Mobile Communications Chapter 5: Satellite Systems

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Mobile Communications Chapter 5: Satellite Systems History Basics Localization Handover Routing Systems Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.1

History of satellite communication 1945 Arthur C. Clarke publishes an essay about Extra Terrestrial Relays 1957 first satellite SPUTNIK 1960 first reflecting communication satellite ECHO 1963 first geostationary satellite SYNCOM 1965 first commercial geostationary satellite Satellit Early Bird (INTELSAT I): 240 duplex telephone channels or 1 TV channel, 1.5 years lifetime 1976 three MARISAT satellites for maritime communication 1982 first mobile satellite telephone system INMARSAT-A 1988 first satellite system for mobile phones and data communication INMARSAT-C 1993 first digital satellite telephone system 1998 global satellite systems for small mobile phones Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.2

Applications Traditionally weather satellites radio and TV broadcast satellites military satellites satellites for navigation and localization (e.g., GPS) Telecommunication global telephone connections backbone for global networks replaced by fiber optics connections for communication in remote places or underdeveloped areas global mobile communication satellite systems to extend cellular phone systems (e.g., GSM or AMPS) Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.3

Classical satellite systems Mobile User Link (MUL) Inter Satellite Link (ISL) Gateway Link (GWL) GWL MUL small cells (spotbeams) footprint base station or gateway ISDN PSTN GSM PSTN: Public Switched Telephone Network User data Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.4

Basics Satellites in circular orbits attractive force F g = m g (R/r)² centrifugal force F c = m r ² m: mass of the satellite R: radius of the earth (R = 6370 km) r: distance to the center of the earth g: acceleration of gravity (g = 9.81 m/s²) : angular velocity ( = 2 f, f: rotation frequency) Stable orbit F g = F c r 3 gr ( 2 f 2 ) 2 Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.5

Satellite period and orbits 24 20 velocity [ x1000 km/h] satellite period [h] 16 12 8 4 synchronous distance 35,786 km 10 20 30 40 x10 6 m radius Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.6

Basics elliptical or circular orbits complete rotation time depends on distance satellite-earth inclination: angle between orbit and equator elevation: angle between satellite and horizon LOS (Line of Sight) to the satellite necessary for connection high elevation needed, less absorption due to e.g. buildings Uplink: connection base station - satellite Downlink: connection satellite - base station typically separated frequencies for uplink and downlink transponder used for sending/receiving and shifting of frequencies transparent transponder: only shift of frequencies regenerative transponder: additionally signal regeneration Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.7

Inclination plane of satellite orbit perigee satellite orbit d inclination d equatorial plane Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.8

Elevation Elevation: angle e between center of satellite beam and surface minimal elevation: elevation needed at least to communicate with the satellite e Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.9

Link budget of satellites Parameters like attenuation or received power determined by four parameters: sending power gain of sending antenna distance between sender and receiver gain of receiving antenna Problems varying strength of received signal due to multipath propagation interruptions due to shadowing of signal (no LOS) Possible solutions Link Margin to eliminate variations in signal strength L: Loss f: carrier frequency r: distance c: speed of light 4 r f c satellite diversity (usage of several visible satellites at the same time) helps to use less sending power L 2 Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.10

Atmospheric attenuation Attenuation of the signal in % Example: satellite systems at 4-6 GHz 50 40 rain absorption e 30 20 fog absorption 10 atmospheric absorption 5 10 20 30 40 50 elevation of the satellite Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.11

Orbits I Four different types of satellite orbits can be identified depending on the shape and diameter of the orbit: GEO: geostationary orbit, ca. 36000 km above earth surface LEO (Low Earth Orbit): ca. 500-1500 km MEO (Medium Earth Orbit) or ICO (Intermediate Circular Orbit): ca. 6000-20000 km HEO (Highly Elliptical Orbit) elliptical orbits Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.12

Orbits II GEO (Inmarsat) HEO LEO (Globalstar, Irdium) MEO (ICO) inner and outer Van Allen belts earth 1000 10000 Van-Allen-Belts: ionized particles 2000-6000 km and 15000-30000 km above earth surface 35768 km Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.13

Geostationary satellites Orbit 35,786 km distance to earth surface, orbit in equatorial plane (inclination 0 ) complete rotation exactly one day, satellite is synchronous to earth rotation fix antenna positions, no adjusting necessary satellites typically have a large footprint (up to 34% of earth surface!), therefore difficult to reuse frequencies bad elevations in areas with latitude above 60 due to fixed position above the equator high transmit power needed high latency due to long distance (ca. 275 ms) not useful for global coverage for small mobile phones and data transmission, typically used for radio and TV transmission Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.14

LEO systems Orbit ca. 500-1500 km above earth surface visibility of a satellite ca. 10-40 minutes global radio coverage possible latency comparable with terrestrial long distance connections, ca. 5-10 ms smaller footprints, better frequency reuse but now handover necessary from one satellite to another many satellites necessary for global coverage more complex systems due to moving satellites Lower longevity (atmospheric drag, inner Van-Allen-Belt) Examples: Iridium (start 1998, 66 satellites) Bankruptcy in 2000, deal with US DoD (free use, saving from deorbiting ) Globalstar (start 1999, 48 satellites) Not many customers (2001: 44000), low stand-by times for mobiles. Bankruptcy in 2002. Re-structured in 2004 Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.15

