For free-flying cube satellites, see
CubeSat.
The Hubble Space Telescope being lifted out of the payload bay of Atlantis before being released back into space.
SpaceCube is a family of high-performance reconfigurable systems designed[when?] for spaceflight applications requiring on-board processing. The SpaceCube was developed by engineers at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center.[1] The SpaceCube 1.0 system is based on Xilinx's Virtex-4 commercial FPGAs. The debut mission of the SpaceCube 1.0, Hubble Servicing Mission 4, was the first time Xilinx's Virtex-4 FPGAs flew in space.[2]
Missions
Family overview
- SpaceCube 1.0: Based on Xilinx's Virtex-4 commercial FPGAs.
- SpaceCube 1.5: Intermediate version of SpaceCube 2.0. Based on Xilinx's Virtex-5 commercial FPGAs. Scheduled to fly on sounding rocket flight in the fall of 2010.[7]
- SpaceCube 2.0: Currently[when?] under development with over $1 million in funding.[7] The SpaceCube 2.0 system is based around Xilinx's new radiation-hardened Virtex-5 FPGA.[7][8][needs update]
Awards
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center SpaceCube team earned an honorable mention for the 2009 "IRAD Innovator of the Year" award.[9]
On-board science data processing achievements
- Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) results:
- 6 to 1 loss-less data volume reduction on SAR Nadir Altimetry dataset.[10]
- 165x data volume reduction on SAR mapping dataset.[10]
References
External links
- Media