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#1
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Hello,
I'm curious about avionics circuits in high altitude conditions (60,000ft+). What kind of design considerations are taken into account? I've heard about radiation effects on certain devices especially computers / microcontrollers, but I'm also curious about other factors. Thanks! CD |
#2
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Since electronics do not know much about elevation, there are two major
changes - temperature and pressure. The largest change would be a change in temperature. Unless electronics are heated, there could be a major problem for displays. Also, batteries may not work as well. Pressure change should not be much of a problem. When it comes to radiation, the question is how long the electronics are going to be up there? Unless it is a very long time, I doubt the radiation will be a major factor. Colin |
#3
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Since electronics do not know much about elevation, there are two major
changes - temperature and pressure. The largest change would be a change in temperature. Unless electronics are heated, there could be a major problem for displays. Also, batteries may not work as well. Pressure change should not be much of a problem. When it comes to radiation, the question is how long the electronics are going to be up there? Unless it is a very long time, I doubt the radiation will be a major factor. Actually it might be a factor. NASA research aircraft have had several single event upsets in semiconductor based memories at 40,000 feet on missions lasting even just a few hours. Avionics containing microprocessors and memory were not affected but the desktop grade PCs strapped in equipment racks would crap out with a memory parity error or something once every few days. They believed it was radiation induced. The same computers worked fine on the ground. The Kuiper Airborne Observatory (a C-141 A model) is one example where this happened. |
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