On 7 December 2011, the station's 35 m-diameter dish antenna was hoisted into place. The operation took several hours and had to wait for a calm day with no wind.[2] The station underwent tests in 2012 and was fully operational in 2013.[3]
Malargüe Station was one of the stations providing communications, tracking and data download from the Rosetta spacecraft.[4]
20kW CW High Power Amplifier (HPA) it was created by Rheinmetall Italia S.p.A. (Italy). The monitoring and control system was implemented by Microsis srl (Italy). A 500W ASI Ka transmitter (Italian Space Agency) has been installed for Ka band transmission experiments carried out jointly with NASA. The transmitter was made by Rheinmetall Italia S.p.A. (Italy) and Microsis srl (Italy).
Scientific use
Due to its location far from the large antennas of the NASA network for Very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) , Malargüe Station is particularly able to contribute to the location of astronomical radio sources in the Southern hemisphere.[5][6]
^Jacobs, Christopher S and de Vicente, J and Dugast, M and Garcia-Mir, C and Goodhart, CE and Horiuchi, S and Lowe, ST and Madde, R and Mercolino, M and Naudet, CJ (2013). Extending the X/Ka Celestial Reference Frame over the South Polar Cap: Results from combined NASA-ESA Deep Space Network baselines to Malargue, Argentina. Proceedings of the 21st EVGA Symposium. p. 1.{{cite conference}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Garcia-Mir, C and Sotuela, I and Jacobs, CS and Clark, JE and Naudet, CJ and White, LA and Madde, R and Mercolino, M and Pazos, D and Bourda, G. (2014). The X/Ka Celestial Reference Frame: towards a GAIA frame tie. 12th European VLBI Network Symposium and Users Meeting (EVN 2014). Vol. 3.{{cite conference}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)