DocumentCode
2622683
Title
Telescience in the space station era
Author
Schmerling, E.R.
Author_Institution
NASA, Washington, DC, USA
fYear
1988
fDate
9-11 Nov 1988
Firstpage
87
Lastpage
91
Abstract
Telescience refers to the development of systems where participants, involved in research in space can access their fellow scientists and the appropriate NASA services before flight, during flight, and after flight, preferably from their home institutions and through the same equipment. Telescience requires integration of available technologies to develop computer environments that maintain interoperability across different disciplines and different portions of the lifetimes of space experiments, called teledesign, teleoperations, and teleanalysis. Participants in the NASA Telescience Testbed Program are using a rigid prototyping approach to evaluate the necessary technologies and select the options and tradeoffs that best suit their accustomed modalities. The concept of transaction management is described, where the emphasis is placed on the effects of commands, whether event-generated onboard the spacecraft or sent up from the ground. Interoperability, security, and privacy issues are also discussed, and the Telescience Testbed Pilot Program is described
Keywords
satellite relay systems; NASA services; Telescience Testbed Pilot Program; computer environments; interoperability; privacy; security; space station; teleanalysis; teledesign; teleoperations; telescience; transaction management; Aerospace engineering; Costs; Design engineering; Fellows; Instruments; Maintenance engineering; NASA; Space stations; Space technology; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electronics and Aerospace Conference, 1988. How will Space and Terrestrial Systems Share the Future? Conference Proceedings, IEEE EASCON '88, 21st Annual
Conference_Location
Arlington, VA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/EASCON.1988.11224
Filename
11224
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