SPC03 - Explorer 18 - Digital Data Processor - The First ICs in Space

SPC03 - Explorer 18 - Digital Data Processor - The First ICs in Space

$825.00
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Explorer 18, also called IMP-A (Interplanetary Monitoring Platform), was launched on November 26, 1963, as part of NASA's Explorer program. This satellite was designed to study space beyond Earth's atmosphere, focusing on the interplanetary medium, magnetic fields, and cosmic rays. It spun at 22 rotations per minute (RPM) and had several scientific instruments, including a Digital Data Processor (DDP). This processor used integrated circuits, making Explorer 18 one of the first spacecraft to do so. The DDP managed experiments, stored results, and sent data back to Earth using pulse-frequency modulation signals. Explorer 18's DDP telemetry system was the first operational use of integrated circuits in a spacecraft, even before the Minuteman II missile's D-37C computer and the Apollo Guidance Computer. The DDP stored data from different experiments into accumulators, which periodically sent the data as pulse-frequency modulation (PFM) signals to ground stations. The accumulators could ho

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