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Satcom: Satellite Communication
Satcom: Satellite Communication
Satellite Communication
Satcom is also a foundation for the next generation of air traffic control. After a
half-century of aircraft confined to narrow routes and tracks, a changeover is beginning
to a new architecture known as FANS, for Future Air Navigation Systems. More
airplanes will fly safely within the same airspace under a concept known as “Free
Flight.” Satcom makes it possible, as well as providing information, entertainment and
other services for passengers in the cabin.
INMARSAT
Inmarsat-2 (I-2)
Inmarsat-3 (I-3)
Each satellite is backed up with a spare orbiting in the same vicinity. The other
two major components of the satcom systems are:
If the message is intended for an aircraft in flight, the ground earth station
receive it through telecommunications networks and beams it up to a satellite for relay to
the airplane.
Ten ground stations like this one are located around the world for
communicating with aircraft via satellite. The ground station connects to international
telecommunication networks to route calls and messages to any telephone, fax machine
or data terminal in the world.
The station’s dish antenna is typically 10 meters in diameter and operates in the
sitcom band between 4 and 6 GHz.
Voice sent via satellite uses “codec” for digital voice coding and decoding.
Digitizing the voice reduces error in transmission and speech in high in quality.
The various blocks seen at the bottom of the illustration reveal a wide range of
satellite services for aircraft, including air traffic control, passenger telephone, airline
operations and data.
Avionics aboard the aircraft for communicating via satellite are known as the
Aircraft Earth Station. It sends and receives radio frequency signals to and from the
satellite in the L-band (1.5-1.6 GHz). It provides interfaces to various systems aboard
the aircraft for voice, data, fax video, etc.
This equipment conforms to ARINC 741, as well as standard from Inmarsat, the
satellite service provider.
The basic components of an Aircraft Earth Station:
The satellite data unit also processes all messages data, protocols and digital
coding and decoding.
During receive, the signal from the antenna first passes through a Low Noise
Amplifier, then is applied to the Radio Frequency Unit. Signals are converted down to a
lower, or intermediate, frequency and sent to the Satellite Data Unit.
The Low Noise Amplifier boosts the radio frequency signals received from the
antenna.
The antenna may be steered in two ways. For electromechanical types, the
antenna array is positioned by a motor. For electro antennas, different combinations of
fixed elements are selected to focus the beam.
Satcom antennas
A component of the airborne system is the antenna, which must always aim
directly at the satellite (to receive all of its services). Although the Inmarsat satellites
appear never to move (they are in geostationary orbit), the airplane often cruises over
500 mph, rapidly changing position. This is solved beam steering unit on the airplane
that operates motor-driven antenna or an electronic system known as a “phased array.”
Consider the satcom antenna carries:
Low Gain
Various communications via satellite require a different amount of power. A
message consisting only letters and numbers moving at a slow rate (300-1200 bits per
second) uses relatively little power and can operate on a “low gain” antenna on the
airplane. The antenna is simple, little more than a blade, and picks up signals from any
direction.
High Gain
This antenna supports the full range of satcom services, which requires more
power than is possible with a simple blade. The “high gain” antenna is more complex
and expensive. The improvement in power (“gain”) is achieved in two ways. First, the
antenna is made highly directional with additional elements to focus signals into a beam.
The narrow beam, however, must always be aimed directly at the satellite.
Steering the beam is accomplished in two types of high gain antenna, shown on
the following pages. One is the electromechanical; the antenna is rotated in azimuth and
elevation by electric motors (much the same as done in an astronomical telescope).
An airplane in cruise is always moving with relation to the satellite. To keep the
high gain antenna pointing to at the satellite, the airborne satcom steers the beam using
information from the airplane’s navigation system. As shown in the illustration, the
electromechanical high gain antenna fits in the tail cap of the airplane.
The high gain satcom antenna supports services with higher rates, such as ”Swift
64,” which handles multichannel voice, data , fax and internet connectivity. The
transmissions rate is 64K bits per second.
High gain is achieved by an array of antenna elements formed into a beam that
focuses on the satellite.
Although the satellite is stationary, the airplane is moving. The antenna therefore
needs the “beam steering unit,” which keeps the beam aimed at the satellite. Steering
information is obtained from the airplane’s navigation system.
