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To help Australian industry successfully launch their products into space requires the highest level of reliability for mission success in extreme environments.  The NSQN will provide a combined total of $1 billion dollars of space qualification infrastructure for immediate, cost-effective testing and accelerated space mission design and delivery.

The National Space Qualification Network evolved from the desire to provide a high-quality sovereign space qualification service to help grow the Australian Space Manufacturing Industry.  The consortium of six founding partners – The Australian National University, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO), Steritech, University of Wollongong Australia, Saber Astronautics, and Nova Systems – came together to drive the vision of Australian-led and managed space testing facilities.

To help Australian industry successfully launch their products into space requires the highest level of reliability for mission success in extreme environments.  The NSQN will provide a combined total of $1 billion dollars of space qualification infrastructure for immediate, cost-effective testing and accelerated space mission design and delivery.

The new radiation capabilities are world-leading and will accelerate Australian space manufacturing growth, which drives the increased international competitiveness for Australian space technology.

With the NSQN, businesses can boost space mission assurance and success through knowhow, rigorous testing, and qualification right here in Australia.

The NSQN is supported by funding from the Australian Space Agency’s Space Infrastructure Fund and the ACT Government.

Mission goals

Build the next generation of Australian space testing qualification capabilities and drive and shape space testing education and culture

Founding Partners

  • The Australian National University
  • Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO)
  • Steritech
  • University of Wollongong Australia
  • Saber Astronautics
  • Nova Systems

Milestones

  • The NSQN is already a cornerstone for the majority of Australian missions active in Low Earth Orbit (LEO), including significant missions like UNSW-Canberra's Space M2/M3, Optimus platform of Space Machines Company, Fleet Space Technologies, and Skykraft, to name a few.
  • In August 2023, the University of Melbourne, in collaboration with Inovor Technologies, Neumann Space, and Nova Systems, concluded the final space environmental testing of the SpIRIT satellite at the NSTF and launched successfully in December 2023. The Space Machines Company conducted space environmental testing of their Optimus spacecraft at the NSTF which successfully launched March 2024.
CubeSat SpaceX Launch

Breaking news

Three Aussie-made and NSQN-tested CubeSats are launching as part of SpaceX’s Transporter-11 mission

19-08-2024

This is a historic moment for Australia in space. Three Aussie-made and NSQN-tested CubeSats are launching as part of SpaceX’s Transporter-11 mission. ANU InSpace Mission Specialist Eduardo Trifoni and his team at the National Space Test Facility (NSTF) have worked tirelessly for the past few years to ensure the safety and success of these launches, as well as three others (Binar-2, 3, and 4) which have recently arrived at the International Space Station and will soon be deployed in orbit. NSTF is one of the ANU space capabilities at Mount Stromlo and a node of the National Space Qualification Network (NSQN).

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