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The TDRSS test

    Well, after a few delays and some quick work, we were ready for our TDRSS test when it came today at 1:00 PM.  The folks at NSBF have to make sure to reserve NASA TDRSS (Telemetry Data Relay Satellte System) for a certain block of time whenever it needs to be used.  It is particularly difficult down here in Antarctica, mainly because the satellite system is in an equatorial orbit.  For us, that means that whenever our payload is too close to the South Pole (below about  85° S Lat.), TDRSS is below the horizon and we are unable to transmit data to it.  By about 1:00, a satellite had finally made its way around Mount Erebus and we were able to make contact with it.  The satellite was reserved between 1:00 PM and 4:00 PM.  During this time, our GSE (Ground Support Equipment) in Palestine, Texas was able to receive data and relay it over a port 7740 (ethernet) connection down here.  However, we were only able to send commands to TIGER during a 44-minute period during the beginning of the TDRSS window and during a 43-minute window during the end of our window.    
    The whole concept is a pretty fascinating thing to think about.  Here I am in a weatherport in a "suburb" of McMurdo Station, Antarctica.  We are sending commands over an ethernet connection to a microwave link to McMurdo Station, up to a satellite, and down to a receiver in the United States, and through the wires to our stateside GSE in Palestine, Texas.  Our commands are telemetered up to TDRSS, which then relays the commands to TIGER, which is currently only about 30 feet from the computer I'm sitting in front of.  TIGER processes command and transmits its response back up to the satellite, which then relays it to an array of dishes in White Sands, New Mexico.  The data is then sent to Palestine where it is sent over the network to our stateside GSE.  The GSE then transmits the data over the network, through the wires and through another satellite link, to McMurdo Station, where it is received and sent over a microwave link out to Williams Field and finally to our local GSE out here.  The whole process takes a matter of a few seconds.  Our data rate is limited to only around 6 kbits every second, but it is a remarkable feat of technology.
    During our test, one of the most important things was the integration of ANITA data into our datastream.  When we flew two years ago, we were alone and we only had to worry about which of our data was important enough to be sent in the limited amount we were able to send over TDRSS.  This year, it is important for ANITA to get as much good data as possible since it is a budding experiment that has been highly regarded by the Balloon Program.
    The test was one of the more grueling 3 hours that I've spent down here, and it was further compounded by the fact that our internet connection to Palestine, Texas is unspeakably slow.  But after all was said and done, it went extremely well.  Our group was able to multitask quite well during the test.  Garry and Dana made use of the TIGER up time to continue working on our thermal insulation shield.  Today, they began the laborious process of covering it in aluminized mylar to reflect the intense sunlight that TIGER will see during flight.
    We headed back at 5:30 to eat dinner and we were lucky enough to see a little friend on the way.  We asked if he needed a ride, but he just waved us on.  Maybe some other time.





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