Why it Was Almost Impossible to Put a Computer in Space

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
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    It’s really hard to put a computer into space… so hard in fact that laptops on the international space station are treated as effectively disposable. So when the folks at HPE wanted to put a SERVER on the ISS, people were a bit skeptical… and it turned out even with the help of KIOXIA’s fast and reliable storage devices, to be harder than they thought.
    HPE Spaceborne 2 Project: www.hpe.com/us/en/compute/hpc...
    The HPE Technology Now Podcast: • Science on the edge of...
    NASA’s “Houston, We Have A Podcast”: www.nasa.gov/podcasts/houston...
    HPE’s January 29, 2024 Blog: www.hpe.com/us/en/newsroom/bl...
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    MUSIC CREDIT
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    Intro: Laszlo - Supernova
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    CHAPTERS
    ---------------------------------------------------
    0:00 PCs in space???
    2:09 Spaceborne 2 & Data Transmission
    4:43 Checking out the servers
    5:50 Storage Config and Hot-swap demo
    10:33 Express Rack
    12:42 Networking
    16:16 Conclusion
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @LinusTechTips
    @LinusTechTips  Před 22 dny +1029

    Correction at 15:20 - This is meant to say "TDRS Satellite" instead of "TRDS Satellitte."

    • @arsen3097
      @arsen3097 Před 22 dny +10

      No comments ? Lemme fix that

    • @Hardesteen
      @Hardesteen Před 22 dny +3

      TDSR?

    • @MegaLokopo
      @MegaLokopo Před 22 dny +31

      If only it was Tardis. That would be my favorite satalite.

    • @OfficialDaveChannel
      @OfficialDaveChannel Před 22 dny +10

      Like the TARDIS?

    • @AnthonyChopra
      @AnthonyChopra Před 22 dny +2

      Did u lot get to play with that DVD Rom Drive behind linus its got its own volume button 2:52

  • @TheLexikitty
    @TheLexikitty Před 22 dny +5888

    It’s very hard to throw a computer that high and have it still work.

    • @YouTubetail
      @YouTubetail Před 22 dny +31

      Haha bro 🤣 best world pc

    • @RealOscarMay
      @RealOscarMay Před 22 dny +67

      It’s very hard to throw a computer at all and have it still work

    • @LostShadowGD
      @LostShadowGD Před 22 dny +51

      LEXI! Also so true.

    • @starwarsshooter336
      @starwarsshooter336 Před 22 dny +57

      wow a random appearing lexi

    • @Knastrolll
      @Knastrolll Před 22 dny +12

      Drop a computer and have it fall that far up*

  • @heroofnone
    @heroofnone Před 22 dny +1985

    I can't believe they built a fake sound stage to cover up the fact that Linus went to the space station.

    • @JorgeAguilera
      @JorgeAguilera Před 22 dny +52

      I’m so glad I didn’t read this comment before watching the whole thing.

    • @KriLL325783
      @KriLL325783 Před 22 dny +25

      He fit into the hand luggage

    • @gcewing
      @gcewing Před 22 dny +24

      They did a really good job simulating gravity, wonder how they did that.

    • @nirmalaagarwal3414
      @nirmalaagarwal3414 Před 22 dny +17

      ​@@gcewing linus just needed 2 very small electromagnets to stick to the surface

    • @Arachnoid_of_the_underverse
      @Arachnoid_of_the_underverse Před 22 dny +4

      He actually landed on the Moon too.

  • @evelynkieraivanova5404
    @evelynkieraivanova5404 Před 21 dnem +116

    As an actual engineer who deals with SWAP and the difficulties of aerospace environments, I will say this video is well made and pretty accurate.

    • @Czeckie
      @Czeckie Před 19 dny +5

      do you have any insight on why there isn't any shielding on the computer? would you need a meter of lead or something like that?

    • @evelynkieraivanova5404
      @evelynkieraivanova5404 Před 18 dny +14

      Because effective shielding is very heavy. Especially for neutrons and Gamma rays. It takes a lot of material to do that.

    • @JC.Denton.
      @JC.Denton. Před 12 dny

      male

    • @zinayhernandez8394
      @zinayhernandez8394 Před 6 dny

      And you been to outer space. 😂

  • @rytislun913
    @rytislun913 Před 22 dny +4201

    Many kerbals have died from "Computer bit flips"

    • @samiraperi467
      @samiraperi467 Před 22 dny +237

      "Many kerbals died to bring us this information."

    • @Dasgabar
      @Dasgabar Před 22 dny

      @Harsh85114get a life

    • @autobotjazz1972
      @autobotjazz1972 Před 22 dny +50

      @@samiraperi467 A quote from Mon Kerbma

    • @FlameSoulis
      @FlameSoulis Před 22 dny +22

      Does that explain 11:00?
      (Yes, I know it Jeb. Maybe a long lost ancestor or whatever.)

    • @r3ttgaming177
      @r3ttgaming177 Před 22 dny +8

      That's a beautiful way of describing a rage quit right there.

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Před 22 dny +2380

    Kudos to Linus for going to space without space suit just for the thumbnail

    • @susstevedev
      @susstevedev Před 22 dny +3

      Yeah props x69,420

    • @FurballCat
      @FurballCat Před 22 dny +10

      oh what a middle aged man would do for views right

    • @discorddiscord2647
      @discorddiscord2647 Před 22 dny

      Wait he’s actually in space or is he in a rocket on earth that will transport this equipment ?

    • @hiddendrifts
      @hiddendrifts Před 22 dny

      @@discorddiscord2647 i think he actually mentioned this on wan show; he's in a replica of the iss at one of hp's offices. or smth like that
      17:11 oh there you go

    • @ShadowWispr
      @ShadowWispr Před 22 dny +1

      Not to be *that* guy, but isn't this an ISS model at NASA

  • @ramtinnazeryan
    @ramtinnazeryan Před 22 dny +96

    that "Houtson we have a.. Linus" joke was AMAZIIING!!!!!

