MegSat (Meggiorin Satellite) is part of Meggiorin Group, a group of 13 companies that
is a leader in the field of radio telecommunications and mobile phone products.
MegSat is specialized in designing and developing complete solutions for data
transmission applicable to different sectors - from energy distribution companies to major
industrial and oil sectors, from the environmental and infrastructure sector to that of
transport.
With its 30 years of experience in the field of telecommunications, the company has
developed highly specialized know-how, so that today MegSat is capable of providing its
customers with the best technical and management solutions.
On 28 April 1999 and on 26 September 2000, MegSat launched the first two of a small
constellation of microsatellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO), with the aim of starting a
system of competitive and technologically innovative services, especially conceived to
collect and process data acquired with the "Store and Forward" method from
plants supplying water, gas and energy, as well as from data-loggers for environmental,
industrial and transport monitoring.
MegSat is also licensed to use other constellations of LEO satellites sending and
receiving data in "Near Real Time", thereby providing in particular transport
monitoring services. Furthermore, the company has the possibility to use geostationary
satellites, which allow for the transmission of large quantities of data.
In order to meet the needs resulting from the most different application fields, mobile
telephony systems (GSM and GPRS technology), commuted telephone network and dedicated
radio repeaters may also be used when and where necessary.
All this allows MegSat to offer a service that represents the best technical and
economic compromise, fitting the real needs of the customer and of the project under
study.
MegSat microsatellites, completely designed and developed within MegSat laboratories in
Brescia, are an essence of high-technology intended as a multi-payload instrument, capable
of providing an easy access to space for all potential users, ultimately reducing program
costs and time.
The system proposed by MegSat consists of new concept microsatellites, compact ground
terminals with a long-term performance guarantee and wholly energy autonomous, and a
complete ground station including a flexible, high speed data processing system.
Each microsatellite is directly and autonomously controlled and managed from MegSat
ground stations in Brescia. The satellites have a parallelepiped shape and use a gravity
gradient boom for stabilization.