Mission Control Interface

Mission Control Interface defines the real-time coupling between physical Martian Micro systems on Earth and their counterparts inside Station A01. Devices, cameras, lighting and software operate across both environments as one continuous system.

Definition

Mission Control Interface is a system architecture connecting physical infrastructure with the station environment.
Physical workspace and station environment operating as one system.
Real devices and their in-station representations exist as part of the same system.
The boundary between environments is operational rather than visual.

Shared System State

All connected systems share a synchronized state in real time.
Changes in physical devices propagate into the station immediately.
Station processes can trigger responses in real-world systems.

Physical and Station Coupling

Physical devices and station systems operate as connected nodes.
Camera feeds such as table cameras, fabrication cameras and operator views are streamed into the station environment.
Interfaces, device states and diagnostics appear as native elements inside the station.

Environmental Synchronization

Environmental systems operate across both environments.
Lighting conditions inside Station A01 are synchronized with physical lighting systems such as Philips Hue.
System state can be expressed through both physical and in-station environments simultaneously.

Continuous Infrastructure

Mission Control Interface operates continuously as part of the station infrastructure.
Physical and station systems remain active regardless of broadcast state.
The architecture supports Continuous World Operation.