Telemetry Made Simple: Rocket Phone Home 53
UserID 3.14 writes "This article from science daily talks about a communications module that will be strapped to the rockets of a shuttle or other payload delivery vehicle. It can be used to provide constant telemetry by making a cell phone call using the Globalstar Network. Does this mean that if you use a cell phone in space, even there people will ask you to step outside?" See NASA's web page about the Flight Modem, which seems to be very much a work in progress
No... (Score:2)
"We've got to call Mission Control about..."
"No way dude, I just got another frag; yes!"
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pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate [ncsu.edu].
Using a cell phone in flight? (Score:1)
Must be because there are no stewardesses to tell you to turn them off.
GSM == Global Satellite Management? (Score:3)
Just so long as they don't try to WAP-enable the launch vehicles, I think we'll be juuust fine...
The significance of this (Score:1)
This is certainly an interesting application of cell phone technology and the existing cell phone network - NASA's page [nasa.gov] mentions savings of multiple hundreds of thousands of dollars per launch.
However, it's hard to see what the significance is overall. Satellites have always been able to communicate in via "realtime telemetry", and could hardly function otherwise.
I think the big thing here is simply that it decreases the amount of special instrumentation needed - any comments from the group?
Hmm (Score:1)
Batteries (Score:1)
Hope they have some good batteries on it. Or do they simply plug it in to the onboard 12V cigarette lighter?
Could be interesting (Score:2)
Who is correct? At this point, it's difficult to tell. Some detractors would argue that this technology presents an undue intrusion into existing social models. Cell-phone and other long distance communication technology is a revolutionary alterance in the existing capacity of communication; it alters the capacity for travel, communication, and intellectual exchange in ways that our current economic structure and techonological understanding may not be prepared to accomodate. Perhaps glitches in this untested process may condemn cell phones to a footnote in our history.
Supporters, on the other hand, say that these kind of cell phones an important step forward for communications and society. With previous types of cell-phones, not all users could not take advantage of the most important technological benefits gained from modern-day research. Telemetry, they say, opens the proverbial floodgates by bringing this technology out of the laboratories and into the homes of the every-day user.
There is some probably some merit to both viewpoints. Certainly, society as a whole will encounter some friction as it shifts to accomodate the mobility capacity and access provided by cell phones. However, the end result may be worth the infrastructural shifts; existing insular communities may not be as structurally capable as their newer cousin.
Will telemetry sink or swim? The question is still up in the air; with many unique forces and viewpoints at work, we'll likely see many interesting challenges and confrontations for the pioneers in the telecommuncations field. Whatever the final result is, it's sure to give the key players on all sides of the issue a trial by fire.
Yu Suzuki
NASA phone home (Score:2)
I have to wonder if this is really going to be used by NASA for a few reasons well mainly, if you look at the timeline ont he NASA homepage, its about 6 years, and we all know how fast technology changes. 6 years before this is even used? Or did I misread it? Anyways it seems like a cost effective idea but I wonder if anyone knows of more specs on this, e.g.:
GPS receiver; potential other sensors (e.g., accelerometers)
Internet protocol (IP) communications and software tools
GPS is readily available already so unless they're banking on some new hyper technical version, why was this listed? IP communications and software tools... Anyone know of any information on software of specs of the IP side of things, IPv6, v4, what? Also if this comes into play I wonder what will companies like Cisco, and Juniper do in order to capture this market, anyone with links to information like that? It'd be some neat Sunday night reading.
Overheard at NASA (Score:3)
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How Interesting! (Score:2)
But seriously, this could be very interesting. I am guessing that this means that anyone who gets the number would also be able to call the astronauts on the shuttle ... unless of course our government is smart enough to block such a thing. (Hmm. Wait a second. DAMN!) It was worth a thought, though. Is there anything that the government doesn't control, here? Com'on. THINK! :)
"Does this mean that if you use a cell phone in space, even there people will ask you to step outside?"
