Alessandro Geist
Goddard Space Flight Center
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Featured researches published by Alessandro Geist.
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2011
Rafael F. Rincon; Manuel Vega; Manuel Buenfil; Alessandro Geist; Lawrence Hilliard; P. Racette
The Digital Beamforming Synthetic Aperture Radar (DBSAR) is a state-of-the-art L-band radar that employs advanced radar technology and a customized data acquisition and real-time processor in order to enable multimode measurement techniques in a single radar platform. DBSAR serves as a test bed for the development, implementation, and testing of digital beamforming radar techniques applicable to Earth science and planetary measurements. DBSAR flew its first field campaign on board the National Aeronautics and Space Administration P3 aircraft in October 2008, demonstrating enabling techniques for scatterometry, synthetic aperture, and altimetry.
ieee aerospace conference | 2014
David J. Petrick; Alessandro Geist; Dennis Albaijes; Milton Davis; Pietro Sparacino; Gary Crum; Robin Ripley; Jonathan Boblitt; Thomas Flatley
This paper details the design architecture, design methodology, and the advantages of the SpaceCube v2.0 high performance data processing system for space applications. The purpose in building the SpaceCube v2.0 system is to create a superior high performance, reconfigurable, hybrid data processing system that can be used in a multitude of applications including those that require a radiation hardened and reliable solution. The SpaceCube v2.0 system leverages seven years of board design, avionics systems design, and space flight application experiences. This paper shows how SpaceCube v2.0 solves the increasing computing demands of space data processing applications that cannot be attained with a standalone processor approach. The main objective during the design stage is to find a good system balance between power, size, reliability, cost, and data processing capability. These design variables directly impact each other, and it is important to understand how to achieve a suitable balance. This paper will detail how these critical design factors were managed including the construction of an Engineering Model for an experiment on the International Space Station to test out design concepts. We will describe the designs for the processor card, power card, backplane, and a mission unique interface card. The mechanical design for the box will also be detailed since it is critical in meeting the stringent thermal and structural requirements imposed by the processing system. In addition, the mechanical design uses advanced thermal conduction techniques to solve the internal thermal challenges. The SpaceCube v2.0 processing system is based on an extended version of the 3U cPCI standard form factor where each card is 190mm × 100mm in size. The typical power draw of the processor card is 8 to 10W and scales with application complexity. The SpaceCube v2.0 data processing card features two Xilinx Virtex-5 QV Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA), eight memory modules, a monitor FPGA with analog monitoring, Ethernet, configurable interconnect to the Xilinx FPGAs including gigabit transceivers, and the necessary voltage regulation. The processor board uses a back-to-back design methodology for common parts that maximizes the board real estate available. This paper will show how to meet the IPC 6012B Class 3/A standard with a 22-layer board that has two column grid array devices with 1.0mm pitch. All layout trades such as stack-up options, via selection, and FPGA signal breakout will be discussed with feature size results. The overall board design process will be discussed including parts selection, circuit design, proper signal termination, layout placement and route planning, signal integrity design and verification, and power integrity results. The radiation mitigation techniques will also be detailed including configuration scrubbing options, Xilinx circuit mitigation and FPGA functional monitoring, and memory protection. Finally, this paper will describe how this system is being used to solve the extreme challenges of a robotic satellite servicing mission where typical space-rated processors are not sufficient enough to meet the intensive data processing requirements. The SpaceCube v2.0 is the main payload control computer and is required to control critical subsystems such as autonomous rendezvous and docking using a suite of vision sensors and object avoidance when controlling two robotic arms. For this application three SpaceCube processing systems are required, each with two processor cards.
Archive | 2010
Daniel Espinosa; Alessandro Geist; David J. Petrick; Thomas P. Flatley; Jeffrey Hosler; Gary Crum; Manuel Buenfil
Synthetic Aperture Radar (EUSAR), 2010 8th European Conference on | 2010
Rafael F. Rincon; Manuel Vega; Manuel Buenfil; Alessandro Geist; Lawrence Hilliard; P. Racette
ieee aerospace conference | 2014
David J. Petrick; Daniel Espinosa; Robin Ripley; Gary Crum; Alessandro Geist; Thomas Flatley
Archive | 2011
Michael Lin; Tom Flatley; Alessandro Geist; Dave Petrick
Archive | 2010
Alessandro Geist; Thomas P. Flatley; Michael R. Lin; David J. Petrick
Archive | 2012
Steve Chien; Joshua Doubleday; Kevin Ortega; Tom Flatley; Gary Crum; Alessandro Geist; Michael Lin; Austin Williams; John Bellardo; Jordi Puig-Suari; Eric Stanton; Edmond Yee
Archive | 2011
Michael Lin; Thomas Flatley; John Godfrey; Alessandro Geist; Daniel Espinosa; David J. Petrick
Archive | 2017
David J. Petrick; Alessandro Geist; Michael R. Lin; Gary R. Crum