NEC and Skyloom to
Pioneer 100 Gbps Space Optical Communications,
Transforming Global Internet Connectivity
NEC Corporation and Skyloom Global
Corporation have joined forces to revolutionize space
communications with the development of cutting-edge
optical communication equipment for multi-orbit
satellite networks. The collaboration aims to
commercialize and make available on the open market one
of the world's fastest space optical terminals,
achieving remarkable high-speed inter-satellite
communications of 100 Gbps and more, propelling the
space industry into a new era of connectivity.
"This marks a monumental milestone
in global internet and space communications," said Eric
Moltzau, Chief Commercial Officer of Skyloom. "In
partnership with NEC, we are committed to the joint
development, testing, and manufacturing of the
groundbreaking 100 Gbps WARP Optical Communications
Terminal (OCT), slated for completion by the end of
2025. Our plan is to launch the product into space by
2026 and rapidly scale up production to meet the
escalating demand from domestic and international
customers in the latter half of the decade."
Traditionally, space communications
have relied on wireless technologies using radio waves.
However, the collaboration between NEC and Skyloom
represents a significant shift towards optical
communication in space, drawing parallels with the
advancements witnessed in terrestrial fiber networks
since the mid-1980s. “This breakthrough will enable
high-speed, high-capacity communication in space,
revolutionizing data transmission between broadband
satellites and Earth Observation satellites on an
unprecedented scale," said Motomitsu Shimizu, Managing
Director of the NEC Aerospace Business Division.
"This is not a science project,"
emphasized Shimizu. "We are committed to tangible
results, and to prove it, we will launch several test
satellites in 2026 equipped with the jointly developed
100 Gbps WARP OCT."
As the deployment of satellite
constellations accelerates, creating a network of
interconnected satellites in low-earth orbit, the demand
for high-speed communication links becomes paramount. In
anticipation of this demand growth, NEC and Skyloom are
at the forefront of developing technology to achieve
optical communication speeds of 100 Gbps and higher.
Moltzau elaborated, "Much like the
emergence of economies centered around Transit Oriented
Developments, we find ourselves at the forefront, just
beginning to grasp the transformative potential of
Extremely High-Throughput satellite communication
speeds. The collaboration between NEC and Skyloom is
poised to usher in a new era of connectivity, empowering
artificial intelligence networks in space to seamlessly
handle vast amounts of data and communications enroute
to their final destinations at remarkable speeds – akin
to the impactful role AI innovation plays on Earth
today."
“The satellite constellation
network, which connects each satellite through optical
communication, liberates the potential of space
utilization from the geographical and temporal
constraints that were inevitable with conventional
standalone satellites," remarked Shimizu.
“Diversification of services encourages smooth data
sharing between satellites, while advancement of
services promotes the implementation of data processing
capabilities rooted in artificial intelligence in orbit.
Both of these are made possible by low-latency and
high-speed inter-satellite optical communication.
Therefore, the performance of optical communication
becomes a determining factor for the quality and
quantity of services utilizing space. The realization of
100 Gbps optical communication through this
collaboration with Skyloom, a leading player in space
utilization in the satellite constellation era and
participant in the US Space Development Agency's
Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture, is a
significant milestone towards the full-fledged
utilization of the satellite constellation era. Beyond
that, NEC aims for the fusion of computation and
communication from undersea to space."
“NEC has a longstanding history of
emphasizing the potential of space utilization for
solving social issues and has been working on space
optical communication since the 1990s," said Yasushi
Yokoyama, Chief of Satellite Constellation Business at
NEC. “We expect that our collaboration with Skyloom on
space optical communication will contribute to expanding
space utilization in the era of networked satellite
constellations."
“The 100 Gbps WARP OCT leverages
the latest technology advances in space-based optical
communications and networking," said Santiago Tempone,
Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer for Skyloom. “We
are pleased to partner with NEC to break the barrier to
commercializing low-latency, extremely high-throughput
space internetworking and communications. Skyloom
technology is designed to drive down the cost per bit of
free-space optical communications, enabling large-scale
production and utilization. We look forward to working
closely with NEC's digital coherent optical
communication experts and delivering a discriminating
optical communications product to the marketplace."
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