Космическим кораблем, который летит к Плутону, управляет процессор MIPS. Конечно, данный конкретный чип для космического основан на процессорном ядре, которое было создано задолго до того, как я начал работать в MIPS, но я участвую как инженер в создании новых ядер MIPS, так что эта новость имеет ко мне отношение. Кстати, многие российские космические аппараты тоже управляются радиационно-стойкими процессорами подобного класса с архитектурой MIPS.
http://blog.imgtec.com/mips-processors/mips-goes-to-pluto MIPS goes to Pluto
by
Alexandru Voica on January 15, 2015 in
MIPS Processors,
Processors This week we found out that
NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft sent on a mission to reach Pluto in 2006 came out of hibernation for its long-awaited encounter with the world’s most famous dwarf planet.
Traveling across the solar system, the New Horizons spacecraft is now approximately 3.5 billion miles from the Sun, nine years after its launch.
New Horizons is a spacecraft sent by NASA to study Pluto
The probe carries American astronomer
Clyde Tombaugh‘s ashes (he discovered Pluto in 1930) and has been navigating the solar system using two computer systems: one is used for command and data handling while the other handles guidance and control. For safety reasons, each of the two systems is duplicated, leading to a total of four on-board processors.
One small step for technology, one giant leap for CPUs
The CPU of choice for New Horizons is a MIPS-based Mongoose-V chip clocked at a whopping 12 MHz. Mongoose-V is a radiation-hardened version of the MIPS R3000 CPU and is manufactured by Synova, a Florida-based company that specializes in turnkey aeronautics solutions.
Mongoose-V is a MIPS-based processor designed by
Synova The engineers at NASA and Synova have worked together to implement multiple clocks and timing routines in hardware and software to help prevent faults and downtime. The Mongoose-V processor analyzes positional information, distributes operating commands to multiple spacecraft subsystems, collects and processes instrument data, and sends bursts of data back to Earth. It also runs an advanced autonomy algorithm that allows the probe to auto-correct any issues or contact operators on Earth for help (more information
here).
A history of the MIPS R3000 processor
MIPS R3000 is a 32-bit RISC microprocessor chip found in workstations and servers designed by companies such as Evans & Sutherland, DEC, Silicon Graphics, Tandem Computers, Whitechapel Workstations and many others; most notably, it was the CPU of choice for
the original PlayStation game console from Sony and is still being used by Toshiba in a range of microcontrollers. It is a second-generation implementation of the MIPS I ISA and was introduced in the late 1980s, following the success of the flagship
R2000 microprocessor.
Since the MIPS instruction set is known for its elegant simplicity, MIPS R3000 is significantly smaller in size compared to similar CPU architectures launched around that time (80×86, 680×0 etc.). The reduced instruction set combined with a 5-stage pipeline design allows R3000 to execute most instructions at a rate close to 1 instruction per cycle.
In addition to the CPU core, the R3000 microprocessor includes an external R3010 FPU (essentially a numeric coprocessor), a memory controller and other on-chip peripherals (error detection and correction, timer, dual UART, expansion interrupts); you can find a block diagram of the design below:
A block diagram of
the Mongoose-V chip There is also a PDF describing the processor’s architecture
here; for those wondering if DAWG was Synova’s attempt at 1980s gangsta rap, it is actually short for Dynamic Automatic Waitstate Generator.
Where will MIPS go next?
The New Horizons probe is the first mission in NASA’s New Frontiers Program. Once a NASA mission completes its prime objective, the agency forms a committee to determine whether extended operations are warranted or if the spacecraft can return to Earth.
Now that the New Horizons spacecraft has arrived to Pluto, it will explore the planet and its
moons. The New Frontiers team will then submit a proposal to NASA in late 2016 for an extended mission to fly by one or two other
Kuiper belt objects that were recently uncovered by the Hubble Space Telescope.
To keep up to date with the New Frontiers Program, follow NASA on Twitter at
@NewHorizons2015. For the latest news and announcements from MIPS, make sure you check out our social media channels too (
@ImaginationPR,
@MIPSGuru,
@MIPSdev).
About Alexandru Voica
After having experienced the fast-paced world of the IP business as a junior engineer at various companies around Europe, Alexandru Voica has decided to pursue his dream of working in technology marketing and PR for Imagination Technologies. His background includes research in computer graphics at the School of Advanced Studies Sant'Anna in Pisa and a brief stint as a CPU engineer. When not planted firmly in front of his laptop, Alexandru can be found hitting the basketball court, singing along at a rock n' roll concert, enjoying art cinema or reading his favorite American authors.
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