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Considerations for an Earth Relay Satellite with RF and Optical Trunklines
Author(s) -
David Israël
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
24th aiaa international communications satellite systems conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2016-5701
Subject(s) - satellite , earth (classical element) , satellite broadcasting , relay , computer science , remote sensing , radio frequency , communications satellite , earth observation satellite , telecommunications , geology , engineering , physics , aerospace engineering , astronomy , power (physics) , quantum mechanics
Support for user platforms through the use of optical links to geosynchronous relay spacecraft are expected to be part of the future space communications architecture. The European Data Relay Satellite System (EDRS) has its first node, EDRS-A, in orbit. The EDRS architecture includes space-to-space optical links with a Ka-Band feeder link or trunkline. NASA's Laser Communications Relay Demonstration (LCRD) mission, originally baselined to support a space-to-space optical link relayed with an optical trunkline, has added an Radio Frequency (RF) trunkline. The use of an RF trunkline avoids the outages suffered by an optical trunkline due to clouds, but an RF trunkline will be bandwidth limited. A space relay architecture with both RF and optical trunklines could relay critical realtime data, while also providing a high data volume capacity. This paper considers the relay user scenarios that could be supported, and the implications to the space relay system and operations. System trades such as the amount of onboard processing and storage required, the use of link layer switching vs. network layer routing, and the use of Delay/Disruption Tolerant Networking (DTN) are discussed.

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