Bah. Pointless and corny - I would have taken it out of the article.
No, because... (Score:2)
No, because in space, no one can hear your cell phone calls.
Been There, Done That (Score:4)
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Save a buck or two! (Score:4)
May I humbly suggest a cost-saving measure:
Rocket: I'd like to make a collect call please.
Operator: Who may I say is calling?
Rocket: Bob I'm-at-23.494923N-82.293823W-3042.4293-feet-below
Operator: One moment please.
*Somewhere in a control room, a telephone rings*
Chart Plotter: Hello?
Operator: I have a collect call from Bob I'm-at-23.494923N-82.293823W-3042.4293-feet-below
Chart Plotter: Wrong number.
*Chart Plotter hangs up*
Operations Manager: Who was that?
Chart Plotter: The rocket. It's over Cuba.
the other way ... (Score:1)
Does this mean you can phone the satellite (for whatever reason)?
Why not use a TCP/IP like protocol for non-critical telemetry if the data rate is low on average ... whatever happened to Teledesic?
Roaming charges? (Score:2)
Roaming Charges? oh my loord ...
look at all of those zones that you used during that conversation....
what you talking bout Willis (Score:2)
Sorry to seem like I'm flaming or starting a flamewar, but I haven't seen anyone, or read an article condemning anything in regards to cellular minus the people attempting to halt drivers from speaking on a cell unless they're hands free for obvious reasons. Maybe a link to what your intending to say would help me out here.
Ummm Maybe this should be argued from NASA's standpoint (in relevance to this article), they are the ones who would suffer from intrusion should anyone intercept or hijack one of the sessions. How is NASA, by using this technology snooping on anything, I think your mistaking NASA with NSA.
How did you mangle this connotation from the article at any point. You've confused me to the extent that...
... well...
I just give up you confused the shit out of me their guy.
Privacy you gotta love it [antioffline.com]
GSP-1620 (Score:2)
Major Tom (Score:4)
Ground Control to Major Tom
Ground Control to Major Tom
Charge your mobile phone and put your hands free on.
Ground Control to Major Tom
Commencing dialup, cell-phone on
Check phone number and may ATT's love be with you
(spoken)
Ten, Nine, Eight, Seven, Six, Five, Four, Three, Two, One, Liftoff
This is Ground Control to Major Tom
You've really been connected
And the papers want to know whose telco you use
Now it's time to use the hands free if you dare
"This is Major Tom to Ground Control
I'm stepping through the door
And my cell phone's floating in a most peculiar way
And your voice sounds very different today
For here
Am I sitting in a tin can
Far above the world
My cell-phone's been cut off
And there's nothing I can do
Though I'm past one hundred thousand miles
I'm feeling very still
And I think my cell-phone knows which tower to use
Tell customer support I love them very much - they know"
Ground Control to Major Tom
Your cell phone's dead, there's something wrong
Can you hear me, Major Tom?
Can you hear me, Major Tom?
Can you hear me, Major Tom?
Can you....
"Here am I floating round my tin can
Far above the Moon
my cell phone's been cut off
And there's nothing I can do."
There goes yet another essential truth of SciFi (Score:1)
Oh well, it was good while it lasted.
Re:Using a cell phone in flight? (Score:2)
If you love God, burn a church!
expensive... (Score:1)
I don't get it... (Score:4)
I'll bet astronauts don't have to put their seat backs and tray tables in their full upright and locked positions, either. Lucky bastards.
Re:Save a buck or two! (Score:1)
Operator: I have a collect call from Bob I'm-at-23.494923N-82.293823W-3042.4293-feet-below- sea-level, will you accept charges?
Cuba is 3000 feet below sea level?
Maybe they decided to take over Holland.
Re:Been There, Done That (Score:1)
That's gotta be like a 1 pound payload. Something tells me that "amateur" is a bit of a misnomer :)
This is for "Sounding Rockets" (Score:1)
Re:NASA phone home (Score:3)
The traditional way of doing this is to put an inertial platform and navigation unit on the rocket. That is what is used on most lauch vehicles.
