1,202 research outputs found
Updates to the NASA Space Telecommunications Radio System (STRS) Architecture
This paper describes an update of the Space Telecommunications Radio System (STRS) open architecture for NASA space based radios. The STRS architecture has been defined as a framework for the design, development, operation and upgrade of space based software defined radios, where processing resources are constrained. The architecture has been updated based upon reviews by NASA missions, radio providers, and component vendors. The STRS Standard prescribes the architectural relationship between the software elements used in software execution and defines the Application Programmer Interface (API) between the operating environment and the waveform application. Modeling tools have been adopted to present the architecture. The paper will present a description of the updated API, configuration files, and constraints. Minimum compliance is discussed for early implementations. The paper then closes with a summary of the changes made and discussion of the relevant alignment with the Object Management Group (OMG) SWRadio specification, and enhancements to the specialized signal processing abstraction
Case Study: Using The OMG SWRADIO Profile and SDR Forum Input for NASA's Space Telecommunications Radio System
The Space Telecommunication Radio System (STRS) standard is a Software Defined Radio (SDR) architecture standard developed by NASA. The goal of STRS is to reduce NASA s dependence on custom, proprietary architectures with unique and varying interfaces and hardware and support reuse of waveforms across platforms. The STRS project worked with members of the Object Management Group (OMG), Software Defined Radio Forum, and industry partners to leverage existing standards and knowledge. This collaboration included investigating the use of the OMG s Platform-Independent Model (PIM) SWRadio as the basis for an STRS PIM. This paper details the influence of the OMG technologies on the STRS update effort, findings in the STRS/SWRadio mapping, and provides a summary of the SDR Forum recommendations
BRITE-Constellation reveals evidence for pulsations in the enigmatic binary Carinae
Car is a massive, eccentric binary with a rich observational history.
We obtained the first high-cadence, high-precision light curves with the
BRITE-Constellation nanosatellites over 6 months in 2016 and 6 months in 2017.
The light curve is contaminated by several sources including the Homunculus
nebula and neighboring stars, including the eclipsing binary
CPD592628. However, we found two coherent oscillations in the light
curve. These may represent pulsations that are not yet understood but we
postulate that they are related to tidally excited oscillations of Car's
primary star, and would be similar to those detected in lower-mass eccentric
binaries. In particular, one frequency was previously detected by van Genderen
et al. and Sterken et al. through the time period of 1974 to 1995 through
timing measurements of photometric maxima. Thus, this frequency seems to have
been detected for nearly four decades, indicating that it has been stable in
frequency over this time span. These pulsations could help provide the first
direct constraints on the fundamental parameters of the primary star if
confirmed and refined with future observations.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted to MNRA
Asteroseismology of massive stars with the TESS mission: the runaway Beta Cep pulsator PHL 346 = HN Aqr
We report an analysis of the first known Beta Cep pulsator observed by the
TESS mission, the runaway star PHL 346 = HN Aqr. The star, previously known as
a singly-periodic pulsator, has at least 34 oscillation modes excited, 12 of
those in the g-mode domain and 22 p modes. Analysis of archival data implies
that the amplitude and frequency of the dominant mode and the stellar radial
velocity were variable over time. A binary nature would be inconsistent with
the inferred ejection velocity from the Galactic disc of 420 km/s, which is too
large to be survivable by a runaway binary system. A kinematic analysis of the
star results in an age constraint (23 +- 1 Myr) that can be imposed on
asteroseismic modelling and that can be used to remove degeneracies in the
modelling process. Our attempts to match the excitation of the observed
frequency spectrum resulted in pulsation models that were too young. Hence,
asteroseismic studies of runaway pulsators can become vital not only in tracing
the evolutionary history of such objects, but to understand the interior
structure of massive stars in general. TESS is now opening up these stars for
detailed asteroseismic investigation.Comment: accepted for ApJ
The variability of the BRITE-est Wolf-Rayet binary, Velorum I. Photometric and spectroscopic evidence for colliding winds
We report on the first multi-color precision light curve of the bright
Wolf-Rayet binary Velorum, obtained over six months with the
nanosatellites in the BRITE- Constellation fleet. In parallel, we obtained 488
high-resolution optical spectra of the system. In this first report on the
datasets, we revise the spectroscopic orbit and report on the bulk properties
of the colliding winds. We find a dependence of both the light curve and excess
emission properties that scales with the inverse of the binary separation. When
analyzing the spectroscopic properties in combination with the photometry, we
find that the phase dependence is caused only by excess emission in the lines,
and not from a changing continuum. We also detect a narrow, high-velocity
absorption component from the He I 5876 transition, which appears
twice in the orbit. We calculate smoothed-particle hydrodynamical simulations
of the colliding winds and can accurately associate the absorption from He I to
the leading and trailing arms of the wind shock cone passing tangentially
through our line of sight. The simulations also explain the general strength
and kinematics of the emission excess observed in wind lines such as C III
5696 of the system. These results represent the first in a series of
investigations into the winds and properties of Velorum through
multi-technique and multi-wavelength observational campaigns.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, additional measurements to be included in
online dataset. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Space Telecommunications Radio System (STRS) Definitions and Acronyms
Software-defined radio is a relatively new technology area, and industry consensus on terminology is not always consistent. Confusion exists when the various organizations and standards bodies define different radio terms associated with the actual amount of reconfigurability of the radios. The Space Telecommunications Radio System (STRS) Definitions and Acronyms Document provides the readers of the STRS documents a common understanding of the terminology used and how they will be applied to the STRS architecture
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