Friday, April 15, 2016

Rosetta/Philea Space Probe Data Collection and Management



In this blog we will examine the methods used by the European Space Agency (ESA) to incorporate data collection and management protocols within the system architecture of the Philae comet lander which landed on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko November 12th, 2014 (Howell, 2015).

The Philae lander and its mothership, the Rosetta space probe, was launched from the ESA’s French-Guiana launch facility in 2004. Following a 10-year chase, the Rosetta probe reached Comet 67P and deployed the Philae lander on mission to determine the comet’s physical structure and composition (ESA, 2014). Unfortunately, the lander’s harpoon anchoring system failed to operate properly resulting in the Philae coming to rest on the comet’s surface at an angle. As the lander’s solar panels were unable to provide enough power for the expected duration of the mission, Philea went silent after 64 hours of operation and was placed into hibernation (Grady, 2016). Despite this setback, the lander was still able to transmit a wealth of information about Comet 67P despite the less-than-perfect landing, a testament to excellent hardware design.

Aboard Philea, the CDMS (Command and Data Management Subsystem) engineered by the Hungarian SGF Company (SGF Technology Associated Co. LTD, 2015) was responsible controlling of all of the lander functions. According to SGF (SGF, n.d.), the CDMS is a modular design that, while on the comets surface, would collect and execute commands from Earth, send scientific and lander status to the nearby Rosetta spacecraft for retransmission to controllers, and control sequencing of the scientific instrument operations. 

The CDMS features a common motherboard that supports redundant sub-units including two DPUs (Data Processing Units), two RTC (Real Times Clocks), two CIUs (Central Interface Units), two Mass Memory boards, and a Power Distribution board. SFG states that the primary DPU performs payload operations while the secondary observes the results. Thus the secondary DPU may assume payload control in case of primary DPU failure (SFG, n.d.).  A journal posted for the 2003 DASIA (Data Systems in Aerospace) conference (Baksa et al., 2003) describes the DPU as containing a Harris RTX2010 processor with a 16-bit processor that is radiation-hardened for space travel. A DPU also contains the program and memory data sets as well. Communication between system components is controlled by the CIU through a serial data transmission channel with a data transfer rate of 32 Kbit/s. System timing is controlled by the RTCs to ensure that critical functions occur exactly as programmed. The Massive Memory boards are capable of storing huge amounts of data (exact amount unspecified) garnered from mounted scientific instruments during the time periods when the lander is in the radio-shadow of the Rosetta probe. FORTH based software serves the operating system for the redundant CDMS components which operate in parallel for fault-tolerance, a critical characteristic for space vehicles which may be out of Earth contact for long periods of time.

The CDMS is also responsible for establishing data communication for transmission to Earth. According to NASA Technical Memorandum 2006-214431 (Gwaltney & Briscoe, 2003), the Rosetta mission utilized the European-developed SpaceWire protocol. The SpaceWire method permits a large number of devices to be networked that can communicate with each other at speeds of up to 400MB/s. This data transfer protocol was an ideal choice for the Rosetta mission where a low-powered lander was required to transmit bursts of data to the mothership over specific time periods (i.e., when the Philae and the Rosetta spacecraft were in position to communicate) for retransmission to Earth.

In summary, the Philae lander demonstrated the vital importance of well-designed data management systems and redundant system architecture supported by robust hardware and software. Despite enduring 10 years of space travel, and then literally bouncing off the surface of comet and landing awry, Philae was able to meet 90 percent of its scientific goals (Gibney, 2014). A truly remarkable accomplishment following a long and arduous journey to explore a little known and primeval relic from the dawn of the creation of our solar system.

References:


ESA 2014 Rosetta LanderESA. (2014). The Rosetta Lander. Retrieved from http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Rosetta/The_Rosetta_lander 201604101428271120279908
Gibney E 2014 Philae’s 64 hours of comet science yield rich dataGibney, E. (2014). Philae’s 64 hours of comet science yield rich data. Retrieved from http://www.nature.com/news/philae-s-64-hours-of-comet-science-yield-rich-data-1.16374 2016041017412752597284
Grady M 2016 Farewell to Philae as Rosetta Probe goes into 'Eternal Hibernation'Grady, M. (2016). Farewell to Philae as Rosetta Probe goes into 'Eternal Hibernation'. Retrieved from https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/feb/12/farewell-philae-rosetta-probe-goes-into-eternal-hibernation-comet-67p-churyumov-gerasimenko 20160410144805564049244
Gwaltney D A Briscoe J M 2003 Comparison of Communication Architectures for Spacecraft Modular Avionics SystemsGwaltney, D. A., & Briscoe, J. M. (2003). Comparison of Communication Architectures for Spacecraft Modular Avionics Systems. Retrieved from http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20060050129.pdf 201604101656531602582336
Howell E 2015 Wild, History-Making Comet landing by Philae Probe recreated in VideoHowell, E. (2015). Wild, History-Making Comet landing by Philae Probe recreated in Video. Retrieved from http://www.space.com/31129-philae-comet-landing-rosetta-video.html 201604101413201713546038
SFG n.d. Command and Data Management Subsystem (CDMS) of the Rosetta Lander (Philae)SFG. (n.d.). Command and Data Management Subsystem (CDMS) of the Rosetta Lander (Philae). Retrieved from http://www.sgf.hu/newsgfweb3_005.htm 201604101558321619160772
SGF n.d. Command and Data Management Subsystem (CDMS) of the Rosetta Lander (Philae)SGF. (n.d.). Command and Data Management Subsystem (CDMS) of the Rosetta Lander (Philae). Retrieved from http://www.sgf.hu/newsgfweb3_005.htm 201604101524041373302221
SGF Technology Associated Co LTD 2015 Welcome to our Web SiteSGF Technology Associated Co. LTD. (2015). Welcome to our Web Site. Retrieved from http://www.sgf.hu/ 201604101518551808394313


 







3 comments:

  1. Very interesting Mark. I can see the application of deep space storage sensing technology being applied directly to unmanned systems here on Earth.

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  2. The current distance from comet 67 P to the Sun is causing a substantial decrease in data rates. The comet has moved further from the Sun in its orbit, the lander is going to have to survive the extreme cold temperatures of space, with almost no guarantee that it will get enough sunlight to power itself. This could make all of the sensors of no use. The chances that Philae will ever communicate are remote.

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  3. that is so impressive that we could still land on the comet and gather data even when the harpoon failed and it was at an angle. the data transfer rate was impressive and having the systems protected from the radiation was very creative

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