Kor37 9 Posted November 20, 2008 NASA Successfully Tests Interplanetary Internetby Thomas Ricker, posted Nov 19th 2008 at 3:01PM NASA is reporting the first successful tests of its Deep Space Network modeled after Earth's own Internet. Instead of using TCP/IP, however, the interplanetary communication network relies upon DTN (Disruption-Tolerant Networking) co-developed by none other than Google's Vinton Cerf. As such, NASA's network does not assume a continuous end-to-end connection -- if a link is lost due to solar storms or a planetary eclipse, the communication node will store the information until the connection is re-established. So, what's the big deal you rightly ask, after all, we've been (purposely) transmitting data to and from space for a half-century. As Leigh Torgerson, manager of NASA's DTN Experiment Operations Center explains it: "In space today, an operations team must manually schedule each link and generate all the commands to specify which data to send, when to send it, and where to send it. With standardized DTN, this can all be done automatically." Testing of the Deep Space Network began in October with twice-weekly communications between NASA's Epoxi spacecraft (on a mission to rendezvous with Comet Hartley 2) and nine ground-based nodes meant to simulate Mars landers, orbiters, and operation centers. The International Space Station is scheduled to join the testing next summer. Although the nature of the data transmitted wasn't specified, we can only presume that it was laced with Google ads for Mr. Lee's Greater Hong Kong. Cool! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ian Wood 1 Posted November 20, 2008 Alright! That's pretty neat! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
He Who Shall Not Be Named 2 Posted November 26, 2008 Big deal. The code can only go as fast as the speed of light. And just think of data loss / corruption due to solar winds, black holes, etc. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites