Title: Basic Satellite Communication (3) Components of Communications Satellite
1Basic Satellite Communication (3)Components of
Communications Satellite
2Components of a Satellite
- Payload Satellite Main Mission Antennas
Communications System - Satellite Bus Components
- Satellite Tracking, Telemetry, Command
Monitoring (TTCM) - Methods to Cope with Rain Attenuation
- Satellite Power System
- Satellite Bus, Orientation and Stabilization
System
3Components of a Satellite Main Mission Antennas
Communications System
- Antennas are constantly pointed to the earth with
larger antenna server the lower frequency and
smaller antenna service the higher frequency - The transponder in the communications system is
responsible for receiving the signal, amplifying
it and re-transmitting it in the lower frequency
back to earth. - Most transponders in the C- and Ku- bands now use
solid state power amplifiers (SSPAs) to amplify
the signal because of their weight, compactness
and reliability. - Satellites can have 12 to 96 transponders plus
spares, depending on the size of the satellite.
4Components of a Satellite Satellite Transponders
SSPA
- The transponder is the active part of the
satellite communications system that provides the
connection between the satellites receive and
transmit antennas. - A transponder bandwidth can frequently be 36 MHz,
54 MHz, or 72 MHz or it can be even wider. - A transponders function is to receive the signal
filter out noise, shift the frequency to a
downlink frequency and then amplify it for
retransmission to the ground. The main amplifier
may be a Travelling Wave Tube (TWT) or Klystron
tube (now usually used for higher frequencies
above 20 GHz and at very high power levels (i.e.
100 to 200 watts) or it may be a Solid State
Power Amplifier (SSPA) that would be used at
lower L, C or Ku bands frequencies. If the
transponder is a regenerative transponder then
the signal will be converted to base band
frequencies and processed there rather than
handled at RF bands.
5Components of a Satellite Antenna Gain Path
Loss
- Gain measures the performance of an antenna. The
larger the size (or aperture) of an antenna the
better it can point to or concentrate a signal
towards the desired receiver location on earth.
Thus the more the antenna acts like a spot light
to illuminate the earth and not send signal
uselessly out into space, the higher the gain of
the antenna. An Omni antenna that sends signals
in all directions equally has a gain of 1 and
represents the lowest gain. - Path loss comes from the spreading out of a
signal from the antenna as it travels from the
satellite to user antenna and vice versa. Since
the signal spreads in a circle effective power
(or flux density) is reduced by the square of the
distance traveled.
6Components of a Satellite Satellite Transmit
Power (EIRP)
- EIRP Effective Isotropic Radiate Power.
- The product of final amplifier power, filtering
and coupling losses and antenna gain. - Specified in watts or dB (relative to 1 watt)
dBw - EIRP density, typically specified in terms of
dBw/Hz is a key parameter in determining both
uplink and downlink performance.
7Components of a Satellite Satellite Transponder
SSPAs
- Transponder Traffic Loading is a Function of
- Transponder Bandwidth
- Uplink and Downlink satellite and earth station
parameters - Number of Carriers per transponder. This
determines back-off which is the reduction in
amplifier power from the saturated or maximum
output power. - Modulation efficiency (i.e. bits/Hz)
8(No Transcript)
9Methods to Cope with Rain Attenuation
- Use lower frequencies where possible
- Provide link margin additional link margin in
beams where there is heavy rains - On-board processing
- Site diversity
- Ability to increase dwell time and/or reduce
information rate
10Components of a Satellite Satellite Tracking,
Telemetry, Command Monitoring (TTCM)
- Tracking is necessary to know exactly where a
satellite is and thus be able to send it
commands, receive telemetry and communication
with it. - Omni antenna is used to be able to track and
command satellite even if orbit is disturbed. - The TTCM system is highly automated with
computer alarms to sound in case of anomalies are
detected. - Analogy School bus represents spacecraft bus,
and passengers represents payload
telecommunications and TV traffic. TTCM is
needed to keep bus running and check on status
of passengers.
11Components of a Satellite Satellite Power System
- Main source of power is solar cell panels that
are constantly oriented towards the sun. - New solar cells are increasingly efficient.
- The solar cell system is backed up by battery
system that provides energy during solar eclipses
and other periods of outages. - Typical power levels of 2 to 5 KWs for Fixed
Satellite Systems and 10 to 12 KWs for Mobile and
Broadcast Satellite Systems in GEO. Levels are
lower for LEO MEO Systems.
12Components of a Satellite Satellite Bus
Stabilization System
- The bus is the key parts of the satellite that
allows its operation in space. - The early generation of satellites use
gravity-gradient or spin stabilization but now
3-axis body stabilization using momentum wheels
is most common because of lifetime efficiency. - The bus includes the antenna mast, the thermal
control, the sun earth sensors, the batteries,
momentum wheels, solar array controls on-board
computers. - Carbon-epoxy structures are used because of
strength and light weight.
13Components of a Satellite Satellite Bus
Stabilization System
14Assignment
- Assignment 4
- Write short notes on the terms highlighted in
yellow color (Slides 4 and 9 of lecture 4)