Disruption Tolerant Networking Flight Validation Experiment on NASA's EPOXI Mission

  • Authors:
  • Jay Wyatt;Scott Burleigh;Ross Jones;Leigh Torgerson;Steve Wissler

  • Affiliations:
  • -;-;-;-;-

  • Venue:
  • SPACOMM '09 Proceedings of the 2009 First International Conference on Advances in Satellite and Space Communications
  • Year:
  • 2009

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Abstract

In October and November of 2008, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory installed and tested essential elements of Delay/Disruption Tolerant Networking (DTN) technology on the Deep Impact spacecraft. This experiment, called Deep Impact Network Experiment (DINET), was performed in close cooperation with the EPOXI project which has responsibility for the spacecraft. During DINET some 300 images were transmitted from the JPL nodes to the spacecraft. Then they were automatically forwarded from the spacecraft back to the JPL nodes, exercising DTN's bundle origination, transmission, acquisition, dynamic route computation, congestion control, prioritization, custody transfer, and automatic retransmission procedures, both on the spacecraft and on the ground, over a period of 27 days. All transmitted bundles were successfully received, without corruption. The DINET experiment demonstrated DTN readiness for operational use in space missions. This activity was part of a larger NASA space DTN development program to mature DTN to flight readiness for a wide variety of mission types by the end of 2011. This paper describes the DTN protocols, the flight demo implementation, validation metrics which were created for the experiment, and validation results.