SBIR-STTR Award

SIMNET: Leveraging COTS Plug 'n Play Electronics Protocols for Space Applications
Award last edited on: 5/16/2008

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
DOD : AF
Total Award Amount
$849,396
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
AF06-261
Principal Investigator
Gary J Rodriguez

Company Information

Sysrand Corporation

15306 Foxglove Court
Parker, CO 80134
   (303) 840-0797
   N/A
   www.sysrand.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 04
County: Douglas

Phase I

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: ----    Completed: ----
Phase I year
2006
Phase I Amount
$99,498
A few low-level changes in the USB2 implementation will enhance the performance of the serial bus in space applications. Several mid and upper-layer changes will considerably improve the utility and resulting system-wide synergism of the many components of a satellite. Seamless integration of distributed resources can enable response and reliability to an extent yet to be realized by conventional methodologies.

Phase II

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: ----    Completed: ----
Phase II year
2007
Phase II Amount
$749,898
We offer a ‘logistics-oriented’ marketing position, emphasizing mass production of satellite bus modules with rapid distribution to operational theatres. With declining costs single application satellites of short mission duration become a tactical alternative to large, multi-mission vehicles. We establish the classic ‘build or buy’ decision in the always-a-custom satellite marketplace by providing the ‘buy’ option. Modularity does provide mass production cost benefits to small satellite bus and payload. Rapid assembly and integration, and pre-staging of completed low-cost modular satellites will reduce the logistics cost of satellites to that of precision-guided munitions deployed in forward areas. Test ByPass emerges as an indispensible component of Space Plug & Play Architectures, while remote debug and diagnostics serves to extend the useful life of ‘on-orbit’ assets. The TBP Processor Element-based Application Program has access to the high-performance bus and also communicates with the IO Bus Manager supervising a SPA-U IO Bus and the several TBP Network debug Monitor programs which are resident on ASIM 8051 nodes. The TBP Applications program is generalized through a scripting language to support Hardware-In-The-Loop Simulation (HILS), Diagnostics, Debug/Monitor, Performance Monitoring and Serial Bootloader Applications.

Keywords:
Networks For Modular Satellites, Multiple-Node Debug & Diagnostic Facilities, Hardware-In-The-Loop Simulation, Structured Support For Fault Tolerance,