Spelling suggestions: "subject:"highlevel data link control (HDLC)"" "subject:"highlevel data link coontrol (HDLC)""
1 |
SPACE COMMUNICATION DEMONSTRATION USING INTERNET TECHNOLOGYIsrael, Dave, Parise, Ron, Hogie, Keith, Criscuolo, Ed 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 21, 2002 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / This paper presents work being done at NASA/GSFC by the Operating Missions as Nodes on the Internet (OMNI) project to demonstrate the application of Internet communication technologies to space communication. The goal is to provide global addressability and standard network protocols and applications for future space missions. It describes the communication architecture and operations concepts that will be deployed and tested on a Space Shuttle flight in July 2002. This is a NASA Hitchhiker mission called Communication and Navigation Demonstration On Shuttle (CANDOS). The mission will be using a small programmable transceiver mounted in the Shuttle bay that can communicate through NASA’s ground tracking stations as well as NASA’s space relay satellite system. The transceiver includes a processor running the Linux operating system and a standard synchronous serial interface that supports the High-level Data Link Control (HDLC) framing protocol. One of the main goals will be to test the operation of the Mobile IP protocol (RFC 2002) for automatic routing of data as the Shuttle passes from one contact to another. Other protocols to be utilized onboard CANDOS include secure login (SSH), UDP-based reliable file transfer (MDP), and blind commanding using UDP. The paper describes how each of these standard protocols available in the Linux operating system can be used to support communication with a space vehicle. It will discuss how each protocol is suited to support the range of special communication needs of space missions.
|
2 |
INTERNET TECHNOLOGY FOR FUTURE SPACE MISSIONSRash, James, Hogie, Keith, Casasanta, Ralph 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 21, 2002 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / Ongoing work at National Aeronautics and Space Administration Goddard Space Flight Center
(NASA/GSFC), seeks to apply standard Internet applications and protocols to meet the technology
challenge of future satellite missions. Internet protocols and technologies are under study as a future
means to provide seamless dynamic communication among heterogeneous instruments, spacecraft,
ground stations, constellations of spacecraft, and science investigators.
The primary objective is to design and demonstrate in the laboratory the automated end-to-end
transport of files in a simulated dynamic space environment using off-the-shelf, low-cost,
commodity-level standard applications and protocols. The demonstrated functions and capabilities
will become increasingly significant in the years to come as both earth and space science missions
fly more sensors and the present labor-intensive, mission-specific techniques for processing and
routing data become prohibitively.
This paper describes how an IP-based communication architecture can support all existing
operations concepts and how it will enable some new and complex communication and science
concepts. The authors identify specific end-to-end data flows from the instruments to the control
centers and scientists, and then describe how each data flow can be supported using standard Internet
protocols and applications. The scenarios include normal data downlink and command uplink as
well as recovery scenarios for both onboard and ground failures. The scenarios are based on an Earth
orbiting spacecraft with downlink data rates from 300 Kbps to 4 Mbps. Included examples are based
on designs currently being investigated for potential use by the Global Precipitation Measurement
(GPM) mission.
|
Page generated in 0.0782 seconds