All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
Collaborators on the DISRUPT project include Delft University of Technology and University College Dublin.
Marco Langbroek, a lecturer at Delft University of Technology's aerospace engineering department, suggested on his blog that the object might be a Composite-Overwrapped Pressure Vessel (COPV).
The Aerospace faculty of Delft University of Technology (TU Delft) used the Kosmos 482 reentry as a test case for their reentry model, developed with the TU Delft Astrodynamics Toolkit (Tudat).
TU Delft's final assessment predicted that Kosmos 482 would reenter around 6:40 UTC near 38 degrees south and 130 degrees east, just south of Australia, with a noted uncertainty interval of 1.5 hours.
Four Delft University of Technology students founded Revolv Space in 2022 to develop mechanisms and moving parts for the small satellite market.
Marco Langbroek is a satellite tracker from the Netherlands and a Lecturer in Space Situational Awareness at Delft Technical University.
Dr. Raha Hakimdavar was awarded a NAF-Fulbright Research Scholarship to the Technical University of Delft in the Netherlands.
Steven van de Heijning studied Space Systems Engineering at Delft University of Technology.
ISISPACE was created as a spin-off from TU Delft’s Delfi-C3 CubeSat project on 6 January 2006.
Dawn Aerospace’s founding team met in 2010 while working on suborbital rockets at Delft University of Technology.
Jeffrey Apeldoorn supports the Society of Aerospace Students “Leonardo da Vinci” at Delft University of Technology.
Innovative Solutions in Space was established in 2006 as a spinoff of Delft University of Technology.