    • @GrayMatter70
      @GrayMatter70 Před 20 dny +1

      Hate to buzzkill, but that's based on an oft-repeated misquote. Neither of the Apollo 13 astronauts involved said that. It was closer to "Houston, we've had a...".

    • @anonymoususer3561
      @anonymoususer3561 Před 18 dny +1

      Redditor, you have to go back

  • @cpljimmyneutron
    @cpljimmyneutron Před 22 dny +101

    So, in the once upon a time my grandfather worked for JPL, and I did in fact get to see a couple of the ISS modules at Cape Canaveral before they launched. And I can tell you... they basically looked like big white rectangles. Researching the tech behind them is honestly more fun.
    But as far as computers surviving in space... my grandfather did work on two such computers that are still working today, more than 40 years after they launched... the Voyager probes.

    • @tyrannicpuppy
      @tyrannicpuppy Před 21 dnem +8

      That is so cool. Space is so incredible and the folks like your grandfather than helped us learn so much about it are all legends. They deserve way more credit and appreciation from us than they get.

    • @2ManyGoats
      @2ManyGoats Před 20 dny +4

      True legend!

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 19 dny +3

      but those computers were no were near as powerful, and were specially designed for radiation, these were COTS servers with no radiation protection of any kind.

    • @chrisoakey9841
      @chrisoakey9841 Před 17 dny +1

      there are a few things called satellites up there also. not surprising they also have computers up there. the big problem is the ISS seemed to be planned and executed with long slow and dangerously bad design and practice. everything from the station not being completed till after it was supposed to have reached end of life. they run at low pressure resulting in converting super fit & healthy humans into very weak people.
      they could dissipate heat from computers to heat the station.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 16 dny

      @@chrisoakey9841 Utter nonsense.
      "they run at low pressure resulting in converting super fit & healthy humans into very weak people."
      That in no way weakens people, it's lack of gravity that does it, same as bed-ridden hospital patients.
      "they could dissipate heat from computers to heat the station."
      The problem is Not heating, it's cooling. Without sufficient cooling, the ISS would overheat and cook teh astronauts alive from getting too hot. The computers also need cooling, and so are limited by the total ISS cooling budget, which is limited by the size and number of their radiators.
      Since the ISS continued longer than planned, they kept bolting on new unplanned additions. things take years to design, test, validate,etc. before flown, and so something planned in the 1980s and initially designed in the 1990s is going to be obsolete 35yrs later, who knew. The ISS was initially developed in the days before personal computers, internet, and other technology being commonplace. Even most electronic calculators in teh early 1990s were still very crude devices, with 2-line calculators and more scientific computing features coming along later.

  • @QEin1786
    @QEin1786 Před 22 dny +943

    I like this sort of sponsorship; "Hey, we did a cool thing, let us pay you to come out and see it all and share how cool it is, to get our brand out there."

    • @zackzeed
      @zackzeed Před 22 dny +77

      One of the best kinds of sponsorships!

    • @Dragon-xd9em
      @Dragon-xd9em Před 22 dny +23

      I hope we see more of this kinda stuff, it's cool to see all the fancy space tech!

    • @himaro101
      @himaro101 Před 22 dny +24

      Couldn't agree more. I mean, it's a flex from Kioxia for sure, but damn, it's a big flex. I'd love to be able to migrate to Kioxia SSD's for my NAS, even if they're monstrous overkill.

    • @JoshuaCasey
      @JoshuaCasey Před 22 dny +8

      I agree. I just hope this doesn't age poorly like Linus's trip to Intel in the terrorist state of Israel

    • @caiocc12
      @caiocc12 Před 22 dny +10

      Yeah, some years ago If you said Kioxia I would ask which disease is that, and if I wanted a good SSD I would go Samsung or Intel, now I know about them.

  • @sleipnir_8364
    @sleipnir_8364 Před 22 dny +1831

    it is ironic that "space age technology" needed to be older and more analog to survive.

    • @mozzjones6943
      @mozzjones6943 Před 22 dny +164

      And/Or, Because it took so much time to build things and most of the NASA space tech was designed and engineered decades ago, They can't just update/replace to accumulate new tech.. Like for the ISS.

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError Před 22 dny +31

      Sounds like the land part of the nuclear triad... which was still using a huge arse diskette...

    • @bthatguy1181
      @bthatguy1181 Před 22 dny +70

      Not when you consider the "space age" was 60 years ago.

    • @ulasht1
      @ulasht1 Před 22 dny +5

      @@mozzjones6943 and yet they can't even follow their own guidelines for making a rocket go figure. joking aside while the getting things to space and having it work issue is a factor most of it's Bureaucracy.

    • @Spearhead45
      @Spearhead45 Před 22 dny +22

      well government has never been good at moving fast. Private industry should be in charge of the tech and integration. I mean a us defense contractror charges 90k dollars for a very small bag of bushings. they charge too much because the government pays with tax dollars.

  • @aaardvaaark
    @aaardvaaark Před 22 dny +40

    This video came at just the right time, I've been looking for a server for my space station.

  • @paratus04
    @paratus04 Před 21 dnem +20

    11:41 One correction. The cooling loops exchange heat with the External Thermal Control System radiators (the two sets of 3 radiators closest to the modules along the truss)
    The Photovoltaic Thermal Control System Radiators are the 4 radiators mounted between each pair of solar arrays. They only provide cooling to the electronics for their respective solar arrays. This makes sense because they are mounted outside of the 2 Solar Alpha Rotary Joints which spin the 4 port and starboard solar arrays 360 degrees every orbit. It’s hard to pass a fluid through a rotating joint.

