SNOUG/src/Introduction.tex

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% Introduction.tex
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% SatNOGS Optical Unofficial Guide
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% Copyright (C) 2022, Jeff Moe
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% This document is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
% International Public License (CC BY-SA 4.0) by Jeff Moe.
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The SatNOGS Optical Unofficial Guide documents how to set up and run an
\gls{optical-ground-station} for the \gls{LSF}'s \gls{SatNOGS} network.
\section{Unofficial Guide Overview}
First, an overview of the this text, then the \gls{LSF},
some of it's key projects, such as the \gls{SatNOGS} network.
Chapters:
% Perhaps more LaTeXy ref XXX
\begin{itemize}
\item Satellites --- What are we looking at?
\item Ground Stations --- How Earth talks to satellites and back.
\item SatNOGS Optical Process Overview --- The big picture of what
hardware and software is needed to set up an optical ground station
for use on the distributed network.
\item Hardware --- Details on appropriate hardware configurations,
and example setups.
\item Software --- A look at the myriad software related to satellites,
and what works best at present for SatNOGS Optical.
\item Acquire --- Convert photons to bits. Pointing a camera at the
sky works.
\item Solve --- Pictures of stars reveal the time and location of
the photo. Plate solvers reviewed.
\item Detect --- The plate solver says where the photo is,
now detect if are there moving tracks that aren't stars that could
be satellites.
\item Identify --- With time, location, satellite detection, \glspl{TLE}
are overlaid and compared with detected satellites.
Satellite identification by computers and humans.
\item Upload --- When ready, data will be pushed to the SatNOGS network.
\item Support --- Where development is occurring and questions answered!
\end{itemize}
\section{Libre Space Foundation}
The \gls{LSF} supports
``free and accessible space for all, creating \gls{open-source} space technologies.''%
\footnote{\url{https://libre.space}}
\index{Open Source}
\begin{figure}[h!]
\includegraphics[keepaspectratio=true,height=1.10\textheight,width=1.00\textwidth,angle=0]{lsf-web.png}
\caption{Libre Space Foundation Website.}
\label{fig:lsf-web}
\index{Libre Space Foundation}
\end{figure}
Select \gls{LSF} projects:
\index{UPSat}
\begin{itemize}
\item SatNOGS --- Global network of satellite ground stations \\
\url{https://satnogs.org}
\item UPSat --- First open source hardware and software satellite in the world \\
\url{https://upsat.gr/}
\end{itemize}
\section{SatNOGS Network}
SatNOGS is the \gls{LSF}'s global network of satellite ground stations.
\begin{figure}[h!]
\includegraphics[keepaspectratio=true,height=1.10\textheight,width=1.00\textwidth,angle=0]{satnogs-web.png}
\caption{SatNOGS Website.}
\label{fig:satnogs-web}
\index{SatNOGS}
\end{figure}
\section{Network Status}
The SatNOGS \gls{RF} network has been running successfully for years.
Adding an optical network is a new development. At present there
are zero nodes on the network.
Some software already exists,
some is being ported from C to Python, and other parts remain to be done.
There is software available for acquiring optical data of satellites.
There is no facility at present for pushing data back to the network.