Hewlett Packard Enterprise is sending a supercomputer to the International Space Station aboard SpaceX's next resupply mission for NASA, which is currently set to launch Monday.
Officially named the "Spaceborne Computer," the Linux-based supercomputer is designed to serve in a one year experiment conducted by NASA and HPE to find out if high performance computing hardware, with no hardware customization or modification, can survive and operate in outer space conditions for a full year – the length of time, not coincidentally, it'll likely take for a crewed spacecraft to make the trip to Mars.
Typically, computers used on the ISS have to be "hardened," explained Dr. Mark Fernandez, who led the effort on the HPE side as lead payload engineer. This process involves extensive hardware modifications made to the high-performance computing (HPC) device, which incur a lot of additional cost, time and effort. One unfortunate result of the need for this physical ruggedization process is that HPCs used in space are often generations behind those used on Earth, and that means a lot of advanced computing tasks end up being shuttled off the ISS to Earth, with the results then round-tripped back to astronaut scientists in space.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday August 15 2017, @01:49AM
Unless, like cars, that isn't true, like maintaining a Lamborghini for a commute to work when really what you need is an econobox. A couple of years of what is spent on the ISS could be used to buy a pretty nice space station that actually does most of what the ISS does with far lower maintenance costs.
Why would that happen? The atmosphere on the station isn't a tinder box. That's one mistake those NASA engineers aren't going to repeat.
Most, but not all. They'll still see radiation effects (both solar and cosmic rays) on their equipment.