Airbus and VDL Group join
forces to produce an airborne laser communication
terminal
10 January 2023
Airbus and VDL Group have
signed a partnership agreement for the development
and manufacturing of a laser communication terminal
for aircraft, known as UltraAir. Based on the
development led by Airbus and the Netherlands
Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO),
the two companies will now prepare a demonstration
of a prototype and a first flight test in 2024.
As of 2024, Airbus and VDL
Group – a Dutch high-tech industrial supplier – will
further industrialise the prototype in order to make
it ready for integration with a hosting aircraft.
VDL brings design for production to the partnership
and will manufacture critical systems. A flight test
of this industrialised prototype is planned in 2025
on an aircraft.
UltraAir will enable the
exchange of large amounts of data using laser beams
in a network of ground stations and satellites in
geostationary orbit at 36,000 km above the Earth.
With unparalleled technology including a highly
stable and precise optical mechatronic system, this
laser terminal will pave the way for data
transmission rates that could reach several
gigabits-per-second while providing anti-jamming and
low probability of interception.
In this way, UltraAir will
allow military aircraft and UAVs (Unmanned Aerial
Vehicles) to connect within a multi-domain combat
cloud thanks to laser-based satellite constellations
such as Airbus’ SpaceDataHighway. This is a key
milestone in the roadmap of Airbus’ overall strategy
to drive laser communications further, which will
bring forward the benefits of this technology as a
key differentiator for providing multi-domain combat
collaboration for government and defence customers.
In the longer term, UltraAir could also be
implemented on commercial aircraft to allow airline
passengers to establish high-speed data connections.
Regarded as the solution for
data traffic in the quantum age, laser communication
technologies are the next revolution in satellite
communications (satcom). As satellite bandwidth
demand is growing, the traditional satcom
radio-frequency bands are experiencing bottlenecks.
Laser communication brings 1,000 times more data, 10
times faster than the current network. Laser links
also have the benefit of avoiding interference and
detection, as compared to already-crowded radio
frequencies they are extremely difficult to
intercept due to a much narrower beam. Thus, laser
terminals can be lighter, consume less power and
offer even better security than radio.
Co-financed by Airbus and VDL
Group, the UltraAir project is also supported by the
ESA ScyLight (Secure and Laser Communication
Technology) programme and by the “NxtGen Hightech”
programme, as part of the Dutch Growth Fund, led by
TNO and a large group of Dutch companies.
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