The economics and performance of satellite packet switching
Abstract
The economics and performance of packet-switched satellite systems operating in a broadcast mode are studied and compared to landline-based systems similar to the ARPANET. The fixed-packet length inefficiencies and the satellite channel utilization of the satellite systems are presented as functions of the message length distribution, the number of earth stations, the average message delay, and the average number of messages generated at each earth station. Some of the economic factors in the design of packet-switched satellite networks are discussed, including hardware costs as a function of technology and system performance. Satellite network configurations with or without backhaul facilities are compared and it is concluded that configurations using backhaul facilities consisting of two 30 mile private leased lines (each 50 kbits/s) are more expensive.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report A
- Pub Date:
- July 1975
- Bibcode:
- 1975STIA...7535758E
- Keywords:
-
- Channels (Data Transmission);
- Communication Satellites;
- Economic Factors;
- Satellite Networks;
- Switching Circuits;
- System Effectiveness;
- Broadcasting;
- Cost Effectiveness;
- Data Transmission;
- Satellite Design;
- Systems Engineering;
- Technology Assessment;
- Communications and Radar