  • @RomainCavallini
    @RomainCavallini Před 22 dny +642

    OMG ! they put a "do not stir" label at 16:01 , above the "o2 cryogenic tanks" label.
    For those not as geeky as me, its a reference to the Apollo 13 lunar mission, that suffered an explosion due to a short circuit...while stirring the O2 tanks ! (Fortunately no one died, its a really cool story, there's also a movie about that)

  • @icehawk3442
    @icehawk3442 Před 22 dny +776

    Today's lesson: NASA space station tech doesn't mean high tech, it just means it's engineered to not kill its occupants as far as possible

    • @MirageAfterDark
      @MirageAfterDark Před 22 dny +146

      To be fair, "engineered not to kill its occupants as far as possible" in "lethal high energy high radiation environment" is fairly high tech. :P

    • @audguy
      @audguy Před 22 dny +20

      To be fair, it is up really high!

    • @zwenkwiel816
      @zwenkwiel816 Před 22 dny +7

      It just means "good enough for government work"

    • @formes2388
      @formes2388 Před 22 dny +35

      Not really surprising.
      Think about a submarine - the other kind of pressure vessel we use as a species that deals with dramatic changes. The ISS deals with a total pressure differential of ~1 atmosphere. Relatively speaking, it's easy to keep the thing as one solid piece. The difficult part is the lack of atmosphere.
      Take a hinge - like a standard door hinge, two pieces of brass or whatever, that slide together. In space you would find it has the awful habbit of sticking after you open it a few times, and by sticking I mean suddenly welding itself together as the oxide layer is rubbed off, exposing bare smooth metal surfaces that don't know any difference than to presume they are a single continuous piece of metal and suddenly: You can't easily move the hinge. This isn't a problem on earth - any oxide layer that does get removed, quickly reforms. But where you have no atmosphere?
      The problems in Space aren't so much about bleeding edge technology - it's about solving problems that you didn't know would be problems. This is why Reliability, trumps basically all else. You need to know it will work.

    • @AdrianSchwartzmann
      @AdrianSchwartzmann Před 22 dny +16

      It's like seeing explosion proof secruity cameras in a companies product line, then thinking they must be some crazy kind of armored camera. Then finding out it just means they won't cause an explosion not that they would survive one.

  • @bromine_35
    @bromine_35 Před 20 dny +9

    Now they can edge in space

  • @brandonm750
    @brandonm750 Před 22 dny +5

    Idk if you've done a video on Mars rovers or their computers (a quick CZcams search suggests not 🤷‍♂️) but the radiation hardening required for those sattelites and computers that go beyond LEO are insane. For instance, the Perseverance rover launched in 2020 has the equivalent of a late-90s PowerPC Mac CPU. The ISS and other LEO sattelites don't need this because they are below the Van Allen radiation belts that capture most of the sun's harmful radiation.
    On another note, I don't think the wider public realizes how difficult it can be to change hardware out in space. Every spacewalk takes multiple hours and you only get half of the work done that you could here on the ground. And every upgrade (like adding Starlink antennas) would require a spacewalk.
    The work that goes into computers and equipment that goes into space is amazing. Awesome video, love that you could work with NASA and bring light to a wider audience the awesome things they do. 😁👍

  • @Luzgar
    @Luzgar Před 22 dny +820

    The very idea of Linus Chaos Monkey Sebastian on the ISS is terrifying.
    He would be able to make it drop from orbit.

    • @frostydog2028
      @frostydog2028 Před 22 dny +7

      Where do you think Cobra got the idea for ZEUS during GI Joe 2?

    • @trophywolfe
      @trophywolfe Před 22 dny +8

      Hijack the communication antenna to get high speed satalite internet 😂

    • @bvoyelr
      @bvoyelr Před 22 dny +1

      But we can rest assured that the day would be saved by an inanimate carbon rod.

    • @TheOmegaRiddler
      @TheOmegaRiddler Před 22 dny +16

      Linus wishes he could go to the ISS so he could drop something in zero gravity and not have to worry about breaking something.

    • @frostydog2028
      @frostydog2028 Před 22 dny +13

      @@TheOmegaRiddler He’d find a way to break it…. This is Linus we are talking about.

  • @RandomToon1
    @RandomToon1 Před 22 dny +255

    They launched a hard drive with a super capacitor, but accidentally launched an experiment that tested what happens to unshielded super capacitors when bombarded with gamma radiation. The ISS will ALWAYS manage to gather data about something.

    • @noobulon4334
      @noobulon4334 Před 22 dny +8

      Oh my, I'm curious of the results

    • @acmenipponair
      @acmenipponair Před 22 dny +13

      @@noobulon4334 The results were simple: SSDs in space fail much faster than on the earth, as the super capacitators break faster and therefore the SSD gets overcharged during saving procedures earlier compared to earth. Solution: regularly backup your data - that's why they have this big server with longer living capacity, so that they can save the data from the experiments all the time and then send it to earth in big packages.

    • @tyrannicpuppy
      @tyrannicpuppy Před 21 dnem +4

      True science is just as excited about a bad result as a good result. Because it's still a result that they can learn from. And let us never forget just how many amazing discoveries were made by accident while trying to learn something entirely different. Accidental results are some of the best we've made.

  • @jackryan2946
    @jackryan2946 Před 22 dny +5

    Thank you so much for the video!! I think this may be my personal favorite. So cool to see the practical applications in such a unique and challenging environment.

  • @VascoBreitenfeld
    @VascoBreitenfeld Před 22 dny +6

    Wow! This has got to be one of the coolest videos I’ve ever seen on CZcams! Great to know how the ISS operates and its constraints. It’s nothing like I expected! Please do more videos on space tech if you can 😊

  • @BlackHoleForge
    @BlackHoleForge Před 22 dny +235

    14:47 for anybody feeling nostalgic, remember AOL and dial-up. You would have to wait 20 minutes for a single song to download. Now you can relive the experience, all you have to do is become an astronaut.

