Title: Iridium Military Comm on the Move
1IridiumMilitary Comm on the Move
Scott Scheimreif Asst VP Government
Programs Iridium Satellite LLC
2The Iridium Constellation
- 66 low-earth orbit space vehicles (SVs)
- 10 spares on orbit
- True global coverage
- SV Footprint 2800 miles
- SV footprints overlap
- Each SV has 48 spot beams
- Spot beams 250 miles diameter
- All spot beams overlap
- SVs equipped w/cross-linked antennas
- Gateways
- Commercial Gateway Tempe, Arizona
- Dedicated Secure DoD Gateway Wahiawa, Hawaii
- Back-up Gateway in Alaska
3Iridiums Global LEO Network Provides a Unique
Capability
- Communications on the move people, vehicles,
aircraft, assets - A single subscriber device works worldwide
- Ubiquitous coverage
- Any terrain with clear sky view
- Over all oceans
- Where terrestrial infrastructure is unavailable
or undesirable - Polar routes
- Satellite-to-satellite links securely route voice
or data around the earth to gateway or Iridium
mobile user - Low time latency worldwide
July 2006 Commercial Activity
4Corporate Strength and Growth
- 4 years continuous growth
- Services introduced to an expanding market
- Circuit switched data
- Direct Internet access
- Messaging
- Short burst data
- New Products and Services
- Short-burst data modem
- Netted voice and data
- iBroadband
5 Distributed Operations The Vision
Enable joint force commanders to influence a
larger portion of the battle-space earlier
6Netted Iridium
- Provide a global push-to-talk over the horizon
and on-the-move secure netted voice and data
capability that - Provides critical near- to mid-term augmentation
for UHF SATCOM - Makes effective use of existing commercial
satellite infrastructure and DoD investments - Deploy a secure netted architecture which is
reliable and will scale to support the demand for
tactical PTT communications
7iBroadband
iBroadband 9.6-154 kbps
iBroadband UltraMobile 9.6 kbps
Conventional Iridium 2.4 kbps
iBroadband will offer a range of broadband
solutions from the current 2.4 kbps up past the
high-speed alternatives of competing systems