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![]() by Staff Writers Atlanta GA (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
A new collaborative research project has been announced between the Georgia Institute of Technology and satellite communications provider Xenesis to offer new age solutions to open the bottleneck that now limits the flow of data from Earth-orbiting satellites to ground stations. The project will miniaturize, space qualify and test the laser communications transceiver from the International Space Station which is set to dramatically expand the bandwidth available for downlinking information from the growing number of satellites in low Earth orbit. Xenesis has licensed the technology from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), and will work with Georgia Tech and JPL to mature it for use as a primary communication system for satellites as small as CubeSats. "We expect to significantly add to the total bandwidth of information that we can get down from space, and the more bandwidth we have, the more information we can exchange and the more value we can get from satellite networks," said Brian Gunter, an assistant professor in Georgia Tech's Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering who will be leading the project. Gunter's lab has experience with small satellites, and will apply that expertise to the project with Xenesis - which signed a $1.2 million contract on June 14 to support the work. "With all of the satellites that are going into space, everything from CubeSats to major satellites, there is more information being generated than can ever be downloaded," said Dennis Poulos, chief technology officer at Xenesis. "Most of today's systems depend on radio frequency downlinks, and there is just a limited amount of bandwidth available for use." Xenesis is essentially setting itself up to be the first in the industry to offer a real time solution to this archaic problem. Laser-based systems can dramatically expand that bandwidth to beyond 10 gigabits per second, Poulos said. In addition to boosting bandwidth, optical systems can use smaller antennas, use power more efficiently, and provide better data security. "Xenesis recognizes the need for a global communications revolution, and we plan to empower space with an optical product called XenHub," said Mark LaPenna, CEO of Xenesis. "Through this architecture, any company, EO mission or global operator on the ground or in space, will be able to compete on a level playing field for the first time since Sputnik." The initial focus will be space-to-ground communication, though the system could also be used for cross-linking communication between satellites. "Once we can show that this works from space to ground, that will demonstrate that the technology can survive the harsh environment of space, and allow us continue the development of the transceiver for commercial use," Gunter added. "This has the potential to open up a range of new capabilities, including the ability to provide high-volume data services to anywhere in the world." In Georgia Tech's School of Aerospace Engineering, the contract will support graduate students, a postdoctoral researcher, and a group of undergraduate students, Gunter said. "This will be a major satellite project for our lab, and we look forward to advancing the technology with our collaborators."
![]() ![]() China Mulls Creation of Joint Global Satellite System with Russia Moscow (Sputnik) Jul 09, 2018 A Chinese delegation has proposed to Russia's Roscosmos state space corporation to discuss a possibility of the creation of a joint global satellite communications system, which could become an analogue of UK's OneWeb satellite constellation or Starlink, a source from Russian space industry told Sputnik. "During the bilateral meeting on July 4, the Chinese delegation, which arrived in Moscow to get acquainted with the new leadership of Roscosmos, presented, among other things, its plans to create ... read more
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