    • @HazewinDog
      @HazewinDog Před 21 dnem +5

      How about sending a >1MB file through MSN? That would also take minutes at best and had a very high potential to fail, at which point you had to start all over again. Sounds very much like what they're dealing with in space today :D

    • @undinism69
      @undinism69 Před 21 dnem +4

      haha, I've been using internet since '89. Downloads to home will slow back then here in Australia. 300 baud modem if I remember correctly?

  • @JeffGeerling
    @JeffGeerling Před 22 dny +722

    It's hard to put a computer in space...
    unless you put it in a space bar.

    • @Mrpuggo0322
      @Mrpuggo0322 Před 22 dny +4

      Bruh😂

    • @906
      @906 Před 22 dny +19

      Why did the computer go to space?
      To get a byte of the Milky Way!

    • @NerdyThrowbackTech
      @NerdyThrowbackTech Před 22 dny +7

      ba dum tss

    • @HXRDWIREDGaming
      @HXRDWIREDGaming Před 22 dny +12

      god damnit. This joke was from is Dada-base.

    • @HXRDWIREDGaming
      @HXRDWIREDGaming Před 22 dny

      @Harsh85114 This is 14 year old bait, if you click don't forget to report! :)

  • @ANDSENS
    @ANDSENS Před 21 dnem +2

    What an awesome video. I love it that LTT is sticking to the original mission of making informative/educational vids, love it!

  • @hoofhearted4
    @hoofhearted4 Před 22 dny +10

    That scene from MSB of Arnold taking his helmet off on Pluto, lives rent free in my head. one of these few episodes I ever actually saw (was probably with school tbh)

  • @timeimp
    @timeimp Před 22 dny +108

    Magic School Bus reference was not expected but entirely appreciated. Nice work Editor!

  • @maquiavelmg
    @maquiavelmg Před 22 dny +96

    Due to the "lack of gravity", it is impossible to drop something in space.
    Linus: hold my LTT screwdriver

    • @tyrannicpuppy
      @tyrannicpuppy Před 21 dnem +1

      You just know he used this opportunity to put a few into the chain there. Hoping that one of them might actually make it up to space and get on one of the live streams they do.

  • @DJAlexParker
    @DJAlexParker Před 22 dny +8

    Actually found this alot more interesting than I thought I would, great video 😊

  • @epickh64
    @epickh64 Před 22 dny +3

    This is so awesome. While watching this, my eyes were sparkling so much, one might have seen the light from the ISS. I love this video. Very well-done.

  • @anumeon
    @anumeon Před 22 dny +390

    @16:19 "Cryogenic Tanks, do not stir"
    Someone at NASA remembers what happened to Apollo 13

    • @venosaur121212
      @venosaur121212 Před 22 dny +14

      Well I would hope that almost everyone at NASA remembere what happened there :D

    • @MegaLokopo
      @MegaLokopo Před 22 dny +5

      @@venosaur121212 I hope the exception to that is the kid of the janitor during take your kid to work day, but he would probably still know that.

    • @lmcgregoruk
      @lmcgregoruk Před 22 dny

      You missed it at 0:14 then?

    • @anumeon
      @anumeon Před 22 dny +1

      @@lmcgregoruk Nope, i just used the one where i was in the video when i decided to make the comment.. :D

    • @GloomGaiGar
      @GloomGaiGar Před 17 dny

      they better!

  • @Reckless150681
    @Reckless150681 Před 22 dny +142

    Hi I'm working in aerospace, I can talk about just a couple of things:
    1. People think of space as cold, but it might not be as cold as you think. Temperature in low Earth orbit (LEO) can be -60 to +120 C depending on how much direct sunlight you're receiving. Linus' point about having no air to convect heat away is a pretty big deal - that's why you need massive radiator panels.
    2. NASA and incumbent space agencies tend to be risk-averse and want to see SIGNIFICANT verification of functionality at every level, particularly when humans are involved. That's probably one reason why they don't use Starlink - the technology is simply too new and maybe there's some technical or bureaucratic inertia to overcome. It's also why tech in space tends to be pretty old, even if it's launched today. US agencies like to see flight heritage. So even (as a silly example) if Ryzen 7600 is better than Intel Core 2, if these agencies see that Intel Core 2 provides everything they need, they're more likely to pick the Core 2 over Ryzen 7600 because they KNOW it'll work. This is compounded by the fact that the rad-hardening process takes a ton of money and time, so you often end up sending surprisingly old tech into space. Newer commercial companies and smallsats are trying to use newer tech though.
    3. Power budget is super important. One reason that it's so tight is because solar panels degrade over time, especially in space, so the power available to the ISS is decreasing over time.
    4. Bit flips are MUCH more common than on Earth, that's why rad-hardening is important. I had a professor whose research specifically tried to ameliorate the effects of bit-flipping.
    5. Not necessarily tech related but it's true that space vehicles need to balance physical practicality versus human preference, e.g. convenient orientations versus "needed" orientations like Linus mentioned.

    • @Deinorius
      @Deinorius Před 22 dny +3

      About Starlink I'm also asking myself, if those satellites even have antennas directing to space. Starlink was built for use on earth primarily.

    • @phuzz00
      @phuzz00 Před 22 dny +7

      @@Deinorius They did use Starlink to link to the recent Starship test flight, but that was lower than the satellites. I guess at some point SpaceX will put a dish in/on a Dragon capsule to test it further up.

    • @sylfrear
      @sylfrear Před 22 dny +15

      i work in a company that launches cubesats and we just had a radiation incident a week or so ago! can bus traffic to the power management board completely dead and watchdogs not triggered, radiation’s bad for the little dudes lol

    • @Reckless150681
      @Reckless150681 Před 22 dny +2

      @@Deinorius they have some sort of communication capability in space. I'm not sure off the top of my head what it is - but we know they're expected to be able to respond in case of collisions. Whether that can be repurposed for communication with Earth, I dunno

    • @jamescollins6085
      @jamescollins6085 Před 22 dny +1

      Why don't they use Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators instead or in combination with solar? They could reliably generate hundreds of watts for decades.

