Link Architecture and Spacecraft Terminal Design for High Rate Direct to Earth Optical Communications

A satellite in low-Earth orbit (LEO) or medium-Earth orbit (MEO) with a modern image sensor and/or other remote sensing device can collect data at rates of 10 Mbps or higher. At these collection rates, the satellite can accumulate more data between its passes over a given ground station than it can transmit to the ground station in a single pass using radio-frequency (RF) communications. Put differently, the sensors fill the spacecraft's memory faster than the spacecraft can empty it. Fortunately, free-space optical communications signals can carry far more data than RF communications signals. In particular, a spacecraft can transmit over 1 Tb of data in a single pass using burst wavelength-division multiplexed (WDM) optical signals. Each burst may last seconds to minutes, and can include tens to hundreds of WDM channels, each of which is modulated at 10 Gbps or more.

Departments: Lincoln Laboratory
Technology Areas: Communication Systems: Optical, Satellites / Sensing & Imaging: Imaging, Optical Sensing
Impact Areas: Connected World

  • link architecture and spacecraft terminal for high rate direct to earth optical communications
    Patent Cooperation Treaty | Published application
  • link architecture and spacecraft terminal for high rate direct to earth optical communications
    United States of America | Granted | 9,998,221

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