MEO systems Orbit ca. 5000-12000 km above earth surface comparison with LEO systems: slower moving satellites less satellites needed simpler system design for many connections no hand-over needed higher latency, ca. 70-80 ms higher sending power needed special antennas for small footprints needed Example: ICO (Intermediate Circular Orbit, Inmarsat) start ca. 2000 Bankruptcy, planned joint ventures with Teledesic, Ellipso cancelled again, start planned for 2003. Ended-up deploying one GEO. Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.16

Routing One solution: inter satellite links (ISL) reduced number of gateways needed forward connections or data packets within the satellite network as long as possible only one uplink and one downlink per direction needed for the connection of two mobile phones Problems: more complex focusing of antennas between satellites high system complexity due to moving routers higher fuel consumption thus shorter lifetime Iridium and Teledesic planned with ISL Other systems use gateways and additionally terrestrial networks Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.17

Localization of mobile stations Mechanisms similar to GSM Gateways maintain registers with user data HLR (Home Location Register): static user data VLR (Visitor Location Register): (last known) location of the mobile station SUMR (Satellite User Mapping Register): satellite assigned to a mobile station positions of all satellites Registration of mobile stations Localization of the mobile station via the satellite s position requesting user data from HLR updating VLR and SUMR Calling a mobile station localization using HLR/VLR similar to GSM connection setup using the appropriate satellite Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.18

Handover in satellite systems Several additional situations for handover in satellite systems compared to cellular terrestrial mobile phone networks caused by the movement of the satellites Intra satellite handover handover from one spot beam to another mobile station still in the footprint of the satellite, but in another cell Inter satellite handover handover from one satellite to another satellite mobile station leaves the footprint of one satellite Gateway handover Handover from one gateway to another mobile station still in the footprint of a satellite, but gateway leaves the footprint Inter system handover Handover from the satellite network to a terrestrial cellular network mobile station can reach a terrestrial network again which might be cheaper, has a lower latency etc. Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.19

Overview of LEO/MEO systems Iridium Globalstar ICO Teledesic # satellites 66 + 6 48 + 4 10 + 2 288 altitude 780 1414 10390 ca. 700 (km) coverage global 70 latitude global global min. 8 20 20 40 elevation frequencies [GHz (circa)] 1.6 MS 29.2 19.5 1.6 MS 2.5 MS 5.1 2 MS 2.2 MS 5.2 19 28.8 62 ISL 23.3 ISL 6.9 7 access FDMA/TDMA CDMA FDMA/TDMA FDMA/TDMA method ISL yes no no yes bit rate 2.4 kbit/s 9.6 kbit/s 4.8 kbit/s 64 Mbit/s 2/64 Mbit/s # channels 4000 2700 4500 2500 Lifetime 5-8 7.5 12 10 [years] cost estimation 4.4 B$ 2.9 B$ 4.5 B$ 9 B$ Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.20

Link Budget Pr = Pt - 92.4-20 Log F(GHz) - 20 Log D(Km) - At + Gt + Gr G- Gain of antenna t transmission; r reception At atmospheric attenuation (dust, rain) D = 36000 Km -> 20 LogD = 91,1 F= 2 GHz -> 20 LogF = 6 A=10 db Gt = Gr = 30 dbi Pt = 40 dbm (10 W) -> Pr = - 99,5 dbm Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.21

Angles - Divergence & Spot Size 1 17 mrad 1 mrad 0.0573 Small angle approximation: Angle (in milliradians) * Range (km)= Spot Size (m) 1 mrad 1 m 1 km Divergence Range Spot Diameter 1 mrad 36000 km 36 Km 17 mrad (1 deg) 36000 km 612 Km Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.22

Antenna Gain vs Divergence Gain(dBi) = 10 Log (2 / Div) = 10 Log (360º/Divº) Isotropic Antenna -> Div = 2 / 360º (both Vert. and Hor.) Gain(dBi) = 0 Cisco AIR-ANT3338 21dBi Parabolic Dish Azimuth 3dB BW =12º Elevation 3dB BW =12º Examples: Div =2º -> Gain(dBi) = 22,6 dbi (2x 22,6 if in both planes) Div =4º -> Gain(dBi) = 19,6 dbi Div =8º -> Gain(dBi) = 16,6 dbi Div=12º -> Gain(dBi) = 14,7 dbi (Vert and Hor: 14,7 x 2 = 29,4 dbi) Nota: a antena da Cisco com Div= 12º tem 21 dbi de ganho, (vs 29.4 dbi teórico) devido a perdas noutras direcções. Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.23

Received Power based on Antenna Aperture Area (Ae) Ae = Aphysical * h (h - Antenna efficiency 50%-80%) Pr = Pt 10 Log( Footprint / Ae) At Pt = 40dBm (10W) Footprint = 600 000 Km2 (775km x 775km) (Iberian peninsula 582 860 km2) Aphy = 1m2 ; h = 50% At = 10 db Pr = 40 121-10 = - 91 dbm 1.2º 775 Km 36000 Km Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller, http://www.jochenschiller.de/ MC SS02 5.24