Slashdot Mirror


Telemetry Made Simple: Rocket Phone Home

UserID 3.14 writes "This article from science daily talks about a communications module that will be strapped to the rockets of a shuttle or other payload delivery vehicle. It can be used to provide constant telemetry by making a cell phone call using the Globalstar Network. Does this mean that if you use a cell phone in space, even there people will ask you to step outside?" See NASA's web page about the Flight Modem, which seems to be very much a work in progress

5 of 53 comments (clear)

  1. Been There, Done That by JAVAC+THE+GREAT · · Score: 4

    I regularly participate in amateur rocket competitions. For telemetry I find it quite simple to attach a Nokia 5100 (with detached Honey Orange faceplate) and wire it to a microprocessor that will send varying volumes in different audible frequency bands to indicate different values, scaled into audible ranges. For example, altitude, airspeed, latitude and longitude (as calculated by GPS and communicated to the uP). I simply record on DAT tape the audio on another cell phone. When I return home I play the audio into my computer as a WAV file, and then run spectrum analysis on it and scale and filter frequency analysis into raw telemetry data that I can then plot. (This is easily done with Matlab).
    ---

  2. Save a buck or two! by Chester+K · · Score: 4

    It can be used to provide constant telemetry by making a cell phone call using the Globalstar Network.

    May I humbly suggest a cost-saving measure:

    Rocket: I'd like to make a collect call please.
    Operator: Who may I say is calling?
    Rocket: Bob I'm-at-23.494923N-82.293823W-3042.4293-feet-below- sea-level.
    Operator: One moment please.
    *Somewhere in a control room, a telephone rings*
    Chart Plotter: Hello?
    Operator: I have a collect call from Bob I'm-at-23.494923N-82.293823W-3042.4293-feet-below- sea-level, will you accept charges?
    Chart Plotter: Wrong number.
    *Chart Plotter hangs up*
    Operations Manager: Who was that?
    Chart Plotter: The rocket. It's over Cuba.

    --

    NO CARRIER
    1. Re:Save a buck or two! by Chester+K · · Score: 4

      Cuba is 3000 feet below sea level? Maybe they decided to take over Holland.

      Nobody realistically expects version 1.0 to come out without any bugs now, do they? =P

      --

      NO CARRIER
  3. Major Tom by chris.bitmead · · Score: 4


    Ground Control to Major Tom
    Ground Control to Major Tom
    Charge your mobile phone and put your hands free on.

    Ground Control to Major Tom
    Commencing dialup, cell-phone on
    Check phone number and may ATT's love be with you

    (spoken)
    Ten, Nine, Eight, Seven, Six, Five, Four, Three, Two, One, Liftoff

    This is Ground Control to Major Tom
    You've really been connected
    And the papers want to know whose telco you use
    Now it's time to use the hands free if you dare

    "This is Major Tom to Ground Control
    I'm stepping through the door
    And my cell phone's floating in a most peculiar way
    And your voice sounds very different today

    For here
    Am I sitting in a tin can
    Far above the world
    My cell-phone's been cut off
    And there's nothing I can do

    Though I'm past one hundred thousand miles
    I'm feeling very still
    And I think my cell-phone knows which tower to use
    Tell customer support I love them very much - they know"

    Ground Control to Major Tom
    Your cell phone's dead, there's something wrong
    Can you hear me, Major Tom?
    Can you hear me, Major Tom?
    Can you hear me, Major Tom?
    Can you....

    "Here am I floating round my tin can
    Far above the Moon
    my cell phone's been cut off
    And there's nothing I can do."

  4. I don't get it... by jbuhler · · Score: 4

    NASA is willing to strap a cell phone to their tres expensive rockets filled with sensitive custom electronics, but Continental won't let me use my cell phone in the air. "Oh no, it might interfere with the aircraft's avionics. Besides, you can't use cell phones in flight because they'll see too many cells at once from way up there. Use our AirPhone instead, only $19.99/second!"

    I'll bet astronauts don't have to put their seat backs and tray tables in their full upright and locked positions, either. Lucky bastards.