Leaf Space Expands
Global Ground Station Network to Support Growing
Demand from Customers
June 24, 2021
Leaf Space is adding three
ground stations to the company's global Leaf
Line Network. The new stations will be installed
in Sri Lanka, the Azores and Scotland enhancing
Leaf Space's capability to provide GSaaS
solutions to its growing list of customers.
Leaf Space is adding three
ground stations to the company’s global Leaf
Line Network. With these additional ground
stations, Leaf Space now fully owns and operates
12 stations globally and is on schedule to
activate three more stations in Q3, with the
goal of doubling the global network to 19 total
this year.
Leaf Space is adding three
ground stations to the company’s global Leaf
Line Network. With these additional ground
stations, Leaf Space now fully owns and operates
12 stations globally and is on schedule to
activate three more stations in Q3, with the
goal of doubling the global network to 19 total
this year.
With these additional
ground stations, Leaf Space now fully owns and
operates 12 stations globally.
The new state of the art
3.7m antenna paired with high performance
baseband processing hardware add important
additional coverage for Leaf Space's customers,
allowing satellite operators expanded
opportunity to communicate with spacecraft,
sending and receiving critical data to support
each mission. With these additional ground
stations, Leaf Space now fully owns and operates
12 stations globally.
"These three stations build
upon our already robust network and improve our
ability to deliver industry leading GSaaS
solutions to our customers," said Jonata Puglia,
CEO and co-founder of Leaf Space. "Ownership of
our own proprietary network offers customers
complete management and flexibility to customize
operations and scale quickly. We are continuing
to pursue additional expansion to support the
daily increases in demand from our customers and
are on schedule to activate three more stations
in Q3, with the goal of doubling our global
network to 19 total this year."
Leaf Space's new ground
station in Sri Lanka will expand the range of
missions the company can support, adding
equatorial orbit to the company's list of
capabilities. Further distributing Leaf Space's
medium-latitude network provides customers with
a strategic advantage as it helps to mitigate
the risk of interference, band saturation and
licensing as well as overlapping, providing
customers with more capacity using fewer
antennas.
The station in Northern
Scotland also adds a desirable high northern
latitude location to Leaf Space's distributed
ground station network, positioned on the 61st
parallel.
"Our expanding ground
station network is further powered by our
end-to-end network orchestration and management
software, the Network Cloud Engine, which
optimizes automatic scheduling and data transfer
for customers, guaranteeing efficiency,
eliminating the risk of conflicts and leveraging
at scale cloud services," added Puglia.
Since Leaf Space's
inception in 2014, the company has focused on
developing robust ground segment services and
technology with the goal of creating disruptive
GSaaS solutions available in the modern space
market. Leaf Space pioneered the concept of
GSaaS for NewSpace satellite and launch vehicle
operators around the world and has achieved
great success working in partnership with more
than 20 customers to increase performance and
availability of crucial data while
simultaneously lowering costs and decreasing
latency.
In addition to announcing
the expansion of the company's distributed
ground station network this week, Leaf Space
will also be supporting 14 new spacecrafts from
six different international customers on
SpaceX's Transporter-2 dedicated Falcon 9
rideshare mission, scheduled to launch from Cape
Canaveral on Friday, June 25. This launch will
signal an important milestone for Leaf Space as
the company will be supporting its largest
number of customers in a single launch to date.