NASA Space Technology Program Selects Space Systems/Loral
Platform to Help Enable Next Era of Space Communications
4 April 2012
Space
Systems/Loral is teaming with NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center to host a laser communications
relay demonstration (LCRD) on a commercial satellite to be
launched in 2016. NASA 's Space Technology
Program selected Goddard's mission proposal to use the SS/L
satellite platform to help enable the next era of space
communications.
Optical communications use an uncongested portion of
spectrum compared to the radio frequency (RF) communications
currently used to transmit data from space. Additionally,
laser communications (lasercom) has the potential to provide
order of magnitude higher data rates than RF, providing the
potential to enable access to much more of the vast amounts
of data that are being gathered from distant planets,
including images and video. For commercial satellites,
lasercom could provide data at rates that are faster than
today's RF rates, with much less mass and power, which are
the typical constraints on satellite design.
"We are excited to be a part of this mission, which is
particularly interesting because of the great potential for
laser communications to revolutionize space exploration as
well as the commercial satellite industry," said
John Celli, president of Space Systems/Loral.
Space
Systems/Loral is working with NASA Goddard's LCRD team
to determine the technical requirements for the instruments
to be integrated with the SS/L 1300 satellite platform. As
the optical modules and ground stations are in development,
SS/L will work with its commercial customers to identify an
appropriate host satellite for the demonstration.
"The
Space Systems/Loral platform provides NASA
with the opportunity to demonstrate new technology on an
operational satellite," said Michael Weiss,
Project Manager, at the Goddard Space Flight Center. "Once
proven, the technology that we are demonstrating will
revolutionize future communication systems. The use of
optical communication technologies in a network environment
will meet the growing needs of high data rate user demands
while also enabling lower mass and power for space and
ground communication systems."
The Space
Systems/Loral
platform is particularly well-suited to hosted payloads
because of its size and high power capability and SS/L has
many years of success in integrating government payloads
onto commercial spacecraft. The company built Intelsat-14,
which hosted the first commercial Internet Router in Space
(IRIS) and was successfully launched in 2009. SS/L also
built Optus-C1 for Singtel Optus, which was launched in
2003. Optus-C1 provides commercial communications services
in
Australia and also hosts a
UHF payload for the Australian Defense Force.
SS/L also integrated a navigation payload for the
European Union onto SES-5, which is scheduled to
launch later this year.
"We are fortunate to have this opportunity to collaborate
with the visionaries on the Goddard Space Flight Center
team," said Al Tadros, Vice President,
Government and Civil Missions at Space Systems/Loral. "By
selecting this project, NASA's Space Technology
Program is not only investigating next generation
technologies, but it is taking the lead in leveraging the
benefit of commercial satellites for faster and less costly
access to space. We applaud NASA for being
proactive in the face of austere budgets to ensure continued
science and technology advances."
Lasercom,
which is also known as free-space optical communications,
operates in the mid-wave infrared band of the
electromagnetic spectrum, around 200 Terahertz (THz). This
un-regulated and un-licensed part of the spectrum, which is
eye safe, is four orders of magnitude higher than the radio
propagation bands used today for satellite and other
wireless communications, which are approximately 20
Gigahertz (GHz). The corresponding increase in bandwidth
effectively eliminates spectrum as a constraint for all
applications, including the highest resolution imagery
payloads and scientific sensors.
The lasercom spectrum is lightly used; however, due to
its very narrow beam widths compared to RF, even if it were
heavily used, multi-user interference is not a limiting
capacity factor. Compared to high bandwidth RF links,
lasercom terminals are approximately one order of magnitude
lower in size, weight and power consumption, and are
therefore suitable as hosted payloads over a broad range of
satellites and spacecraft.