Laser for Satellite to Satellite Communications
heby writes: "Last night ESA successfully tested the first laser link between two satellites (SPOT 4 and Artemis). SPOT 4 is supposed to serve as a data communications relay between Artemis and the receiving station in Toulouse. The link is running at 50Mbps and the two satellites are currently orbiting at 832km and 31000km respectively.
According to ESA "The main challenge in establishing an optical link between satellites is to point a very narrow beam with extreme accuracy to illuminate the partner spacecraft flying at a speed of 7000 m/s." Way to go, ESA!"
According to ESA "The main challenge in establishing an optical link between satellites is to point a very narrow beam with extreme accuracy to illuminate the partner spacecraft flying at a speed of 7000 m/s." Way to go, ESA!"
"while Artemis is temporarily in a parking orbit at 31 000 km."
I had to pay $13.00 to park at Navy Pier....I wonder how much parking costs at 310000 km?
Is relative - 7000m/s sounds impressive but when BOTH spacecraft are travelling at 7000m/s in the SAME relative direction they are actually travelling ( in relation to each other ) at 0m/s
2c
If they transmit data and later convert it to decimal, it's ust another example of a lame base being used yet again. Why not binary or hexadecimal? Why decimal? Why?
How long was the link up for... I'm wondering because one is in a fixed orbit over a single piece of land, while the other is flying around the earth once what? every 90-120 minutes?
The sheer logistics of keeping that link up would be nearly mind boggleing.... So is anybody going to try this with a spot on the planet with a bird up in the sky (satellite)?
We can finally stream porn 31000km above the Earth!
I wonder what the latency of that link is?
Article submitter wrote:
SPOT 4 is supposed to serve as a data communications relay between Artemis and the receiving station in Toulouse.
Then, Tollhouse takes the data and uses it to make cookies.
-nukebuddy
maybe this will help out in the future for satellite imaging to stream video back to earth instead of just pictures that take hours to transmit across space. i think it would be cool to get live video from a satellite orbiting jupiter at any given moment :)
I wonder if they have to allow for signal loss caused by bits of space junk floating by...
Okay, the odds are probably pretty damn small, just a thought.
Besides, slashdot seems screwed, I'm curious to see if I can still post...
Vs lbh pna ernq guvf, ybt bss abj. Tb bhgfvqr. Syl n xvgr.
Well, this is indeed a real challenge. Some time ago we also tried to build a laserlink and succeeded with 128kbit (IrDA). The link was very stable, there was no problem accomplishing a link at around 2km. Next we tried to "upgrade" to 10baseT but sadly never found time to finish this. If anyone is interested, have a look at: http://strike.wu-wien.ac.at/~dusty/projekte/laserl ink/index.shtml
I worked on this back when I was working at BAe Space Systems (since taken over by Matra Marconi).
We had to high accuracy laser targeting systems for the Sat2Sat laser link working in the lab at BAe's Stevenage site 6 or more years ago...
+++ BASELINE REALITY FAILURE+++ +++ PLEASE REBOOT UNIVERSE +++
I was just wondering the other day how feasible it would be to use a laser as a communication device between two birds. You can get really nice range with little EM interference with only a wee bit or output power. The one obstacle I kept running into whilst pondering a laserlink was keeping the beam aimed at another bird in a different orbit. Well hot damn and way to go. I guess I was hit in the face with the same muse as the dudes at the ESA just a little bit late and without any satellites under my control to play with...so far.
I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
I know it's minimal, but does anyone have any info on how much force the laser they use might exert?
- billn
Considering the vastly different orbit heights (832km and 31000km) surely the two satellittes must be going at very different velocities. A little basic mathes show us :
2 * PI * 832 = 5,227,610m
2 * PI * 31000 = 194,778,744m
So the total linear distance travelled in each orbit is very different (assuming that the two heights are taken from the centre of the Earth. Which they aren't. Can't be bothered to factor in Earth's radius). So, at 7000m/s-1, the outer satellitte would take about 8 hours longer per orbit, evidently showing the relative distance would be changing, and making the targetting process much more of a challenge.
So.. presumably 7000m/s-1 is the speed of one of the satellittes (I'm guessing inner)..
PS. I think my mathes is screwy. Its early. I have no coffee.
http://twitter.com/onion2k
I think you got that wrong. Artemis is the relay satellite, SPOT4 is not.
Now that's actually more scary than anything else. If a civil institution is capable of laser-linking satellites, I'd say it's pretty much a given that the military is perfectly capable and probably has been for years to deploy lasers for destructive purposes in earth orbit. Who knows what's meanwhile up there? And I thought Star Wars (SDI) has just been US-propaganda to speed up the USSR's economic meltdown...
Is it just me who wonders in amazement at the cynicism over the missile defence tests about whether it's possible to hit a missile travelling at great speed (GPS or no GPS) - and yet now everyone oohs and ahhs and has no problem with NASA aiming a laser at something moving at 7000 m/s... :)
-- Pete.
