TY - GEN
T1 - Distributed computing for formation flying missions
AU - Jallad, Abdul Halim
AU - Vladimirova, Tanya
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - There is a continuing trend in the space community to reduce costs involved in space missions. Miniaturization has been the primary method that was deployed for reducing space mission costs. This is now changing, due to the recent advancements in technology that enable advanced mission architectures namely, distributed spacecraft missions. Several spacecraft flying in close formations would collaboratively achieve the mission aims at lover costs and with enhanced reliability compared to larger single platform missions. Distributed algorithms have been proposed for use on-board these missions for coordination and control purposes. No work has been done to implement a distributed system at the lower levels of abstraction. This paper proposes the deployment of distributed computing on-board close formation flying missions. Two distributed computing paradigms namely, client-server and mobile agent, are analytically compared in view of close formation flying missions. As a result the mobile agent paradigm is proposed for the application in hand.
AB - There is a continuing trend in the space community to reduce costs involved in space missions. Miniaturization has been the primary method that was deployed for reducing space mission costs. This is now changing, due to the recent advancements in technology that enable advanced mission architectures namely, distributed spacecraft missions. Several spacecraft flying in close formations would collaboratively achieve the mission aims at lover costs and with enhanced reliability compared to larger single platform missions. Distributed algorithms have been proposed for use on-board these missions for coordination and control purposes. No work has been done to implement a distributed system at the lower levels of abstraction. This paper proposes the deployment of distributed computing on-board close formation flying missions. Two distributed computing paradigms namely, client-server and mobile agent, are analytically compared in view of close formation flying missions. As a result the mobile agent paradigm is proposed for the application in hand.
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U2 - 10.1109/aiccsa.2006.205153
DO - 10.1109/aiccsa.2006.205153
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:33750828052
SN - 1424402123
SN - 9781424402120
T3 - IEEE International Conference on Computer Systems and Applications, 2006
SP - 616
EP - 620
BT - IEEE International Conference on Computer Systems and Applications, 2006
PB - IEEE Computer Society
T2 - IEEE International Conference on Computer Systems and Applications, 2006
Y2 - 8 March 2006 through 8 March 2006
ER -