Suggested Edit for Satellite
Suggested by therman89 on: 2025-11-19 13:22
Citation: -
Verdict: Approved
Reviewed by - on: 2025-11-20 14:55
| Name | HUNITY |
| NORAD ID | 98537 |
| Followed NORAD ID | - |
| Alternative Names | NMHH-1, HG1NMHH |
| Description | HUNITY is a 3P PocketQube platform (external dimensions: 178 mm × 50 mm × 50 mm), and the most recent satellite developed by BME as part of an academic program led by students and lecturers. The satellite is designed and built to fly on board Alba Orbital’s ‘Flight 10’ PocketQube rideshare mission. HUNITY is going to be deployed at Low Earth Orbit (LEO) using Alba Orbital’s own AlbaPod deployer. The mission serves as a test flight for BME’s latest redundant PocketQube platform, featuring deployable solar panels. It also demonstrates the use of magnetic‐reluctance BLDC motors for attitude control. In addition, the satellite carries an independent payload from SZESAT, six high-school student experiments, and an ASIC experiment mounted on a deployable PCB. |
| Owner/Operator | - |
| Status |
|
| Countries of Origin | |
| Website | https://gnd.bme.hu/hunity |
| Dashboard URL | - |
| Launch Date | Nov. 20, 2025, 6:18 p.m. |
| Deploy Date | - |
| Image | ![]() |
| Field | Previous | Suggested |
|---|---|---|
| Description | HUNITY is a 3P PocketQube platform (external dimensions: 178 mm × 50 mm × 50 mm), and the most recent satellite developed by BME as part of an academic program led by students and lecturers. The NMHH-1 satellite is designed and built to fly on board Alba Orbital’s ‘Flight 10’ PocketQube rideshare mission. HUNITY is going to be deployed at Low Earth Orbit (LEO) using Alba Orbital’s own AlbaPod deployer. | HUNITY is a 3P PocketQube platform (external dimensions: 178 mm × 50 mm × 50 mm), and the most recent satellite developed by BME as part of an academic program led by students and lecturers. The satellite is designed and built to fly on board Alba Orbital’s ‘Flight 10’ PocketQube rideshare mission. HUNITY is going to be deployed at Low Earth Orbit (LEO) using Alba Orbital’s own AlbaPod deployer. The mission serves as a test flight for BME’s latest redundant PocketQube platform, featuring deployable solar panels. It also demonstrates the use of magnetic‐reluctance BLDC motors for attitude control. In addition, the satellite carries an independent payload from SZESAT, six high-school student experiments, and an ASIC experiment mounted on a deployable PCB. |
