Digicom Electronics and CASPER'S Technology Open Endless Possibilities for Astronomy and Aerospace Innovation and Collaboration

Figure 1. ROACH collaboration around the world
The Beginning
Reconfigurable Open Architecture Computing Hardware (ROACH) System

Figure 2. ROACH board shown in 1.3 U ATX-compatible enclosure on 19″ rack mount
Innovations



Figure 3. Some of the 45 observatories include the LWA-LEDA, Green Bank Telescope, and the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST).
Scientific Results and Accomplishments
Discovery of the Diamond Planet
A star that changes into a diamond planet? What sounds like science fiction is apparently reality. The discovery was made by an international team of scientists from Australia, Italy, Great Britain, the USA, and Germany, including Michael Kramer from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany. The researchers found the diamond planet with the help of the 64-metre Parkes radio telescope in Australia. The planet apparently orbits around an unusual, very dense star, a pulsar.
Fast Radio Burst Detections
A fast radio burst (FRB) is a high-energy astrophysical phenomenon of unknown origin manifested as a transient radio pulse that lasts only a few milliseconds. A new class of objects, FRBs have been discovered in radio pulsar surveys at Parkes and Arecibo within the last decade. Recent efforts in time-domain radio astronomy have focused on real-time FRB detection with the promise of rapid follow-up of new events. Such capability was recently made possible with the development of a real-time transient pipeline at the Parkes telescope.
SETI@home
SETI@home is a scientific experiment, based at UC Berkeley, Oakland, CA, that uses Internet-connected computers in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI). Raw data from some 4 million, and growing, people is fed into SETI@home to aid research.
Mapping and Animation of the Inside of Black Holes
How this was accomplished, how it’s being used, and its significance can be found in works published by the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Neutron Radiography
This is a non-destructive imaging technique that uses thermal neutrons to probe the sample.

See Figure 4. Diamond planet discovery from Parkes. Matthew Bailes, et al.
Summary
White Paper Articles