Telemetry data is usually downlinked as a synchronous serial stream composed of fixed length telemetry frames. Reed-Solomon and convolutional error correcting codes may be used to improve the bit-error-rate and link margins. Nobody, that I know of, uses IP for any air-to-ground communication links. IP is widely used for transferring data between ground stations and control centers.
One problem with the "rocket phone" is the low bit rate. Most launch vehicles have telemetry data rates in the 200 kbps to 600 kbps range.
Range safety is an important issue. Most range safety systems use multiple sources of data, such as launch vehicle telemetry, tracking antenna angle encoders, multiple C-band radar systems and optical trackers. You have to know where the rocket is, where it is heading, and whether the engines and other systems are working properly.
Cheaper, faster, better (Score:1)
Now we are seeing an extension of that same concept into communications. NASA has been using off-the-shelf components for communications components for a long time, but up until now most in-flight communications have come in via the TDRSS satellites. Taking a step toward using a commercial infrastructure instead is a pretty big deal.
-Keslin [keslin.com], the naked nerd girl
I guess it's better... (Score:1)
Re:Save a buck or two! (Score:4)
Nobody realistically expects version 1.0 to come out without any bugs now, do they? =P
tracking devices for launched items (Score:1)
Re:No, because... (Score:1)
Damn, too bad you can't figure out a simple spam decoding!
i wonder if (Score:1)
I can't believe that nobody's said this... (Score:1)
But how do you calculate the long distance charges?
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space phones (Score:1)
This is who they were looking for (Score:2)
-- Greg
Globarstar is going the way of Iridium (Score:1)
Oh yeah, they also have to make the system, unlike Iridium, work in buildings, or anywhere in the vicinity of a city. With Iridium you have to go through hell to try and make a call with tall buildings around.
Cellular Technology == Ground Based Antenna Towers (Score:2)
It obviously isn't going to be using cellular phone bands, which operate over relatively short distances to a network of ground-based cellular antenna towers, arranged in a hexagonal pattern (cells). The towers are allocated one of seven groups of frequencies, so that each tower is not using the same bandwidth as its 6 nearest neighbors. Transmission power of both the phones and towers must be kept low, so that it doesn't interfere with phones and towers more than 2 cell distances away. The geometry of this arrangement is clearly designed as a 2 dimentional coverage area, only on the surface of the planet. There certainly won't be cellular towers along the way to space.
Reading the NASA article, which avoids the unfortunately cellular analogy, it appears that a great portion of the cost savings is due to using only GPS to track the rocket's position, instead of using radar stations.
Re:This is who they were looking for (Score:1)
Finding engineers that believe in "better, faster, cheaper" is easy. Finding NASA managers and bureaucrats that believe in it is the tough part. :-(
Re:I don't get it... (Score:2)
If you had read the article, you'd know that the thing NASA is using is actually a satellite phone, so it shouldn't have that problem. The term "cell phone" apparently got added to the story in an effort to explain it to the masses.
Re:I don't get it... (Score:1)
Re:Using a cell phone in flight? (Score:1)
Re:Save a buck or two! (Score:1)
Mission Control #1: No.
Mission Control #2: Who was that?
Mission Control #1: It was our rocket. It's a boy.
Mission Control #2: Wait a second.... (flips through large manual). HEY! It's not a boy, it's a GIRL. Range Safety! We've got a bird out there with a sexual identity crisis!
Range Safety: I'm on it. It says here that Atlas is a masculine name. I don't see the problem on my screens.
Mission Control #1: She's developing nominal thrust. And she's vaguely cigar shaped too.
Mission Control #2: In cases like this we just wait to see what happens. Perhaps she'll achieve orbital insertion. Plenty of time to evaluate the situation before re-entry.
