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Farnborough UK (SPX) Sep 15, 2004 BAE Systems' radiation-hardened RAD6000 computers and solid state recorder assemblies headed for the planet Mercury August 3. The successful Delta II rocket launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, marked the beginning of a 4.9-billion-mile, 6.5-year journey to Mercury. The spacecraft Messenger will study the planet's geologic history and overall structure. "NASA and Johns Hopkins University scientists are trying to understand the formation of Earth and other planets. Our RAD6000s and solid state recorders will support that mission," said Laura Burcin, BAE Systems Messenger program manager. BAE Systems' Information & Electronic Warfare Systems (IEWS) builds the RAD6000 high-performance 32-bit Reduced Instruction Set Computer (RISC) that operates in the heavily radiated space environment. The RAD6000 is based on the IBM RISC Single Chip (RSC) architecture. BAE Systems' computers and recorders provide on-board computing and data storage for the instruments and spacecraft control functions aboard Messenger. Messenger is set to become the first spacecraft to orbit Mercury. Following a route that includes two fly-bys of Venus, Messenger should reach Mercury by March 2011. During its year-long orbit, Messenger will provide the first images of the entire planet and collect detailed information on the composition and structure of Mercury's crust, its geologic history, the nature of its thin atmosphere, active earth-like magnetosphere, and the makeup of its core and polar materials. The RAD6000 is one of a family of radiation-hardened protected computers developed and produced by BAE Systems in Manassas, Virginia, with the support of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory. BAE Systems' microprocessors are also aboard two of NASA's most successful missions this year. The Mars Rovers "Opportunity" and "Spirit," which landed on the Red Planet in January, carried the RAD6000; and the Cassini spacecraft, which entered Saturn's orbit June 30, was guided by the Advanced Spaceborne Computer Module. The newest member of the processor family, the RAD750, will be used on the Deep Impact mission slated to launch later this year. Related Links BAE Systems Messenger Mission Home SpaceDaily Search SpaceDaily Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express
Laurel MD (SPX) Aug 26, 2004With a successful launch behind them and a long cruise ahead, Messenger mission operators are checking out the systems on the Mercury-bound spacecraft. |
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