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Enabling Communication and Navigation Technologies for Future Near Earth Science Missions
Author(s) -
David Israël,
Gregory W. Heckler,
Robert J. Menrad,
Don M. Boroson,
Bryan S. Robinson,
John Hudiburg,
Donald M. Cornwell
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
2018 spaceops conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2016-2303
Subject(s) - computer science , earth observation , astrobiology , earth (classical element) , systems engineering , human–computer interaction , remote sensing , aerospace engineering , engineering , geology , astronomy , physics , satellite
In 2015, the Earth Regimes Network Evolution Study (ERNESt) Team proposed a fundamentally new architectural concept, with enabling technologies, that defines an evolutionary pathway out to the 2040 timeframe in which an increasing user community comprised of more diverse space science and exploration missions can be supported. The architectural concept evolves the current instantiations of the Near Earth Network and Space Network through implementation of select technologies resulting in a global communication and navigation network that provides communication and navigation services to a wide range of space users in the Near Earth regime, defined as an Earth-centered sphere with radius of 2M Km. The enabling technologies include: High Rate Optical Communications, Optical Multiple Access (OMA), Delay Tolerant Networking (DTN), User Initiated Services (UIS), and advanced Position, Navigation, and Timing technology (PNT). This paper describes this new architecture, the key technologies that enable it and their current technology readiness levels. Examples of science missions that could be enabled by the technologies and the projected operational benefits of the architecture concept to missions are also described.

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