home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!ames!titan.ksc.nasa.gov!dumoulin
- From: dumoulin@titan.ksc.nasa.gov (Jim Dumoulin)
- Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle
- Subject: Re: Space Shuttle Frequencies Scannable?y
- Message-ID: <1992Nov11.213211.4121@titan.ksc.nasa.gov>
- Date: 11 Nov 92 21:32:10 EST
- References: <1992Nov9.083041.22946@dartvax.dartmouth.edu>
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: NASA, Kennedy Space Center
- Lines: 110
-
- In article <1992Nov9.083041.22946@dartvax.dartmouth.edu>, flowerpt@coos.dartmouth.edu (Bill McGonigle) writes:
- > I can't find a FAQL, so lets hope this isn't a FAQ...
- >
- > I was looking at scanners, and I was wondering if its possible to pick
- > up space shuttle frequencies on any scanners.
- >
- > Is that information publically available?
- > Are the transmissions scrambled?
- > Can someone post the frequencies?
- > Any info would be appreciated. Thanks.
- > -Bill
-
- Using a scanner to pickup actually communications between the shuttle
- and the ground won't be of much use to you unless you live very close
- to Kennedy Space Center, one of the Shuttle Landing strips or one of
- the few remaining S-band tracking stations. Your best bet are the
- number of Ham radio 2-meter repeater stations that have land lines to
- NASA centers. They rebroadcast the Public Affairs link. At KSC, the
- active 2-meter repeater is at 146.940 Mhz. You may also have luck
- if the crew is running the SAREX experiment.
-
- The Flight shuttle frequencies in use at KSC are:
-
- Air-Ground Control VHF 126.300 Mhz
- Orbiter Air-Ground 1 UHF 259.700 Mhz
- Orbiter Air-Ground 2 UHF 296.800 Mhz
- Air-Ground Control UHF 284.000 Mhz
- Emergency Commercial VHF 121.500 Mhz
- Emergency Military UHF 243.000 Mhz
-
- We also use a number of Ground Frequencies. In my Icom IC-R1
- Scanner, I've got the following programmed:
-
- KSC RF Net 101 - Utilities 171.000 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 102 - Meas/Safety 165.1875 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 103 - Security 173.6875 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 104 - Launch Support 162.6125 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 105 - Safety 173.6825 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 106 - Supply 170.4000 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 107 - Base Comm 170.1500 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 108 - PAO/Hurricane 163.5375 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 110 - Orbiter Ops 165.4125 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 111 - Loan Pool 153.5375 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 116 - Fire/Rescue 173.5625 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 117 - Medical 173.4375 Mhz
- KSC RF Net 408 - PAO-TV Coord 171.2625 Mhz
-
- The reason your scanner won't do you much good during normal mission
- operations is that most of the time the uplink and downlink audio is
- multiplexed into the data stream. Since I'm a payload person, I'll
- use a payload command uplink to explain how the POCC or CAPCOM's voice
- is multiplexed.
-
- 1. A Payload command word can vary from 3 to 31 16 bit words and they
- are sent from the Payload Operations Control Center (POCC) computers
- to the Mission Control Center (MCC) computers.
-
- 2. The MCC appends an additional 16 bit destination word that is used
- by the orbiter data processing system (DPS) for routing the data
- to the correct payload. Next, a command overhead word is then
- appended to each pair of 16bit payload words. This word specifies
- to which orbiter (the encoding system is capable of supporting
- multiple orbiters in space) and to which GPC on that orbiter the
- words are to be delivered. By now the original 496 bits
- (31 x 16bit words) have turned into 768 bits and have been broken
- up into 48 bit chunks (32 data bits and 16 overhead bits)
-
- 3. The MCC, in order to provide a way of detecting uplink errors,
- then generates a 77 bit Bose-Chandhuri-Hocquenghem (BCH) code
- for each 48 bit data segment. In order for the encoding scheme
- to work properly, 50 bits are required to be input into the
- coding process to produce the 77 bit BCH code. Thus, 2 dummy
- bits are then added at the front end of each 48 bit data word
- and this produces an 128 bit word for each pair of original
- command words. Our original 496 bits have turned into 2048.
-
- 4. In order to provide a means of authenticating a command to
- protect against unauthorized recording and then re-uplinking
- the command at a later time (ala Captain Midnight), a 128 bit
- permuted GMT word is generated for each of the 16 128 bit words
- we currently have. This 128 bit word is added bit-by-bit using
- modulo-2 addition to produce the 128 bit word that is sent to
- the Network Output Multiplexer (NOM) at the MCC.
-
- 5. The NOM then interleaves the command data with voice data.
- Depending on the data rate, either one or two voice channels
- (640 bits/channel) are interleaved with each 128 bit command
- data word to form an uplink frame that is then sent at 50
- frames/sec. This 72 Kb/s (2 voice) or 32 Kb/s (1 voice)
- uplink (no CD quality sound here) is then sent to a convolutional encoder that generates
- 3 bits for every bit of data. This the actual data rate that
- the orbiter sees is 216 Kb/s (2 voice) or 96 Kb/s (1 voice)
- but only 1.6 Kb/s (less than 1 percent) of this is our actual
- command.
-
- 6. The onboard systems inside the shuttle (the Network Signal
- Processor) then reverses all this process to send the voice
- and commands to the proper locations.
-
- To sum it all up, you probably don't have a SB's CIH of decoding
- any of this with a scanner. Sorry.
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Jim Dumoulin INTERNET: DUMOULIN@TITAN.KSC.NASA.GOV
- NASA / Payload Operations SPAN/HEPnet: KSCP00::DUMOULIN
- Kennedy Space Center
- Florida, USA 32899
-
-
-