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by JdeBP
1135 days ago
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"Runs Linux" is superficial thinking, though. ("Runs Linux" doesn't equate to "uses the Internet Protocol".) There is no more Internet Protocol connectivity to Mars in 2023 than there was in 1991. There is no realistic prospect of this being a possible source of confusion now, in the near future, or possibly ever at the current rate. |
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NASA already sends most data from Mars surface assets to Earth by relaying through Mars satellites (including ESA satellites that NASA provides their Electra radio to), and it's starting to get crowded out there. NASA is gearing up for Mars Sample Return (for which they've already cached samples): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9G36CDLzIg
(And, in fact, Ingenuity, which runs Linux, actually sends its images to the Perseverance rover via radio, which transmits to orbiting Mars satellites, which then transmit to Earth... it's becoming a non-trivial network.)
After that will come crewed missions, maybe starting with orbit (perhaps teleoperating assets on the surface) before surface missions. The number of entities involved on Mars has grown pretty dramatically, with not just NASA, but Europe (ESA), China (rover and orbiter, is planning a sample return mission as well), United Arab Emirates (has an operational satellite right now), India (just concluded their satellite mission about 6 months ago after operating 8 years), and there's starting to be private missions as well, such as Impulse Space and Relativity's 2026 mission and whenever SpaceX gets around to sending Starlink satellites (perhaps for NASA...) or Starship or maybe Lockheed doing the same thing, as they've planned for the Moon ( https://gizmodo.com/lockheed-martin-spinoff-satellite-conste... ).
There's every reason to think there will be more and more need for sophisticated networking technology in deep space, including on Mars.