In the fall of 1992 NASA and the Department of Defense chartered a technical team to explore the possibility of developing a common set of space data communications standards for potential dual-use across the U.S. national space mission support infrastructure. The team focused on the data communications needs of those activities associated with on-lined control of civil and military aircraft. A two-pronged approach was adopted: a top-down survey of representative civil and military space data communications requirements was conducted; and a bottom-up analysis of available standard data communications protocols was performed. A striking intersection of civil and military space mission requirements emerged, and an equally striking consensus on the approach towards joint civil and military space protocol development was reached. The team concluded that wide segments of the U.S. civil and military space communities have common needs for: (1) an efficient file transfer protocol; (2) various flavors of underlying data transport service; (3) an optional data protection mechanism to assure end-to-end security of message exchange; and (4) an efficient internetworking protocol. These recommendations led to initiating a program to develop a suite of protocols based on these findings. This paper describes the current status of this program.


    Access

    Access via TIB

    Check availability in my library


    Export, share and cite



    Title :

    The Space Communications Protocol Standards Program


    Contributors:


    Publication date :

    1994-11-01


    Type of media :

    Conference paper


    Type of material :

    No indication


    Language :

    English




    The Space Communications Protocol Standards Program

    Jeffries, A. / Hooke, A. J. / Goddard Space Flight Center | British Library Conference Proceedings | 1994




    Performance of bundle protocol for deep-space communications

    Kanglian Zhao, / Ruhai Wang, / Burleigh, Scott C. et al. | IEEE | 2016