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Funded Projects › FP7

SPWRT · SPACEWIRE RT

FP7Status: CLOSED1 June 201131 May 2013EU funding €499,996

The trend towards “Operationally Responsive Space”, where spacecraft can be rapidly assembled, configured and deployed, to meet specific mission needs, e.g. disaster support, requires flexible on board communication networks with plug-and-play capability. The growing autonomy of scientific missions to remote planets requires networks that are robust and durable, able to recover from transitory errors and faults automatically. The importance of spacecraft mass reduction motivates the sharing of networks for payload data-handling and avionics. Avionics and robotics impose requirements on network responsiveness and determinism. Increasing international collaboration on scientific and Earth observation spacecraft requires standard network technology where a component developed by one nation will interoperate effectively with equipment developed by another. SpaceWire-RT aims to fulfil these demanding requirements with a flexible, robust, responsive, deterministic and durable standard network technology that is able to support both avionics and payload data-handling applications. SpaceWire is a very successful first step in this direction, providing networking technology for payload data-handling on over 30 major space missions. It falls short, however, of the requirements for avionics systems. A quality of service (QoS) layer is needed for SpaceWire to support mixed avionics and data-handling applications. SpaceWire-RT will: use virtual channels to provide a variety of QoS; provide broadcast and multicast capability; support extremely low latency time and out-of band signalling; and incorporate novel fault detection, isolation and recovery methods. The network will be fully responsible for information transfer, decoupling application and data transfer. Creation of this technology will substantially strengthen collaborative bonds between the Russian and European organisations involved in the research, and lead to technology of vital importance for future space mission.

Consortium · 5 organisations

coordinator

UNIVERSITY OF DUNDEE

UK · €224,892

participant

SAINT PETERSBURG STATE UNIVERSITY OF AEROSPACE INSTRUMENTATION*SUAI

RU · €149,900

participant

SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH INSTITUTE SUBMICRON OPEN JOINT STOCK COMPANY

RU · €39,661

participant

ELECTRONIC VLSI ENGINEERING & EMBEDDED SYSTEMS

RU · €59,926

participant

AIRBUS DS GMBH

DE · €25,617

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.