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IBM Edge Computing Accelerates ISS Research

Key Points

  • IBM has partnered with NASA since the Apollo era and now provides edge‑computing capabilities for the International Space Station (ISS).
  • The ISS’s micro‑gravity environment enables unique experiments such as DNA sequencing, but traditional downlink and ground‑based analysis can take weeks.
  • IBM, together with NASA, the ISS National Lab, HPE, and Red Hat, developed a containerized edge‑computing solution that runs analytical code directly on the ISS, eliminating massive data transfers.
  • This approach can cut DNA‑sequencing analysis time by nearly 50 % and speeds code development and deployment by using Red Hat code‑ready containers linked to IBM Cloud’s OpenShift on the ground.
  • The accelerated research workflow not only boosts current ISS science but also lays foundational technology for future deep‑space missions and exploration beyond low‑Earth orbit.

Full Transcript

# IBM Edge Computing Accelerates ISS Research **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm6mN0sbmC4](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm6mN0sbmC4) **Duration:** 00:02:11 ## Summary - IBM has partnered with NASA since the Apollo era and now provides edge‑computing capabilities for the International Space Station (ISS). - The ISS’s micro‑gravity environment enables unique experiments such as DNA sequencing, but traditional downlink and ground‑based analysis can take weeks. - IBM, together with NASA, the ISS National Lab, HPE, and Red Hat, developed a containerized edge‑computing solution that runs analytical code directly on the ISS, eliminating massive data transfers. - This approach can cut DNA‑sequencing analysis time by nearly 50 % and speeds code development and deployment by using Red Hat code‑ready containers linked to IBM Cloud’s OpenShift on the ground. - The accelerated research workflow not only boosts current ISS science but also lays foundational technology for future deep‑space missions and exploration beyond low‑Earth orbit. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm6mN0sbmC4&t=0s) **IBM Enables On‑Orbit DNA Analysis** - IBM partnered with NASA, the ISS National Lab, HPE, and Red Hat to run containerized DNA‑sequencing analytics directly on the International Space Station, cutting analysis time by nearly 50 % and accelerating future space missions. ## Full Transcript
0:04Three, two, one, zero... 0:14From the earliest days of Apollo when  NASA landed the first humans on the moon, 0:18IBM has had the distinct honor of playing a key  role in NASA's space exploration efforts. Fast 0:25forward 50 years to today when the International  Space Station is helping to lay the groundwork for 0:30living and working in space, a baseline for future  nasa missions.Traveling at over 17,000 miles per 0:38hour and orbiting the earth every 90 minutes,  the ISS offers a one-of-a-kind microgravity 0:44environment where crew members perform  research that cannot be done anywhere else. 0:49Critical research like DNA sequencing on the  ISS provides foundational knowledge that will 0:55be essential as NASA seeks to venture further  into space than ever before. However, analyzing 1:01this research often requires data to be downlinked  to earth and processed by personnel on the ground, 1:07a procedure that can take several weeks and delay  results. That's where IBM comes in in partnership 1:13with NASA, ISS National Lab, HPE, and Red Hat,  IBM created the edge computing and space solution 1:22eliminating the need to move massive libraries of  DNA sequencing data by presenting containerized 1:27analytical code locally right on the ISS where the  data originates. This solution has the potential 1:34to cut analysis time by nearly 50 percent opening  the door for many new mission possibilities. 1:40In addition, NASA researchers will use  this platform to more rapidly develop, 1:45test, and push code to the ISS in a fraction  of the time by leveraging Red Hat code-ready 1:51containers and connecting to IBM Cloud running  OpenShift on the ground. This groundbreaking 1:57partnership will not only expedite NASA's ISS  research but will help to lay the foundation 2:02for future exploration opportunities on ISS and  beyond. We can't wait to support what comes next.