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Transcript
Netnod Spring Meeting 2016
Space Communications
By Jörgen Städje
Tech and Nerd Editor
The not very big picture
TDRS: 500 watts, 300 Mbps
in the Ku and Ka bands
The bigger picture
Gigabits per second
The really big picture
The even bigger picture
The absolutely humongous picture
The ridiculously big picture
What are we? Nothing, really.
Voyager’s final picture of the Solar System laid out on the Milky Way.
Can you spot us? The tiny blue dot?
What have we heard so far?
The SETI@Home
project has been
going on since 1999
and so far completely
without result.
Nothing. Zilch. Nada.
What have we done
wrong? What’s the
problem with us
Earthlings and our
technology?
What can
Earthlings
do?
Voyager Jupiter, 1979
800 x 800 pixel
Mars Rover panorama, 2006
MER Spirit in April 2006.
10.000 x 2830 pixel
Cassini Saturn, 2007
4088 x 2980
pixels, a mosaic
of 12 images
taken with the
1024 x 1024
pixels Wide Angle
Camera
New Horizons Pluto, 2015
1024 x 1024 pixel
Radio Galaxy - Astrophysical MASER
NGC 4258: MASER
with the power of a
thousand suns, at
1667 MHz
Billionz and billionz of stars
Space un-communication
When the Sun
is angry
Carrington event,
coronal mass
ejection, solar storm,
call it what you will.
It’s 1013 joules and
it’s heading our way,
hitting us three days
later.
It doesn’t affect humans. Only machines.
We see it as a lovely aurora. Unprotected machines die.
We know the dangers on Earth
•
•
•
•
STOKABs EMI/EMP-safe computer room
deep beneath Stockholm
The only way to stay safe
from EMP is to have your
computers inside a Faraday
Cage.
The Swedish Post and
Telecom Authority (PTS)
requires that high security
installations follow strict
guidelines to survive
geomagnetic storms.
Nothing will happen if you
follow the rules and read your
textbooks, really.
During the first Carrington
event, telegraph lines
sparked. Today, everything is
optical fibres.
But space weather is worse
ZAP!
BLAM!
GAAAH!!
• Solar flares can kill
satellites and spacecraft
• The Japanese Nozomi
was killed by a solar flare
in 2002 on its way to Mars
• A human wouldn’t survive
a minute in Jupiter’s
magnetosphere
• We check out the Sun
using observatories like
SOHO, giving us a few
days warning
Recommendations
•
•
•
•
•
See the film Contact by Carl
Sagan. The radio astronomy bit is
almost correct. Almost. Well, not
really. They visit a few real radio
telescopes and explain some
facts, but then it flips out…
Also, read my web article about
the Arecibo radio telescope:
http://www.qedata.se/e_artiklar_b
akgrund.htm#Arecibo
Troubleshooting Mars Rovers:
http://techworld.idg.se/2.2524/1.1
19061/bilar-pa-mars
TDRS satellites:
http://techworld.idg.se/2.2524/1.5
58338/kommunikationstrolleri-irymden
Voyager has seen it all:
http://techworld.idg.se/2.2524/1.3
81514/voyager-har-snart-sett-allt