Eutelsat breaks new ground with
software-defined “Eutelsat Quantum"
class satellite
8 December 2014
Eutelsat
Communications announces a
ground-breaking programme that will
raise the bar for service delivery
by enabling its clients for the
first time to actively define the
performance and flexibility they
need from a satellite. The
innovative software-defined “Eutelsat
Quantum” class of satellites will
set new standards in terms of
coverage, bandwidth, power and
frequency configurability for users
operating in government, mobility
and data markets.
The new design will represent a
first in the commercial satellite
industry by enabling the complete
electronic synthesis of ‘receive’
and ‘transmit’ coverages in the
Ku-band, including on-board jamming
detection and mitigation. It will
give customers access to premium
capacity through footprint shaping
and steering, power (Mbps) and
frequency band pairing that they
will be able to actively define.
By adapting dynamically to all
frequency bands in each ITU region,
the "Eutelsat Quantum" class
satellite will also be the first
generation of universal satellites
able to serve any region of the
world. This ability to mirror or
complement another satellite
anywhere in geostationary orbit will
offer a level of flexibility that
will transform fleet management and
enable a significantly more
efficient use of resources.
Michel de Rosen, Chairman and CEO of
Eutelsat, said: “We are delighted to
initiate this ground-breaking
programme with the support of ESA,
as well as our longstanding partner,
Airbus Defence and Space. Developing
solutions that give our customers
control over the performance and
adaptability they need from our
satellites is a key ambition for
Eutelsat. With the “Eutelsat
Quantum”’ class of satellite we will
deliver on this goal, offering an
incomparable level of efficiency and
flexibility in data, mobility and
government services markets.”
Magali Vaissiere, Director of
Telecommunications and Integrated
Applications of ESA, said: "ESA is
delighted that the work initiated
with Eutelsat and European industry
on the design and technological
development of flexible payloads has
reached this point. This new
generation of payload will pave the
way for increasingly innovative
missions in the future."
"Following on from KA-SAT and the
all-electric EUTELSAT 172B
satellite, we are pleased to partner
with Eutelsat once more on this
breakthrough programme. Benefiting
from our extensive experience and
capability for flexible payloads,
the "Eutelsat Quantum" design will
mark a break from conventional
payload architectures and feature
unprecedented levels of in orbit
re-configurability," added Eric
Béranger, Head of Programmes, Space
Systems/ Airbus Defence and Space.