Wednesday, December 7th 2022

Phison 8 TB SSD Ready for Historic Liftoff After Earning NASA Certification

Phison Electronics Corp., a global leader in NAND flash and storage solutions, announced today that its 8 TB M.2 2280 SSD solution has completed flight qualification tests required for Lonestar Data Holdings' historic first lunar data center mission. This SSD has been selected by Lonestar's contractor and Phison's partner, space logistics company Skycorp. Skycorp is also Lonestar's engineering design and manufacturing partner for the lunar data center mission scheduled for the second half of 2023.

"After comprehensive testing and certification process, Phison is thrilled that our SSD technology has passed all the rigorous requirements for Lonestar's upcoming Moon mission," said K.S. Pua, Phison CEO. "We are excited about playing a vital role on this important mission, and other future ones as we continue our foray into the new frontier. We also want to thank our outstanding customer, Lonestar, and partner, Skycorp, for helping to make this happen."
To gain NASA Technology Readiness Level 6 (TRL-6) certification, Phison's 8 TB M.2 SSD had to pass a series of tests, including deep cryogenic temperatures and vacuum conditions found on the moon. An electromagnetic environment qualification was also completed. In addition, Phison's SSD technology passed stress and environmental tests that simulated the launch on the SpaceX Falcon 9. Skycorp conducted these tests at government and commercial test facilities in Silicon Valley.

Lonestar, which is launching a series of data centers to the lunar surface to provide off-site archival and edge processing services, is sending the first data center to the Moon as a payload on Intuitive Machines' NOVA-C lander under NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program. In support of its mission, Lonestar selected Skycorp for its space qualified hardware infrastructure. SkyCorp is providing its advanced multi-core RISC-V in space server architecture, which contains Phison's space-certified 8TB SSD.

"Phison is proving to be a superb provider," said Christopher Stott, Founder and CEO of Lonestar Data Holdings, Inc. "We are truly heartened that the qualification tests have gone well, and that our payload has passed these fundamental next steps for spaceflight. Our next giant leap is the Moon itself."

"Space is in transition, and the use of quality commercial components in a space environment is often complicated," said Dennis Wingo, Skycorp CEO. "Phison has demonstrated not only the quality of their products but their incredible product engineering support for our efforts."

This certification comes on the heels of Phison and Skycorp announcing a partnership in September, 2022 focused on in-space processing and the archiving of information. Skycorp is currently using elements of Phison's SSD solution on its intelligent Space Systems Interface (iSSI) experiment avionics on the International Space Station. It features a four terabyte SSD connected to Microchip Technologies Polarfire System on a Chip (SoC). That same technology has now been significantly upgraded to an eight (8) terabyte SSD that will journey to the Moon with Lonestar's first server on the second Intuitive Machines NASA CLPS lunar lander mission.

With the certifications and partnerships in place, Phison's journey into space continues to skyrocket. The company has an 8GB uSSD on the Mars Perseverance Rover along with a 4TB SSD on the International Space Station on Skycorp's RISC-V based computer.
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7 Comments on Phison 8 TB SSD Ready for Historic Liftoff After Earning NASA Certification

#3
Toothless
Tech, Games, and TPU!
Xex360Wouldn't a optane be a better solution.
Discontinued.
Posted on Reply
#4
Space Lynx
Astronaut
as the First Astronaut on this website, I would like to thank Phison for 8tb's of glory!

Steam gaming from the moon!
Posted on Reply
#5
jesdals
Wonder if the prices will be the same as the tip of a lunar rocket?
Posted on Reply
#6
Prima.Vera
Surprised "only" 8TB... Maybe more is not required for all the telemetry data anyways...
Posted on Reply
#7
mechtech
Need a budget like nasa to afford an 8TB nvme lol
Posted on Reply
Apr 19th, 2024 20:37 EDT change timezone

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