  • @JohnAdamZiolkowski
    @JohnAdamZiolkowski Před 22 dny

    Fascinating video! Every second of it was awesome and filled with answers to questions I've never thought of. Seriously awesome and interesting!

  • @theWSt
    @theWSt Před 18 dny

    That's really fascinating, very special and unique video, thx folks!

  • @DavidKhabinsky
    @DavidKhabinsky Před 22 dny +255

    The editors had way too much fun with the windows.

    • @robertaries2974
      @robertaries2974 Před 22 dny +3

      Oh yes 😂

    • @tomikun8057
      @tomikun8057 Před 22 dny +5

      i dont get it

    • @rolandegyed6695
      @rolandegyed6695 Před 22 dny

      ​@@tomikun8057Look at 10:59

    • @pu239
      @pu239 Před 22 dny

      @@tomikun8057 11:00

    • @lemster101
      @lemster101 Před 22 dny +2

      ​@@tomikun8057 In the windows of the ISS replica you can see random things like animated UFOs flying by that the editors added in.

  • @B20C0
    @B20C0 Před 22 dny +122

    A friend of mine is a physicist who used to work at CERN and, as part of her job, assembled sensors for the particle collider. And despite the sensor's specific purpose being to measure the products of a collision, one of the issues they had to deal with was these particles causing bit flips and other issues when passing through the chips inside the sensors.
    So what she told me they did was to irradiate the chips before putting them in because this somehow increased protection from the effects of the particles passing through. Or better put less susceptible to damage. She tried to explain it to me what happens in detail but this was long ago and I didn't understand half of it, so I might be talking BS here. Though I wonder if NASA/ESA also do something similar to their chips.
    But I guess this would only be useful for heavier particles than gamma radiation, which I guess is the main problem in space.
    All that being said, computing in hostile environments is both very interesting and potentially very frustrating as entropy slaps you in the face.

    • @XanatosDavid
      @XanatosDavid Před 22 dny +51

      Physicist here, you pre eradiate them to get those that are particularly susceptible to die before you put it into the heart of a machine you can only service every few years. The procedure does not make anything more resilient, just the surviving units are less likely to fail later on.

    • @B20C0
      @B20C0 Před 22 dny

      ​@@XanatosDavid Ah okay, that makes much more sense. Then I remembered it wrong. I just remembered something about irradiating chips and some presentation slides she sent me years ago. Though I looked through CERN's DB and found them, and you are completely right, it's just part of a testing campaign. In case you're interested (they mention "irradiation qualification of ASICs"):
      indico.cern.ch/event/774201/contributions/3429235/attachments/1875763/3088566/iWoRiDtalkDette2019.pdf
      Though since you're here and could provide some background knowledge: Since this is basically just testing/sorting chips, wouldn't this also make sense for any kind of ASIC/CPU/GPU NASA sends up there? Or do they do that already?

    • @B20C0
      @B20C0 Před 22 dny +15

      ​@@XanatosDavid Somehow my last response was deleted, probably because I linked to a PDF from the CERN document server with slides my friend sent me back when she told me about this.
      But thank you for explaining and of course you are completely right and I remembered it wrong, it was basically just done to sort out the chips that would be most affected by radiation. In the slides she sent me back then she called it "irradiation qualification".
      But since I have another physicist to ask now: Do you know if NASA performs similar tests with the computers they send up? Would make a lot of sense I guess.
      Oh and in case anyone wonders, the PDF can be found on the CERN document server, it has ID 2686279.

    • @azemaviator
      @azemaviator Před 22 dny +2

      @@B20C0 One of the points of this project was to send off the shelf hardware. Most computers that have been sent up before are treated like so or custom made. The spaceborn project's whole point was "modern enterprise hardware has ECC built into every layer how would it work in space?"

    • @oggesiech
      @oggesiech Před 22 dny +2

      Something like this is actually common practice for all industrial grade (and military and aerospace grade of course) electronics. Most component failures tend to occur early, so the parts undergo a stress test inside a climatic chamber, cycling through the temperature and humidity ranges the parts are specified for. It's called a "burn-in". This is of course expensive, but it's a lot less expensive than fixing a train stuck in some tunnel in the alps or a plane crashing.

  • @NickCharles
    @NickCharles Před 2 dny

    This is by far one of the coolest videos I've seen in a long time. What a cool opportunity for the team to make this one!

  • @JheregJAB
    @JheregJAB Před 21 dnem +1

    This is a really cool video, about a topic I wouldn't have thought to investigate on my own. Super cool stuff.

  • @tpolarbeart
    @tpolarbeart Před 22 dny +45

    This brings back memories when i was a test engineer at a satellite company. Nearly every circuit had a duplicate on the same chassis. Then they would put two of those in which is essentially 4 copies. They have to guarantee a satellite to work for 10-15 years without being able to repair it.

  • @mark_walet
    @mark_walet Před 22 dny +67

    1:34 I like that Spaceborne 2 has the same naming scheme as New-New Whonnock

  • @emefcue
    @emefcue Před 21 dnem

    Im very impressed with your reaearch done on this video regarding space. Well done!

  • @Halo_King19
    @Halo_King19 Před 22 dny

    This was so cool to see even though il never need to know or get to see this personally in space. Great job LTT team, amazing video as always.

  • @nickallain
    @nickallain Před 22 dny +91

    Speaking as someone that helped put about 150 satellites into LEO, in my opinion, space hardening the hardware really only applies when you intend on a super long lifespan - which means you also have no reliable de-orbit plan (so you fully intend on being space debris). For something with a lifespan of under 10 years, you just need some redundant systems and really good error checking in your software. Software based hardening is 100% a thing and way cheaper.

