles, by means of two satellite missions, NINA 1and NINA 2.
NINA 1 Instrumentation Launch Results
Instrumentation • Silicon Detector(Box D1) • On-board computer(Box D2) • Power supply(Box P) • Interface computer(Box E) • Resurs-01-N4Satellite
Silicon Detector NINA
On-Board Computer NINA
Interface Computer Duties • Receiving data from box D2 (On-Board Computer) • Re-coding the data from D2 in a format which is compatible with adding information of telemetry and the UT (Universal Time) to each event • Receiving telecommands from the satellite related to the box E status • Delivery of the final data to the telemetry of the satellite NINA
Power Supply NINA
Launch NINA
Results Galactic Cosmic Ray's Results Solar Energetic Particle's Results
NINA 2 Instrumentation Launch Results
Instrumentation Silicon Detector MITA Satellite
Silicon Detector NINA 2
MITA Satellite NINA 2
Launch NINA 2
Results More
Results Last Word