Conformal
The second type of high gain antenna is the “conformal,” which fits the curve of
the fuselage and protrudes less than a half-inch. The radio signal is shaped into a narrow
beam and aimed electronically. Inside the conformal radome are many small microstrip
antennas. The beam steering unit adjusts the signal in each microstrip antenna so its
energy adds or subtracts according to a pattern that forms a beam. The energy is focused
and steered in a technology known as “phased array.”
Antenna is positioned so mounting holes along edges and two holes for the RF
cables do not interfere with structure of the airplane.
Intermediate Gain
A more recent development affects the gain of signals from the space vehicles.
The first two satellite generations broadcast “global” beams to cover as much of the
earth as possible --- and the latest generation still does. Recent satellites, however, add
“spot beams,” which concentrate power over a smaller area (but total earth coverage is
still about 75%). Because of this added power, a third type of aircraft antenna emerged;
the “intermediate gain” type, which falls between the low and high gain models. It is
less costly and simpler, yet provides a wide range of satcom services.
The “intermediate gain” antenna is a more recent satcom type. Operating in the
Aero I service, it can operate with voice, fax and data. It is simpler and lower in cost
than a high gain model because of stronger “spot beam” transmission from Inmarsat-3
satellites.
Cell Phones in the Cabin
Cell phones were banned in aircraft because they contact too many ground
stations simultaneously while at altitude. But intense passenger interest is producing new
systems that will almost certainly be adopted. The work with the passenger’s own cell
phone and billing is done on his regular cell phone account.
The technology places a base station aboard the aircraft that commands cell
phones to operate at low power and avoid raising regular ground stations. The base
station relays the calls through satellites, then into the regular landline telephone system.
Swift64
Based on Inmarsat’s Global Area network (GAN), Swift64 offers mobile ISDN
and IP-based Mobile packet Data Service (MPDS) connectivity at a basic rate of 64
kbit/s to support high-quality voice, fax and data communications for air transport,
corporate and VIP and government users.
Aero H
The original Inmarsat voice and data service, Aero H supports multi-channel
voice, fax and data communications at up to 9.6 kbit/s anywhere in the satellites global
(hemispherical) beams for air transport, corporate and VIP and government users.
Aero H+
An evolution of Aero H. when an Aero H+ equipped aircraft is offering with a
high- power spot beam from an Inmarsat I-3 satellite it can receive Aero H levels of
service at lower cost. Outside the spot beams the terminal works with the global beam as
if it were a standard Aero H system.
Aero I
Exploiting the spot beam power on the Inmarsat I-3 satellites. Aero I bring
Multi-channel voice, fax and data at up to 4.6 kbit/s to corporate aircraft, military
transports and regional airliners through smaller, cheaper terminals.
Aero L
Low-speed (600 bit/s) real time data, mainly for airline ATC, operational and
administrative communications.
Mini- M Aero
Single-channel voice, fax and 2.4 kbit/s data for small corporate aircraft and
general aviation.
Aero C
The Aeronautical version of the inmarsat C low-rate data system, Aero C allows
non-safety-related text or data messages to be sent and received by general aviation and
military aircraft operating almost anywhere in the world. Aero C operates on a store-and
forward basis: messages are in non-real-time.
Four inmarsat satellites are in geostationary orbits, 22,500 miles above the earth.
Spread around the globe, they all follow the line of the equato. Because one orbit equals
one rotation of the earth, they appear fixed in position. Each satellite has one backup
spare in orbit.
Early satellite produced “global” coverage, spreading there power over the
greatest area. The present generation, inmarsat-3, also broadcasts “spot-beams”, in
which concentrate power over a narrower area.
Spot beams illuminate the busiest air traffic regions and simplify equipment on
the aircraft.
Singapore Australia
France Canada
Copy of the
Report
for
AVT 424
Wire and Wireless
Communication
Submitted by:
Group II
Denis Calamba
Czarina Camunias
Laiza May Carawana
Neil Celaje
Ma. Theresa Cassandra T. Choy
Erving Colo
Jerome D. de Leon
Submitted to: