COM
DEV Europe signs €5million contract with European Space Agency
October
7,
2010
COM
DEV
Europe,
has
signed
a €5
million
contract
with
the
European
Space
Agency
(ESA)
for
the
development
of
new
SB-SAT
(SwiftBroadband
for
Satellite)
technology.
Partnered
with
Inmarsat
and
Broad
Reach
Engineering
(US),
COM
DEV
Europe
will
develop
an
SB-SAT
terminal
that
will
enable
24/7
access
to
Low
Earth
Orbiting
spacecraft,
utilising
Inmarsat’s
existing
I-4
satellite
network.
Low
Earth
Orbiting
(LEO)
spacecraft
can
currently
only
communicate
with
the
ground
during
the
ten
minute
period
when
they
fly
over
a
dedicated
ground
station.
Consequently,
satellite
operators
have
to
invest
in
expensive
ground
segment
infrastructure,
or
lease
dedicated
facilities,
in
order
to
communicate
with
the
spacecraft
for
just
a
short
period
a
few
times
a
day.
Satellites
have
to
be
designed
to
store
data
until
the
satellite
passes
over
a
ground
station
and
such
data
is
very
often
‘out
of
date’
by
the
time
it
reaches
the
user.
The
SB-SAT
concept
would
enable
LEO
spacecraft
to
continuously
communicate
during
the
whole
orbit.
Space-qualified
SB-SAT
terminals,
which
will
be
specially
adapted
versions
of
Inmarsat’s
aeronautical
SwiftBroadband
service,
will
be
incorporated
on
LEO
spacecraft.
The
terminals
relay
signals
to
the
Inmarsat
satellites
located
further
out
in
space,
in
geostationary
orbit,
and
then
through
the
Inmarsat
ground
stations
to
the
user
or
operator,
making
full
use
of
Inmarsat’s
mobile
broadband
system
and
its
proven
infrastructure.
This
will
allow
24/7
access
with
very
low
latency
at
data
rates
up
to
475kb/s,
opening
up
new
mission
opportunities.
The
SB-SAT
terminal
will
be
designed
with
an
integrated
GPS
receiver
and
antenna
controller,
though
it
can
be
supplied
as a
terminal
only
if
desired.
“The
contract
with
ESA
is a
major
endorsement
of
the
SB-SAT
concept,
and
will
provide
a
significant
boost
to
its
development,”
said
Rob
Spurrett,
Managing
Director
of
COM
DEV
Europe.
“This
pioneering
technology
promises
to
revolutionise
the
way
in
which
LEO
spacecraft
communicate
with
the
ground,
often
to
share
essential
and
time-critical
information.”