    • @Waitwhat469
      @Waitwhat469 Před 22 dny +11

      Always depends on the workload, but it is crazy how many workloads can fit in the Rancher SUSE "Cattle not pets" model for services where you build them to deploy as stateless as possible to allow for processes to spin up when needed to process data and crash with no loss if they go down.
      Again redundancy, plan for failures to happen, and then you can start to tighten your tolerances to save costs and not just to get it to work at all!

    • @LoganDark4357
      @LoganDark4357 Před 22 dny +7

      I think I heard somewhere that you can have multiple identical CPUs executing in parallel, that way either you can detect errors and either recalculate that, reset, or if you have 3+ CPUs then you can fix one using the others.

    • @AGuyWhoWantAUsername
      @AGuyWhoWantAUsername Před 22 dny +11

      @@LoganDark4357 You might be referring to a TMR (Triple Modular Redundancy) technique.

    • @LoganDark4357
      @LoganDark4357 Před 22 dny +2

      @@AGuyWhoWantAUsernameI didn't know that had a name . yes!!!!!!

    • @SPeeSimon
      @SPeeSimon Před 22 dny +2

      Or when human lives depend on it.
      When a satellite mailfunctions you scream, write it off and send a new one. When a person dies you have a lot more questions and issues to deal with. During the "space race" it was kind of a war with russia and some lives lost were acceptable. That's not the case anymore. That's why things are over engineered and thorougly tested. Because there is no triple a or plumber in space.

  • @NoobLord98
    @NoobLord98 Před 22 dny +265

    Ok, what happened to the real Linus? This guy at 1:57 is wearing shoes, not sandals

    • @aweisen1
      @aweisen1 Před 22 dny +13

      Linus is a synth now

    • @WyattOShea
      @WyattOShea Před 22 dny +2

      @@aweisen1 I understood that reference.

    • @Steamrick
      @Steamrick Před 22 dny +17

      He probably got told that only closed footwear is allowed on premises...

    • @martinh2783
      @martinh2783 Před 22 dny +8

      Must be NASA regulations.

    • @trophywolfe
      @trophywolfe Před 22 dny +2

      It's ai generated obviously cause hes also not looking 35.

  • @Midcon77
    @Midcon77 Před 19 dny

    That was one of more interesting LTTs I've seen in a while - really cool seeing how commercial tech is making it's way into space. Would love to see more of this kind of content - like what compare what was used on the Space Shuttle (486 systems I believe towards the end?) vs. what's used in modern human transport systems (SpaceX Dragon, Boeing Starliner, etc.)

  • @twiz66
    @twiz66 Před 22 dny +80

    I think they're actually called "New New New Spaceborn"

  • @patiolunch
    @patiolunch Před 22 dny +78

    i like these educational style vids more than tech reviews

  • @crispy2902
    @crispy2902 Před 9 dny +1

    So nice of Kioxia to fly Linus to the ISS to film this video! :D

  • @ApfelJohannisbeere
    @ApfelJohannisbeere Před 22 dny

    Thanks for the awesome information there!

  • @JiajuChen
    @JiajuChen Před 22 dny +114

    Space is full of computers
    More like Space is full of ThinkPads...

    • @LaughingOrange
      @LaughingOrange Před 22 dny +6

      Older computers work better in space, because they're less likely to bit-flip.

    • @user-zu6wg9wt8m
      @user-zu6wg9wt8m Před 22 dny +5

      @@LaughingOrange running arch linux on them makes you cool too

    • @furinick
      @furinick Před 22 dny +5

      Thats a huge marketing hook lenovo can use but dont, apple would prob pay billions to show an imac in the iss under actual use

    • @SebiKoerner
      @SebiKoerner Před 22 dny

      @@furinick Only that neither Apple nor NASA would ever attampt to send any Mac-Based system to space. Especially now when there's esentailly no way to swap the OS on Apple Silicon Macs. There is a lot of iPads on the ISS though. Both personal and scientific iPads to track data etc. Funny enough, it was Russia that started to ship iPads to the ISS as enterntainment devices to replace aging iPods in 2011. NASA has since adopted iPads as well though. Sometimes in Crew Dragon launches you can see iPads starpped to the Dragon Flight Suites.

    • @jdselders8010
      @jdselders8010 Před 21 dnem

      They're actually HP Z Books, and they're old because certifying them for flight is an expensive endeavor, so NASA does a bulk lifetime buy of the laptops and spare parts all at once.

  • @nodraw_
    @nodraw_ Před 22 dny +21

    This video is genuinely so interesting! I appreciate the effort you guys went through and I hope to see more videos about industrial computers :)

  • @jamesbrinkler
    @jamesbrinkler Před 15 dny

    This was an amazing video, more space stuff when you can please!

  • @Mavarius89
    @Mavarius89 Před 22 dny +1

    Please more space cpu stuff. Loved it and laughed hard at some facts. Thank you!

  • @sentinelx1055
    @sentinelx1055 Před 22 dny +324

    Space? Space! Spaaaaaaaaaaaace!

    • @computingcapybara
      @computingcapybara Před 22 dny +38

      Space. Space. I love space, la la la, I’m in space. Star star, I like stars!

    • @Nyxes2000
      @Nyxes2000 Před 22 dny +13

      Dad! I'm in space! I'm proud of you, son. Dad, are you space? Yes. Now we are a family again

    • @XRebelRenegadeX
      @XRebelRenegadeX Před 22 dny +18

      Space space wanna go to space yes please space. Space space. Go to space.

    • @SubZeroXJ
      @SubZeroXJ Před 22 dny +8

      Getting bored of space.

    • @thirteenthnile3536
      @thirteenthnile3536 Před 22 dny +2

      That’s it? Just space? Where are the balls?

