PI: Brock LaMeres, Montana State University
Awarded for 2010-2014
The goal of this project is to design, prototype, and test a novel radiation tolerant
flight computer. Our system uses a fault mitigation strategy that can detect, recover,
and repair damaged regions of a computer using tile-based reconfiguration of a reprogrammable
hardware fabric. This type of spatial fault mitigation has the ability to recover
from the three main types of radiation effects observed in aerospace flight systems
implemented on reprogrammable fabrics: Single Event Upsets (SEU), Single Event Functional
Interrupts (SEFI), and Total Ionizing Dose (TID). This project will build upon existing
research that has been conducted over the past two years at Montana State University
(MSU) under the direction of Science-PI Dr. LaMeres. In this previous work, a prototype
computing system has been developed and demonstrated in the laboratory that can continue
operation in the presence of emulated faults caused by all three of the above mentioned
radiation effects. In this project, we will mature this technology from Technical
Readiness Level (TRL) 3 to TRL-5 by testing our system in the Radiation Effects Facility
at Texas A&M University. As part of this project, we will develop the necessary support
hardware to facilitate ion chamber testing and characterize our computer system's
fault tolerance. The specific tasks of this project include: 1) increasing the complexity
of our computer system for testing in a representative environment; 2) development
and packaging of a spatial radiation sensor; and 3) development of a spatially aware
configuration RAM verification circuit (typically referred to as a scrubber).
Contact Info
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Brock J. LaMeres Electrical and Computer Engineering Montana State University Bozeman, MT 59717 |
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