Norwegian Microsatellite Developed by Space Flight
Laboratory (SFL) Achieves Optical
Satellite-to-Ground Communications Link
January 31, 2024
The NorSat-TD demonstration
microsatellite developed by Space Flight Laboratory
(SFL) for the Norwegian Space Agency (NOSA) has
successfully transferred data to a ground station
using optical communications technology. The
accomplishment is a first for a Dutch-built laser
communication device and among the first achieved by
a microsatellite.
Optical, or laser,
communications between a satellite and ground
station enable faster and more secure transmission
of larger data sets than typically possible with
radio communications. Reliable delivery of data
either collected or relayed by satellites is vital
to most low Earth orbit applications, including
Earth observation, telecommunications, atmospheric
monitoring, maritime ship tracking, and space
astronomy.
“The successful demonstration
of satellite-to-ground communication by the 35-kg
NorSat-TD microsatellite greatly expands the utility
of affordable smaller satellites that are more cost
effective than traditional spacecraft to develop,
launch, and operate,” said SFL Director Dr. Robert
E. Zee.
Two technologies are critical
for optical satellite communications. The first is
precise attitude control – a challenge for low-mass
spacecraft – that allows the microsatellite to
accurately and continuously point at the ground
station for several minutes as the spacecraft passes
overhead at 7.5 km per second. NorSat-TD
incorporates barrier-breaking small satellite
stability and pointing capabilities developed and
refined by SFL in dozens of operational missions.
The second and equally
important key to optical satellite-to-ground
communication is a high-quality onboard laser
terminal with a fine steering mirror that locks the
extremely narrow optical beam onto a ground station
beacon. The Small Communication Active Terminal
(SmallCAT) laser communication system aboard
NorSat-TD was developed by a consortium of
organizations led by TNO (The Netherlands
Organization for Applied Scientific Research) of the
Netherlands.
Commenting on the success of
the NorSat-TD optical communications demonstration,
NOSA Senior Advisor, Tyler Jones, said, “The quality
of the pointing performance of SFL’s DEFIANT bus
speaks for itself. NOSA is also pleased with the
flexibility and problem solving that SFL
demonstrated while accommodating the SmallCAT
terminal in the NorSat-TD design, and working
through payload evolutions with TNO.”
Launched in April 2023,
NorSat-TD was the sixth mission developed by SFL for
Norway. Designed primarily as a maritime ship
tracking mission, the demonstration microsatellite
also carried experimental payloads for enhanced GPS
positioning, spacecraft tracking by laser, and
iodine-fueled propulsion, in addition to the
SmallCAT terminal. NorSat-4, now under development
at SFL for a 2024 launch, will feature a
first-of-its-kind low-light imaging sensor.
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