  • @Lord_zeel
    @Lord_zeel Před 22 dny +384

    I legit said "why not use Starlink?" right before he mentions it. I suspect there may be some technical issues with that though? I doubt they could just send a Starlink dish up there and plug a laptop into it.

    • @seanlacroix
      @seanlacroix Před 22 dny +15

      Why wouldn’t they. Space x sends supplies and tons of stuff up to them already.

    • @Kazuhamino
      @Kazuhamino Před 22 dny +71

      I'm assuming theres a power limit issue. As well as they just havent designed the receiver side dishes to actually survive in space. I'm guessing at some point they might intend on bringing the ISS back and sending up one thats much more efficient and modern. 1985 was a long time ago in computer terms and they probably have been pushing the absolute limits as it was for the laptops they had.

    • @enigmabey
      @enigmabey Před 22 dny +109

      I’m gonna go ahead and guess security. Even if NASA is actively collaborating with SpaceX, ISS is a multinational project and not everyone may consent to send their data through a US based private organization

    • @CallOfCutie69
      @CallOfCutie69 Před 22 dny +46

      Starlink’s AESA dish uses a lot of energy, that is reflected in electricity bills of the earthly users, too.

    • @RandomTheories
      @RandomTheories Před 22 dny +72

      Well, for one, the Starlink satelites are facing down to earth at a orbit of around 150km, the ISS is at about 400km above, so they would send the signal only at back of the satelite

  • @erdrickk
    @erdrickk Před 22 dny

    Great video, love these types of informative videos.

  • @RobertoCarvalho-0
    @RobertoCarvalho-0 Před 22 dny

    I loved the type to content. Im looking forward something with The sphere through :)

  • @Mezinov
    @Mezinov Před 22 dny +11

    The company I work for used to make a peristaltic pump for experiments on the space shuttles. It was made to be smaller, lighter, and more energy efficient than any other pump we made at the time and had to be dumb enough not to rely on anything that radiation could kill.

  • @Fatal_Inertia
    @Fatal_Inertia Před 22 dny +12

    See THIS is my type of content. Please do more space computer stuff. Hubble control center next? Or maybe an observatory computer?

  • @Vadu1337
    @Vadu1337 Před 22 dny

    I love this kind of content from you guys

  • @matthiasmartin4355
    @matthiasmartin4355 Před 22 dny

    This was super interesting. Thanks for sharing.

  • @JeremyMcMahan
    @JeremyMcMahan Před 22 dny +3

    That a great video. Enjoyed all the nerding-out. Thanks!

  • @kytechnelson
    @kytechnelson Před 18 dny

    Having just wrapped up my Master's thesis, which dealt with working within the constraints of edge compute systems for AI in space deployments, this was great timing and a very enjoyable video. Great work on really putting into perspective the constraints one has to work within when dealing with computer systems in space. The university I attended has a lot of projects under NASA funding, so its always nice to hear that NASA's big ISS projects have to deal with many of the same sorts of constraints that we have to put up with on our smaller space platforms.

  • @Olaipai
    @Olaipai Před 22 dny +1

    Loved the little alien passing by in the window

  • @SolarpunkMonk
    @SolarpunkMonk Před 22 dny +6

    Great episode Linus, love the theme, would love to see more odd and unique case situations like this! Maybe power plants? Research centres?

  • @streetmp
    @streetmp Před 22 dny +10

    One of my favorite videos you’ve done.

  • @griffenstephenson13
    @griffenstephenson13 Před 22 dny

    This was so interesting, love videos like this

  • @russellneal1263
    @russellneal1263 Před 21 dnem +1

    More content like this please? Love the historical and scientific based educational type stuff

  • @therealherbzy
    @therealherbzy Před 22 dny +3

    This is so cool. Please do more space stuff.

  • @wileymonair
    @wileymonair Před 22 dny +3

    I want to see more space tech coverage!!!
    PLEASE!!!

  • @Erranteumbra
    @Erranteumbra Před 20 dny +1

    I appreciate the dad joke to make fun of Linus’ dad joke by the editor at 12:25

  • @vladimircicmanec6103
    @vladimircicmanec6103 Před 21 dnem

    This is a helluva interesting watch, fantastic

  • @freshcoastdrifttracks6074

    I started working for a aerospace company last year, i was amazed at how much effort it takes to make a computer work in space!

    • @RS-ls7mm
      @RS-ls7mm Před 22 dny

      LEO is pretty easy, below the Van Allen belts. Even laptops work there. GEO is much more fun. Pretty rare to find a processor that works there. I had to design my own but that was 30 years ago.

  • @Treetrytrey
    @Treetrytrey Před 22 dny +11

    Linus is the type of person to put a computer in space and play Minecraft

  • @MrTiger-ud7jc
    @MrTiger-ud7jc Před 22 dny

    Amazing vid guys wow really enjoyed watching!!!

  • @jedfdk
    @jedfdk Před 20 dny

    Thank you for this video. I love LTT and i actually work on the Cygnus program (i am a Quality Assurance person in the propulsion work center for NG) i have been building the Service Module for years now and love what i do.

  • @ayanahmed8180
    @ayanahmed8180 Před 21 dnem +2

    this video had 2 of my favorite things. Space and Computers.

  • @arisakathedappergoose4796
    @arisakathedappergoose4796 Před 22 dny +27

    but can it run Crysis?

  • @SoloRenegade
    @SoloRenegade Před 22 dny

    Awesome video! Very well explained.

  • @Gromaul
    @Gromaul Před 22 dny

    Dunno why, but even though I am subscribed I haven't been seeing your videos in my feed recently. Glad I clicked your channel on my subscribers this is a neat vid!

