Title: GROUND NETWORK ARCHITECTURES FOR FUTURE SPACE OPERATIONS
1GROUND NETWORK ARCHITECTURES FOR FUTURE SPACE
OPERATIONS
- David R Beering
- Infinite Global Infrastructures, LLC
- Wheaton, IL
- Edward M Burns
- Space Operations Management Office
- NASA JSC
- Daniel R Heimerdinger, PhD
- VALADOR
- Denver, Colorado
- Jon M Smith
- SOMO Special Projects Office
- NASA JSC
2Six Principles for Ground Networks for Future
Space Operations
- Employ Commercial Service Providers wherever
possible. Â - Use a mesh network of stations to achieve a high
availability. Â - Use the fewest number of earth stations possible.
- Locate the earth stations on the nodes of the
Terrestrial Internet backbone. Â - Employ Internet command and control of Space
Assets. - Anticipate the inevitable space based Internet.
3Agenda
- Advanced Communications Technology Satellite
(ACTS) refresher - NASA 30 year vision
- ACTS space network
- Inevitables and lessons learned
- ACTS ground networks
- Inevitables and lessons learned
- Ground network architectures for future space
operations based on lessons learned from ACTS
4ADVANCED COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY SATELLITE
(ACTS)
- WHAT IS ACTS?
- Experimental Ka-Band system sponsored by NASA to
pave the way for next generation communication
satellites for Space Networks - National research facility available for use by
US organizations and US-sponsored organizations
to test and demonstrate the advanced technologies
developed
5ACTS for Space NetworksTwelve Satellites in One
Reaching 30 Years Into the Future
6ACTS Spot Beams
7The ACTS Experiments Program
8STRONG COMMERCIAL INVOLVEMENT
- Hughes, Lockheed Martin, Comsat, Harris, BBN,
Baylor, Mayo, Krug, OSB, Intelsat, Inmarsat,
Boeing, ConEdison, 30 others. - 150 organizations involved in 100 experiments
80 demonstrations to various audiences. - HEAVY involvement of US Telecom Industry
- SN Providers
- GN Providers
- Terrestrial, shipboard, and aeronautical mobile
services - Full motion compressed video, fractional T1 to
users premises - ISDN telephony and videoconferencing
- ATM Networks
- Transmission at OC-12 rates (622 Mbps) with full
fiber connectivity - Asymmetrical link connections
9(No Transcript)
10A Common Interface Architecture
11TechSat21 Vision
12ACTS Twelve Satellites in One12 Future Space
Network Payloads
Technologies Ka Band, DAMA, Rain Fade
Compensation, Processing, Switching, Mesh
Connectivity, Switch Matrix, High Gain Hopping,
Fixed Steerable Spot Beams
12 Configurations KaBBPHSB KaBBPHSBRFC
KaBBPHSBDAMA KABBPHSBDAMARFC KaBBPFSB Ka
BBPFSBRFC KaBBPFSBDAMA KaBBPFSBDAMARFC
KaMSMFSB KaMSMFSBRFC KaMSMFSBDAMA KaMSM
FSBDAMARFC
RECEIVERS
TRANSMITTERS
Technology Controls
13ACTS Ground Networks
15 VSAT Terminals
- USAT LESSONS LEARNED
- Hub network
- Started _at_ 9.6kbps end _at_ 45mbps over three years
- Industry was the technology driver
- Came in many forms
- VSAT LESSONS LEARNED
- Star Architecture
- Mesh network demonstrated
- DAMA
- Rain Fade Required
- Easily linked to Internet
- Transportable to meet changing demand
- HDRT LESSONS LEARNED
- Locate on the nodes of the Internet
- Transportable to meet changing demand
- 1.8gbps possible thru satellite
- Bent Pipe Best Sat Configuration
10 USAT Terminals
5 High Data Rate Terminals
14HDRT Architecture Details
15Mobile Terminals
- LESSONS LEARNED
- Many mobile markets emerging
- Many architectures for many applications
- Civil Applications
- Science Applications
- Military Applications
- Wideband mobile applications are inevitable.
16Virtual Network Architectures
- Lessons learned
- Many-in-one Networks
- Prompt Connectivity
- Prompt Accommodations
- Many Applications
- Civil
- Science
- Military
- Many Networks
- State of the practice for terrestrial networks
17System Level Lessons Learned from ACTS
- ACTS taught us that users drive the
communications evolution (entropy) to
increasingly complex systems and architectures.Â
In the future, there will be no simple
architecture but rather a matrix of complex
interactive SN and GN elements. There will be no
more simple architectures that have simple
names but rather complexes of SN and GN
elements named by the functions (users and
markets) they serve.  - A well crafted "architecture for the future" is a
matrix of communications system elements that can
be switched to look like a buss or a star or a
hub or a ring or a spiral or "whatever"
because the system will be ever changing
depending on the users and their applications.
18InevitablesFuture ComSat Systems
- Future Space Networks will be similar to the
ACTS. - They will be located at GEO, MEO and LEO.
- These networks will employ many-in-one
satellites that will be continually reconfigured.
- The Ground Networks will employ many-in-one earth
stations that will be continually reconfigured. - Satellite distribution to mobile users will
employ both RF and lasers com. - Terrestrial distribution will employ many-in-one
virtual networks. - Space distribution will employ Laser
intersatellite links and onboard switching
systems.
19Six Principles for Ground Networks for Future
Space Operations
- Given the NASA mission requirements, the
inevitables, and the lessons learned from the
ACTS, we can formulate principles to apply to
ground network development for future space
operations. - Employ Commercial Service Providers wherever
possible. They represent the state of the
practice in innovative space communications. Â - Use a mesh network of stations to achieve high
network availability using individual stations
operating at modest availability. Â - Use the fewest number of earth stations to
achieve the lowest cost network with a maximum of
utilization. Â - Locate the earth stations on the nodes of the
terrestrial Internet backbone to assure wideband
access to all users of the networks and provide
for future growth with the Internet. Â - Employ Internet command and control of Space
Assets to enable mesh networks of space assets
for prompt, reliable communications for science,
commercial and military space applications. Â - Anticipate the inevitable space based Internet
and configure to benefit from its architecture to
support mobile applications.