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Using Mesh Networking for A Dynamic Lunar Internet of Things (Liot)The purpose of this project is to evaluate the feasibility of an IEEE 802.11 mesh protocol for lunar surface computing. This standard for wireless networking boosts speed, dependability and range of wireless transmissions. The concept is to integrate sensors (such as deployed science instruments) or Astronaut tools (such as a handheld spectrometer) that communicate with a node on a common cell. The nodes can extend the range of the cell and can dynamically reconfigure the data routing in case of another node failure. All of the data in a cell pass through a modem that communicates with a distant base station across a 4G link.

The application of mesh networking to a potential lunar surface network increases robustness and fault tolerance over a traditional single-point modem system. By demonstrating the basic capability of a mesh network, the student team has learned about issues with power, distance, thermal, dust, radiation, data processing, and communication problems applicable to the lunar surface. This knowledge can feed into future NASA requirements to improve the capability of a LunaNET implementation for the Artemis program.

This project follows 10 years of successful collaboration between NASA ARES, Texas Space, Technology, Applications and Research (T STAR) and Texas A&M University in a Public, Private, Academic (PPA) Partnership. NASA funds T STAR to mentor undergraduate Capstone teams in the College of Engineering Department to design, built, and test prototypes meeting NASA requirements. TAMU faculty lead the student teams in their academic class, and NASA Subject Matter Experts (SMEs) provide T STAR and students insight on requirements evolution, prior design projects, and future development goals.
Document ID
20230015176
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Poster
Authors
Michael Ellis Evans
(Johnson Space Center Houston, Texas, United States)
Date Acquired
October 19, 2023
Subject Category
Space Sciences (General)
Meeting Information
Meeting: JSC Innovation Showcase 2023
Location: Houston, TX
Country: US
Start Date: December 8, 2023
End Date: December 8, 2023
Sponsors: Johnson Space Center
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 689807.98.06.72.01.03
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
Lunar Mesh Networking
802.11n mesh
Lunar IOT

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