  • @Emelin-cr8nc
    @Emelin-cr8nc Před 22 dny +12

    that picture of an alien got me laughing 😭😭😭

  • @guaiqueritech
    @guaiqueritech Před 22 dny +3

    This puts into perspective the fact that the Voyager probe was so well built that it still works, despite all the cons mentioned in this video. Impressive

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 21 dnem +1

      far less capable though too. but those are the kinds of decisions and tradeoffs that have to be made with each specific mission.

  • @dan110024
    @dan110024 Před 22 dny

    Love these different but interesting videos!

  • @kuunib7325
    @kuunib7325 Před 21 dnem

    This is really cool. Stating the obvios but I like learning about tech and space and engineering. So this really hits the spot.

  • @tylerdean980
    @tylerdean980 Před 22 dny +8

    A silicon graphics neofetch? Give me the dots, now

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 22 dny +1

      yes, the original Spaceborne was started and designed by SGI right as HPE acquired SGI. But was completed and launched after the merger.

  • @SpicerJack
    @SpicerJack Před 22 dny +17

    The U.S. government has outsourced everything to private contractors who use research from public colleges and universities, and actual NASA is looking like some kind of retro future aesthetic using off the shelf server parts.

    • @ZaPpaul
      @ZaPpaul Před 22 dny

      NASA isn't a government agency.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 22 dny +2

      the private sector computers are far more advanced than anything the gov has developed. Making modern computers is not easy, and the US gov doesn't have the people, nor the equipment, nor the innovation to do it themselves. And if they did, without having volumes to sell, it would be ridiculously expensive for a single computer.

    • @wereoctopus
      @wereoctopus Před 22 dny +4

      NASA has *always* outsourced a ton of stuff to private contractors.
      e.g. take the Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC). The MIT Instrumentation Laboratory designed the computer's hardware, OS and UI. Raytheon did the manufacturing.
      Fairchild Semiconductor pioneered the first mass-producible ICs in 1960, and the AGC was the first computer to use them. Of course these were still primitive-one flatpack chip roughly 20mm² might contain two 3-input NOR gates, for a total of 6 transistors.
      The AGC's memory was even wilder. Its RAM was magnetic core memory (typical for the time) but its ROM was core rope memory. The AGC had 6 core rope modules. Each contained 512 iron/nickel cores (donuts 0.249" in diameter, about 6.3mm) and 192 "sense" wires. For every core, each sense wire either threaded through it (representing 1) or around it (representing 0). Cores had additional wires for address selection and reading out. All of this threading was done by hand-Raytheon had a factory full of needleworkers threading data into the ROM, bit by bit.
      They did this because even though core rope memory was incredibly labour-intensive to make, it had unparalleled information density, about 5× that of the magnetic core memory used as RAM. When going into space, mass and volume are paramount.
      It also happens to be resilient to bit-flips ;)

  • @Harlinization
    @Harlinization Před 22 dny

    as well happy to see a Video with out the Over-Sillyness - its balances out nicely

  • @ktrainer2885
    @ktrainer2885 Před 22 dny +2

    This was an awesome video. Saying hi from NASA JPSS Program here. I hope to see more videos like this!

  • @QBDLettuce
    @QBDLettuce Před 17 dny

    Very cool video and cool information.
    Thanks for the content.

  • @BriefNerdOriginal
    @BriefNerdOriginal Před 22 dny +3

    Enterprise Drives: the new Star Trek frontier 🖖

  • @Indrid__Cold
    @Indrid__Cold Před 22 dny +18

    You're too young to remember, but the first laptop in space was by Grid Systems. Their product, the Grid Compass 1101, was introduced in 1982 and became notable for its rugged, clamshell design and magnesium case. This model was used by NASA on the Space Shuttle missions, starting with STS-13 in 1983. They were VERY expensive as I recall. The computer featured an Intel 8086 processor, a 320 × 240-pixel electroluminescent display, 340-kilobyte magnetic bubble memory, and a 1200 bit/s modem. Devices such as hard drives and floppy drives could be connected via the IEEE-488 I/O (also known as GPIB or General Purpose Interface Bus). This port made it possible to connect multiple devices to the addressable device bus. It weighed 5 kg (11 lb). The power input is ~110/220 V AC, 47-66 Hz, 75 W.

  • @RealGr33nGiant
    @RealGr33nGiant Před 21 dnem

    Pretty cool seeing Linus talk about our ISS Hardware. A lot of information about ExPRESS Racks are provided on NASAs website as well as other payloads. To get a little more specific Spaceborne is actually housed in one of our Basic ExPRESS Racks. From its name you can tell it has a fewer resources than a standard ExPRESS Rack but it still has all of the resources that the Spaceborne team needed for their payload.

  • @wintlink
    @wintlink Před 18 dny

    That’s amazing ! Very interesting content

  • @catlife2
    @catlife2 Před 22 dny +4

    Linus is evolving from making videos about cables to making videos about computers on iss💀

  • @blancobull
    @blancobull Před 22 dny +4

    Linus, you're HUGE(ish) in Japan.

  • @artamereenshort6610
    @artamereenshort6610 Před 21 dnem

    A very nice episode. More like this one

  • @charliebeij5181
    @charliebeij5181 Před 22 dny

    Love videos like this, very interesting!

  • @farhadmodaresi4182
    @farhadmodaresi4182 Před 21 dnem +3

    bruh that''s not atrocious that's like a normal internet connection for me

  • @CricketEngland
    @CricketEngland Před 22 dny +10

    Yes but the question everyone is asking is “Can it play Doom!”?

  • @sanctusletum8522
    @sanctusletum8522 Před 21 dnem +1

    Alright, we NEED more aerospace computer application videos from LTT. This is phenomenal.

  • @Nimrod336
    @Nimrod336 Před 22 dny

    I have been asking for years how do computers run in space. Thank you. I finally get to see a video on it.

  • @MozartTheGOAT
    @MozartTheGOAT Před 22 dny +12

    Because its impossible to throw a PC that far up.
    I know this from experience, ahh those were the golden days.