A baseline maritime satellite communication system
Abstract
This paper describes a baseline system for maritime communications via satellite during the 1980s. The system model employs three geostationary satellites with global coverage antennas. Access to the system is controlled by a master station; user access is based on time-ordered polling or random access. Each Thor-Delta launched satellite has an RF power of 100 W (spinner) or 250 W (three-axis stabilized), and provides 10 equivalent duplex voice channels for up to 1500 ships with average waiting times of approximately 2.5 minutes. The satellite capacity is bounded by the available bandwidth to 50 such channels, which can serve up to 10,000 ships with an average waiting time of 5 minutes. The ships must have peak antenna gains of approximately 15.5 dB or 22.5 dB for the two cases (10 or 50 voice channels) when a spinner satellite is used; the required gains are 4 dB lower if a three-axis stabilized satellite is used. The ship antenna requirements can be reduced by 8 to 10 dB by employing a high-gain multi-beam phased array antenna on the satellite.
- Publication:
-
IEEE Transactions on Communications
- Pub Date:
- 1974
- Bibcode:
- 1974ITCom......690D
- Keywords:
-
- Communication Satellites;
- Maritime Satellites;
- Satellite Communication;
- Satellite Communications Ships;
- Satellite Networks;
- Systems Engineering;
- Channel Capacity;
- Digital Data;
- False Alarms;
- Frequency Division Multiplexing;
- Ground Stations;
- Phased Arrays;
- Satellite Antennas;
- Voice Communication;
- Communications and Radar