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Satellite Communication Subsystems Overview

This document provides an outline for a lecture on satellite sub-systems, including: - The major sub-systems of satellites including attitude and orbit control, telemetry tracking command and monitoring, power, communication, antennas, and thermal sub-systems. - An overview of satellite transponders, including that they are the smallest assignable resource and there are two types - "bent pipes" and regenerative. - Examples of power systems on satellites including calculating the number of solar cells needed to generate a given amount of power based on factors like solar flux and conversion efficiency.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
894 views11 pages

Satellite Communication Subsystems Overview

This document provides an outline for a lecture on satellite sub-systems, including: - The major sub-systems of satellites including attitude and orbit control, telemetry tracking command and monitoring, power, communication, antennas, and thermal sub-systems. - An overview of satellite transponders, including that they are the smallest assignable resource and there are two types - "bent pipes" and regenerative. - Examples of power systems on satellites including calculating the number of solar cells needed to generate a given amount of power based on factors like solar flux and conversion efficiency.

Uploaded by

ab4aziz
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

ECE 5233 Satellite Communications

Prepared by:
Dr. Ivica Kostanic
Lecture 6: Satellite sub-systems
(Section 3.1-3.4)

Spring 2014
Outline

Satellite subsystems
Communication subsystem
Satellite transponders
Examples

Important note: Slides present summary of the results. Detailed derivations


are given in notes.

Florida Institute of technologies Page 2


Satellite subsystems

 Major satellite subsystems


o Altitude and Orbit Control Systems (AOCS)
– maintain and stabilize satellite in the orbit
o Telemetry, Tracking, Command and
Monitoring (TTC&M) – take and process
measurements on satellite health and position
o Power subsystem – generate and distribute
power to various components of the satellite
o Communication subsystem – Receives,
processes and re-transmits the signals
o Satellite antenna – receive and transmit EM
waves.
o Superstructure – construction of the satellite
that is used as a mount for all other
components
o Thermal subsystem – maintains the
temperature of the satellite within prescribed
range
Major components of a Lockheed
 Satellites have life expectancy 10-15 years
Martin remote sensing satellite
 Many components are deployed in redundant
configurations to minimize probability of satellite
failure BBC Documentary - How to build a satellite:
[Link]

Florida Institute of technologies Page 3


Altitude and Orbit Control
 Two principle tasks
o Stabilize the orientation of the satellite
o Maintain the position of the satellite in orbit
 Four ways of stabilizations Example of spin
stabilized satellite
o Spinning
o Momentum wheels
o Reaction wheels
o Control moment gyro
 Orbit is maintained using control thrusters
 The amount of fuel available for thruster operation is a fundamental
limit on the satellite life span

Different methods for


satellite stabilization

Boeing 376 – one of the most popular GEO


Comm. Satellites
Operates in C, Ku bands
Usually 24 transponders
50 satellites over five continents, used by more
than 20 companies
Florida Institute of technologies Page 4
Telemetry, Tracking, Command and Monitoring

 TTC&M – distributed between satellite and Earth


station
 Satellite provides measurements
o Position sensors
o Environmental sensors
o Alarms
 Satellite may have few hundred of different sensors
 Measured data sent over TTC&M link to Earth station
 The TTC&M link is a narrowband link - allows for
high sensitivity reception
 At the Earth station measured data processed and
commands are issued to the satellite
 TTC&M may be operated by satellite owner or it may
be outsourced
 TTC&M systems are build with redundancy

Block diagram of TTC&M


system

Florida Institute of technologies Page 5


Power systems
 Used for generation and distribution of power
throughout a satellite  Source of power generation – Solar panels
 Three types of power systems  Solar panels consist of many strings solar cells
o Solar – the most frequently used in commercial connected in parallel
satellites  Solar energy in Earth orbit has density of ~
o Chemical – used for backup to power satellite 1390W/m2
during solar eclipses  Three axis stabilized satellites use flat solar panels
o Nuclear – used for satellites leaving the Earth  Spinning satellites have solar panels on the
orbit (deeper space exploration) cylindrical surface of the satellite
 Efficiency of solar cells is about 20% (i.e. only 20%
of the sunlight might be converted to energy)
 The energy is used to charge satellite batteries and
to power rest of the satellite
 The power needed for a satellite may be in the
range 0.5-10KW
 Majority of the power is consumed by the
communication equipment - RF amplifiers on the
transponders

