Military & Aerospace Electronics Online Article

| Add RSS Feed

BAE Systems computer powers NASA missions to the moon, Mars

MANASSAS, Va., 23 June 2009. A BAE Systems computer is at the core of a strategic NASA mission for space exploration, says a company representative. The company's RAD750 microprocessor powers NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and the Lunar CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite as the spacecraft surveys the moon's environment.

The missions launched together from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on June 18.

The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter is the first mission in NASA's Vision for Space Exploration initiative, a plan to return to the moon, Mars, and beyond. The orbiter will gather information on the lunar environment to prepare astronauts for long-duration lunar stays. The spacecraft will spend a year in orbit just 31 miles above the moon's surface, while its instruments survey the environment and look for safe landing sites and potential resources.

"The RAD750 is the most advanced microprocessor offered to the space community," says Vic Scuderi, manager of satellite electronics for BAE Systems in Manassas, Va. "This version incorporates our RAD750 processor and BAE Systems' new SpaceWire high-speed interface. In addition to surviving the rigors of lunar exploration and mapping, SpaceWire offers scientists the ability to format and download massive amounts of data to support the missions."

The Lunar CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite, or LCROSS, is intended to confirm the presence of water or ice on the moon's south pole, a discovery crucial to the future of human activities there. LCROSS will do this by excavating the dark floor of one of the moon's polar craters to see if ice lies underneath, says a representative.




| Add RSS Feed


 
Return to Previous Page

 
 





 

Military & Aerospace Electronics Webcasts






Thermal Management: Keeping It Cool in Military Systems
November 16, 2009










The VPX STANDARD and Its Use in Military Applications
Original broadcast on
July 29, 2009












Implementing High Performance Embedded Applications with RapidIO Switching and High Performance Multicore DSPs
Original broadcast on
April 29, 2009





More
 
Sponsored White Papers Library
Recently Added White Papers

File System Considerations in a Multi-Core RTOS Environment (10/23/2009, Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing)

Pilatus PC-21 - the trainer aircraft for the 21st century (10/23/2009, Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing)

Integrated VXS SIGINT Digital Receiver/Processor (10/23/2009, Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing)

Rugged VME and CompactPCI hardware platform controls multiple unmanned aircraft (09/29/2009, Kontron)

Kontron supplies multi-processor VME solution to power the world's most accurate satellite navigation system (09/29/2009, Kontron)

More