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Date:         Thu, 26 Jan 1995 14:02:53 -0500
Reply-To: Shirley Wilkins <jcsu.lib@UNCECS.EDU>
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From: Shirley Wilkins <jcsu.lib@UNCECS.EDU>
Subject:      JPL/Cyberspace meets mission ops (fwd)
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I believe this announcement may be of interest to this list.

Wilson Goodson
Johnson C. Smith University Library
Charlotte, NC 28216
VOICE: (704) 378-1123
FAX:   (704) 378-3524
EMAIL: jcsu.lib@uncecs.edu

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 6 Jan 1995 15:49:52 -0800
From: Admin@CCMAIL.JPL.NASA.GOV
To: Multiple recipients of list SEDSNEWS <SEDSNEWS@tamvm1.tamu.edu>
Subject: JPL/Cyberspace meets mission ops

PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011

Contact: Diane Ainsworth

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                       January 6, 1995

     Space flight controllers at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory may soon be spending most of their time in
cyberspace -- not to navigate the Internet as most computer
users would -- but to monitor real-world spacecraft
exploring new vistas in space billions of miles away.

     The three-dimensional software tool that will make this
possible -- called the Cyberspace Data Monitoring System --
is currently under development at the Laboratory and being
designed to monitor the health and status of spacecraft and
Earth-orbiting satellites.

     The new software boasts colorful display grids of
spacecraft subsystems. Each grid can be rotated at different
angles to give controllers different dimensional views of
the data.  If the information is being viewed at more than
100 percent on the screen, the controller can "fly over" the
data grid using a mouse and zoom in on other subsystem
information. Up to 20 or 30 individual spacecraft can be
monitored simultaneously with this new cyberspace feature.

     "This graphical interface represents a next generation
approach to monitoring systems for a variety of space flight
and terrestrial applications," said Dr. Ursula Schwuttke,
supervisor of the JPL Flight Projects Office Information
Systems Testbed, which is developing the software interface.

     "There are myriad advantages to displaying spacecraft
subsystem information in an abstract, visual way," she said.
"Most importantly, a visual software interface allows us to
display a dramatically increased amount of data all at the
same time and it gives operators immediate visual
recognition of potential problems by using icons that change
in color or begin flashing when a situation is becoming
serious on board the craft."

     The system is a departure from conventional text-based
software programs. Rather than displaying tables of
alphanumeric data and text, the cyberspace environment
presents data in three dimensions, using specified colors
and shapes, such as squares, circles and diamonds, to denote
different data channels and values.  Motion is used to
denote changes in status quo.

     In the 3-D environment, flight controllers can pitch,
yaw, roll, zoom in and zoom out of data grids that are
displaying information about the status of spacecraft
subsystems such as power, temperature, alarms and star
calibration reference points.

     When a channel goes into alarm, its corresponding
channel object or icon changes color and position, said
Robert Angelino, lead software developer for the cyberspace
project. Two types of alarms are detected by the system:
conventional limit-based alarms and trend alarms, which have
not typically been used in monitoring systems.

     "Trend alarms display the rate of change of a channel
value," Angelino said. "If the rate of change exceeds a
predefined magnitude over a predefined time period, then the
channel triggers a trend alarm. So, for instance, if the
temperature on board the spacecraft is heating up to
unusually high levels, or a gyro is beginning to drift off
course, the corresponding channel objects will change colors
from yellow to red. The channel objects will also spin if
they are in yellow and flash if they are being displayed in
red.

     "This scheme allows for the unambiguous display of all
the various alarm combinations," he said.  "At any time,
regardless of whether a channel is in alarm, the user can
click on a channel object using the mouse and pop up a text
window that displays all the information about the channel
that was selected, including its value and alarm status."

      The software provides mission analysts with short- and
long-term trend analysis capabilities.  Short-term trend
analysis, consisting of the trend alarming system of
spinning and flashing motions and color changes, occurs
automatically.  On-demand, long-term trend analysis will
provide detection of alarm conditions that manifest
themselves over extended periods of time and the ability to
display plots of any telemetry channel over the same time
periods.

     "Trend analysis is very important since JPL's
Multimission Ground Data System does not provide that
capability and mission analysts currently have access to
trend information only if the analysis has been performed by
hand," Schwuttke said.

     Cyberspace data monitoring software has been installed
in JPL's mission operations center and is being evaluated
using real data from the Magellan, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2
spacecraft.  Data from all three missions can be displayed
in a single window and many more space flight missions could
be added to the system.

     The software is also in the process of being installed
at Kirtland Air Force Base at the Phillips Lab Payload
Operations Center in Albuquerque, New Mexico, for the TAOS
(Technology for Autonomous Operational Survivability)
mission, Schwuttke said.  In addition, the software is
becoming increasingly popular within the Air Force. A
version of the program that displays data from TAOS, the
Miniature Seeker Technology Integration (MSTI-II) mission
and other satellite missions was demonstrated in November at
Onizuka Air Force Base in Sunnyvale, Calif.

     The cyberspace interface is being developed as a
generic monitoring application that will be versatile and
applicable to a variety of ground-based industrial uses,
such as monitoring levels of radiation in nuclear power
plants or levels of toxicity at chemical waste sites.

     "The software clearly allows considerable flexibility
in selecting the classification and level of detail to be
used for routine monitoring of data," Schwuttke noted.
"Cyberspace monitoring interfaces can also work as a
companion piece to other data processing tools for more
detailed data visibility."

     Development of the Cyberspace Data Monitoring System is
being carried out with funding from the U.S. Air Force and
the JPL Multimission Operations Systems Office for NASA's
Office of Space Science.

                           #####

1-6-95 DEA
#9502

Note:  An image depicting a display screen from the cyberspace
system is available from JPL's public access site via anonymous
file transfer protocol (FTP) to jplinfo.jpl.nasa.gov.  The files,
in the directory news, include a browse version CYBER.GIF and
a full-resolution (3.5-megabyte) version, P45068.TIF.
The files are also available via JPL's World Wide Web page,
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov.