Block diagram of solar power generation system

Florida Institute of technologies Page 6


Power systems - examples

Example 1. Consider a case where a spin-stabilized Example 2. It is desired that the battery system on board
satellite has to generate 2000 watts of electrical power the satellite is capable of meeting the full power
from the solar panels. Assuming that the solar flux falling requirement of 3600 watts for the worst case eclipse
normal to the solar cells in the worst case is 1250W/m2, period of 72 minutes. If the satellite uses nickel–hydrogen
the area of each solar cell is 4 cm2 and the conversion cells of 1.3 volts, 90 A h capacity each with an allowable
efficiency of the solar cells including the losses due to depth of discharge of 80 %, and discharge efficiency of
cabling, etc., is 15 %, determine the number of solar cells 95 %, find
needed to generate the desired power. What would be
(a) the number of cells required
the number of cells required if the sun rays fell obliquely,
making an angle of 10◦ with the normal? (b) (b) the total mass of the battery system. Given that
the specific energy specification for the battery
technology used is 60W h/kg.
Answers:
Required number of cells: 83777
Answers:
For 10% angle, required number of cells is 85070
a) Required number cells – 49
b) Mass of the battery system – 94.74 kg

Florida Institute of technologies Page 7


Communication systems

 Most important (i.e. revenue generating part


of the satellite)
 Satellite – repeater in the sky
 Bands for satellite operation: L(2GHz/1GHz),
S(4GHz/2GHz), C(6GHz/4GHz), X(7/8 GHz)
Ku(12-18GHz) and Ka(27-40GHz)
 Early communication satellites – power
limited, used narrowband transmission
 Contemporary satellite – bandwidth limited,
use wideband transmission and frequency
reuse
 Frequency allocation handled through ITU
on the global basis
 Management of the frequencies in the US
are conducted by Federal Communications
Outline of satellite
Committee (FCC) communication system
 A unit of satellite communication capacity -
transponder

Florida Institute of technologies Page 8


Satellite transponders
 Two types of satellites
o “Bent pipes” (transparent)
o Regenerative (base band processing)
 Smallest assignable recourse
o Satellite transponder
o Satellite usually hosts many transponders
o Some of transponders may be spares
o Typical active transponder count is 24
o Satellite usually operates in single band
(although there are some multiband Basics of “bent pipe” architecture
satellites)
o Bandwidth of the satellite transponder is a
compromise between power efficiency
(favors larger bandwidth) and limitations
on linearity of PA (favors smaller
bandwidth)
o Most common bandwidth of a
transponder in 36MHz (with 40MHz
channelization)
o Some satellites adopt 54MHz or even
72MHz

Satellite with onboard processing


Florida Institute of technologies Page 9
Transponder arrangement – fixed frequency translation

 Basic design – each transponder


is individual chain with fixed
frequency translation
 Banks of transponders are
arranged to achieve higher
frequency separation (80MHz)
o Minimizes intermodulation
products

Example of transponder arrangement


for RCA’s SATCOM

Florida Institute of technologies Page 10


Simplified single conversion transponder

1. Input signal
3. Output signal- translated by frequency of LO
x1  t   A cos 2f 6G t 
x3  t   GKA cos 2  f 6G  f LO  t 
2. After mixing stage

x2  t   K  A cos 2f 6G t   X LO cos 2f LO t 


1 1
 KA cos 2  f 6G  f LO  t   KA cos 2  f 6G  f LO  t 
2 2

Florida Institute of technologies Page 11

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