Monochrome - Probably the UK's largest internet BBS
however, it was demonstrated in the sixties
by concurrent US and Soviet teams (Tatarskii) that
a laser link (although very secure and
promising in terms of bw ) between an earth station and a satellite was not feasible
due to atmospheric turbulence. Maybe
things have evolved now...
Google passes Turing test : see my journal
Sure, you get the laser link up and running fine, transferring all your data, and suddenly a piece of space debris intercepts the path of the laser. So some amount of data is lost.
What kind of redundencies are employed to work around this problem?
Or isn't it a problem at all?
-Shaunak.
Now all they have to do is increase the intensity and they've beaten us to Strategic Defense Initiative.
So, yes i'm nit picking.
Now the question is: Why isn't it in Geo-stationary orbit? Am I missing something?
I work with free space lasers as part of my PhD and I can assure you they can be an absolute b*stard to align properley, even accross a small lab bench into a detector. Hats off to em!
I'd be interested to know what wavelength these devices operate on. (I'm assuming they are semiconductor devices as nothing else would be light enough to launch into space) Blue semicondutor lasers (with nitrogen doping) are becomming cheaper and cheaper and can carry more data (because of the shoter wavelength) per sec but may not be as reliable as "traditional" longer wavelengths.
A few months ago we tried rigging up a "laser ethernet" conection from our physics dept to our house (its line of sight). Only by making teh beam very divergent did we manage to get any sort of alingment, and that was on a clear day! It was nowhere near good enough for us to be able to use the universitys fat pipes from home!
Anyone quoted by a reporter knows how little they understand
Don't believe what you read is the truth.
Operating wavelength is between 800 and 860 nanometer. Probably a GaAs laserdiode
I thought it might be.
Most space stuff tends to rely on older tried and trusted technology, rather than anything that might go wrong (Its not easy to fly into space to replace a blown diode!) That and I'm sure the bit-rate available over ~830nm is more than adiquate.
Anyone quoted by a reporter knows how little they understand
Don't believe what you read is the truth.
Interesting side effect of this is that these communications can't be intercepted, unlike RF/microwave broadcasts.
D.
Now 15 year-olds can launch DOS attacks with laser pointers.
My girlfriend works at NASA as a Tech, and something I hear all the time is about their funding, and how it's really hard to get anything real done around there without a whole lot of BS. PHB's trying to get Win2K on P5-75's; and some other obsurd stuff to just make you question why we've cut their budge a lot.
I disable sigs...do you?
Anyone know anything more about this? Could this be a way to get a link to and from the ground?
73,
dit dit
So the sentence:
The link is running at 50Mbps and the two satellites are currently orbiting at 832km and 31000km respectively.
Is just code for:
The system is running at Full Power and the two satellites are currently orbiting above Washington and Moscow respectively.
Insert "Bad Guys Laughter" here...
Pedro Côrte-Real.
It is called metempsychosis -- soul travel (of the psyche) from one place to another. If this astounding SlashDot report is true, then our lush, green planet Earth stands on the space-port doorstep of intelligent ethereal beings flitting about from satellite to satellite on a beam of laser light.
But what happens, Scottie, if you are beaming up an AI Laser-Mind and you miss the receiving satellite? Does the robot soul or consciousness sail off eternally into the far reaches of the universe?
And how will this satellite-to-satellite laser-beam technology be used more mundanely, before the arrival of Technological Singularity?
Come on boys
Laser's that accurate must have many other applications.
Now THAT is what I call P2P communication!
Good post. And I bet even the high lattitudes could be covered too if we just shoot it up to something in a Molniya orbit and then relay that to the constellation.
73,
dit dit
So, how much energy can you cram into a laser beam these days? Anyone lazed ionizing UV and soft Xrays yet? Imagine a nice sharp beam of gammas. Yikes, I'm vaporized.
DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
What amaze me with this kind of PR is that they always use large number to impress people.
The fact that the linear speed difference between the two satellites (from previous post, I assume that the 7000m/s is the speed difference between the two satellites) is not very important. What is important is the angular speed.
It is a lot easier to target an object moving at 100Km/h at a distance of 100 meters than to target the same object at a distance of 10 meters.
Ver precise, and even better, incapable of intercepting transmissions. Good to see this coming to light. "Weeeeery eeenteresting."
Of course, when are we going to see this technology used to guide in laser guided bombs and missiles from sattelite? Or, do we already have it and we don't know about it?
It seems to me that this is just an incremental advance from older satellite-to-satellite communications systems.
Military satellite networks, for example MILSTAR have already implemented very narrow beam communications between satellites. This has been necessary to prevent interception or jamming of the signal.
The advances here probably relate mostly to greater-precision mechanics and more powerful CPUs. I don't know if the data rate mentioned is a big leap or not, but considering the fact that the MILSTAR network carries all the photographic and video intelligence gathered by NRO's Improved CRYSTAL satellites the MILSTAR bandwidth must be pretty impressive too...
Marko Karppinen
It's a bird!
It's a plane!
Ow, that thing blinded me!
// Alan Porter