Lame Joke (Score:2)
Why this won't work: (Score:1)
Cell-satellite beams aren't designed to hand-off subscriber units that are climbing through 100 miles at 9500 mph.
The reliability of this connection is going to suck. Trying to time the launch so you get good cell coverage with minimal handoff will make the old solution the economical one.
--Blair
"Return to your homepages. There's nothing to see here."
Re:Globarstar is going the way of Iridium (Score:2)
The scarry thing is, compared to Globalstar, Iridium is 10x better at making these sorts of calls.
I think that NASA is making a huge mistake by picking Globalstar over Iridium. First, Globalstar only works in Latitudes between 60 degrees north & 60 degrees south. It turns itself off when it is over the oceans to recharge its batteries, and when its over the land, it needs to be near a basestation to make it work
Iridium does all of its call processing in space, so it will work anyplace in the world, during any time of the day.
Re:The significance of this (Score:3)
Re:Cheaper, faster, better (Score:1)
This began in earnest back in 1991 I believe (someone correct me if I'm wrong please) when Military and Space Exploration budgets were being hacked in half. (Part of an attempt to balance the ever growing budget)
NASA was told that they needed to explore more commercially availible products and begin using as many as they could (without sacrificing mission safety) in order to save money. They have done a fairly good job of it.
It's good to see that they are starting to use commercially availible telecommunications systems also. One point that should be made however, is that this is not a Cellular system that we are talking about. This is a Satilite telephone system. Cellular systems are land based and have no satilite components within them directly. They may be linked to other systems through some sort of satilite (by an outside provider) but in and of themselves, all cellular systems rest firmly on the ground.
It's pretty awsome that NASA feels that satilite phones are reliable enough to include as communications links for missions. :)
Re:what you talking bout Willis (Score:1)
Watching the telecommunications industry develop with this new system for E911 (Lat and Long. provided to Emergency service.) is going to be loads of fun. Companies are trying to develope software and databases full of location information that they can sell to cellular companies so that you can be notified when you are driving near something that might be of interest to you.
From my understanding, these services are going to be optional for you, and no-one (entity) is going to be getting your location information, the network servers will recieve it and respond back with a short message alerting you of whats around you.
My guess if that Mr. S. beleives people will be worried that their location is being given to someone that they don't know and that it could be concidered an invasion of privacy.
Think about this one example:
It's issues like this that can raise fears in people. However, there are tons of benifits that could come from it also. For example:
So, do cell phones have a future, or are they going to invade privacy to the point that people will stop using them and find another means to communicate? My guess is that cellular companies want to stay in business selling cellular service.
Re:NASA phone home (Score:1)
CDMA service works on GPS provided timing. The phone has to be sync'd up to the gps system on three (we currently use three, but the technology provides specs for six) antennas in the phone. There is a fourth antenna in each phone right now, but it is for searching the network for your next cellsite.
Also, with a lauch date of six years from now, NASA may be thinking about the fact that 3G Cellular telecommunications will be availible. Data transfer rates right now are a pathetic 14.4 kbps. That will soon be changing. The first step CDMA2000 will move the transfer rate up to 144 kbps, and then full 3G will be at 1.44 Mbps.
Full 3G has been expected to come out for a while now, however there have been many delays in it's coming. Lucent [lucent.com] has some information posted. But not the hard and fast facts most people will be looking for. Oh, and here [lucent.com] is a cute picture of what they want as an all IP based cellular network.
Re:Globarstar is going the way of Iridium (Score:1)
Older analog cell phones had the same problem. They were a little more reliable around buildings because the base stations we ussually sitting on top of the building in downtown areas, but inside was murder. CDMA and TDMA have helped relieve this problem because they are noise tolerant technologies.
GSP-1620 Satellite Packet Data Modem (Score:1)
Just in case any of you wanna build you own datahaven node in orbit.
Re:Cellular Technology == Ground Based Antenna Tow (Score:1)
Re:Globarstar is going the way of Iridium (Score:1)