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Launch

Launch Date:

30 June 2021

Launch Mission:

Transporter-2

Launch Operator:

SpaceX

Rocket:

Falcon 9

Launch Vehicle:

Launch Location:

Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, FL, USA

COSPAR id:

In Space

Host:

PACE-1

Type:

Satellite, Cubesat

Operator:

NASA

Location:

Low Earth Orbit, Sun-Synchronous Orbit

COSPAR id:

2021-059AG

Return

Return Date:

Return Mission:

Return Vehicle:

Landing Location:

COSPAR id:

Updated:

8/7/24

status:

Operational

Mission Profile

Partners:

Arno Geens

Curator, Designer

Artist(s)

Collection

This artwork is part of a collection:

PACE-1

2021

Feynman diagrams laser-etched on spacecraft exterior.

One of NASA’s newest spacecraft to reach orbit features artwork that is close to home: stylized depictions of Feynman diagrams, laser-etched into the outer emissivity skin of the PACE-1 6U satellite. The PACE-1 satellite is part of NASA’s Payload Accelerator for CubeSat Endeavors (PACE) Initiative, a project to test a series of potential payloads for cubesats, which are tiny modular satellites. Arno Geens, a designer and former visual strategist at JPL, which Caltech manages for NASA, created an artwork that drew inspiration from diagrams created by the late Richard Feynman, professor of physics and Nobel laureate. “Feynman developed a uniquely elegant and creative visual language to depict an intrinsically complex process,” Geens says. “His diagrams depict the interaction of subatomic particles, such as the kind that would occur from radiation affecting a satellite’s scientific payload. By honoring them as true works of art, his diagrams directly reflect the satellite’s objective.” The spacecraft engineering team, the artist, and co-curator Luke Idziak collaborated to determine how to etch art onto the side of the cubesat without affecting its ability to perform its job. “We wanted to find a way to depict invisible things happening inside the spacecraft; to show vanishingly small processes—particle collisions—through an artistic medium that could be accessible to wide audience,” he says. Idziak sees the artwork as both a continuation of NASA’s legacy of art in space, which includes the Voyager Golden Record, and an homage to the bygone era of objects that are functional and creative, such as illuminated medieval manuscripts. “Every spacecraft is a custom-built creation, with countless hours of effort distilled into it,” Idziak says. “By including artists in the development process, we have an opportunity to make new spacecraft not only functional, but beautiful and engaging to a wide audience as well.”—ROBERT PERKINS, Caltech Magazine. This artwork is part of the first orbital art exhibition curated by the Spacecraft Agency for NASA. Other artists in this exhibition are Selby Sohn, Mike Dabro and Steven Johnon. The Artwork was launched on june 30th 2021 from Cape Canaveral, Florida aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and is currently operational in a sun-synchronous orbit.
Dimensions:

20 x 30 cm

Medium:

Laser etching on aluminum spacecraft body

Genre:

Feynman

Arno Geens

Belgium

2021

2021

Operational
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