Space startup Quasar takes off to solve satellite data
challenge
May 04, 2021
New Australian space startup Quasar
Satellite Technologies is set to revolutionise space
communication, allowing ground stations to talk to
hundreds of satellites at once using technology
developed by CSIRO, Australia’s national science agency.
Over the next decade, more than
57,000 satellites will be launched worldwide to support
a surge in demand for space-derived data, from
environmental monitoring such as bushfires and floods,
to connecting to sensors on ‘Internet of Things’
networks.
However, with present-day ground
stations typically tracking one satellite at a time,
heavy congestion will limit the potential of satellites
and the downstream industries they support.
Launched today, Quasar is backed by
$12 million in funding, technology and industry
expertise from CSIRO, Main Sequence, the Office of the
NSW Chief Scientist & Engineer, and Australian companies
Vocus, Saber Astronautics, Fleet Space Technologies and
Clearbox Systems.
Quasar will look to capitalise on
the US$130 billion satellite ground communications
market, using technology developed by CSIRO for radio
telescopes like its own ASKAP telescope in Western
Australia.
CSIRO Chief Executive Dr Larry
Marshall said after helping receive images of humans on
the Moon fifty years ago, commercialisation of this
breakthrough research will now help to put more
Australians into new jobs in our growing space industry.
“CSIRO has been a leader in radio
astronomy and spacecraft communications for more than 60
years, from supporting the Moon landing in 1969 to
inventing and delivering the phased-array feeds in
Australia’s newest radio telescope, ASKAP in Western
Australia,” Dr Marshall said.
“CSIRO’s technology breakthrough
enabled the world to connect without wires using fast
WiFi, and now our technology will help connect
satellites using our breakthrough phased array
technology.”
Quasar CEO Phil Ridley, a
telecommunications veteran behind some of Australia’s
pioneering internet services like BigPond and
Vividwireless, said the technology would enable new
satellite-based business models and opportunities
previously hindered by legacy ground station technology.
“Space is the highway of the stars,
but current ground station technology is the equivalent
of one-lane on-ramps,” Mr Ridley said.
“By making it possible to
communicate with hundreds of satellites simultaneously,
we’ll be able to ensure the thousands of satellites
launching over the next decade have a way to call home
efficiently.”
CSIRO commercialisation specialist
and a founding Director of Quasar, Dr Ilana Feain said
bringing together state of the art technology, private
investment and industry expertise gives Quasar a strong
head start.
“CSIRO’s phased array technology
revolutionised radio astronomy by enabling ASKAP to see
enormous portions of the sky at once – about 30 times
the area that conventional telescopes could see,” she
said.
“I’m excited to see the next
evolution of this technology empower satellite
businesses and their downstream industries.”
Quasar will offer the technology
‘as a service’, enabling commercial and public sector
partners to access data from satellites in low, medium
and geostationary orbit from anywhere in the world, in
the same way many cloud computing services work today.
Quasar is building the technology
using an Australian-based team with expertise and
research support from CSIRO.
Fullerton (formerly
Westin) Hotel, Sydney
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