Interplanetary Internet: Difference between revisions
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Cerf has called the existing system "the front end of what could be an evolving and expanding interplanetary backbone."<ref name="wired"></ref> | Cerf has called the existing system "the front end of what could be an evolving and expanding interplanetary backbone."<ref name="wired"></ref> | ||
==References== |
Revision as of 15:14, 17 April 2016
Interplanetary Internet or Interplanetary Networking is spaced-based network first in its infantile stages of development, with only a few nodes as of May 2013.[1] One of its goals, amongst others, is to connect spacecrafts, satellites, rovers, and orbiters of different planets and comets for the exchange of scientific data.[2]
Early Stages[edit | edit source]
The project first began in 1997, after Google's Vince Cerf and Bob Kahn had consultations with individuals at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The two initially considered TCP/IP protocols, and soon realized that while those were sufficient for communications on Earth, they were insufficient for communications between Earth and Mars.[1]
Cerf has called the existing system "the front end of what could be an evolving and expanding interplanetary backbone."[1]
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Google's Chief Internet Evangelist on Creating the Interplanetary Internet, Wired.com. Published 2013 May 6. Retrieved 2016 April 17.
- ↑ The Interplanetary Internet Implemented on the GENI Testbed, IEEE.org. Published 2015 December 6. Retrieved 2016 April 17.