The 10-Year Satellite Forecast 73
coondoggie writes "When it comes to satellites sometimes less is more. In the next ten years the government expects to see fewer but ever larger satellites flung into space. Specifically, the folks who monitor such things, the Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee (COMSTAC), said in a draft report today that an average 20.8 satellites could be launched from 2009 through 2018, a decrease of one satellite when compared to the 2008 forecast of 21.8 and the 2007 forecast of 21.0 satellites per year. Actual launches per year were above 20 for the first time since 2002 and the highest total since 2000, with 23 satellites launched in 2008.
As for the weight, the group said there has been steady growth in satellite mass since 1993 and the trend will continues as satellite mass is expected to remain near or slightly above 100,000 kilograms (220,400 lbs) forecast for the coming years with an all-time high of nearly 116,500 kg (257,000lbs) in 2009, the COMSTAC report stated."
More tacos! (Score:3, Funny)
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And also more dots [youtube.com]!
Congestion (Score:5, Insightful)
OK, I know there's a lot of room up there but surely some of the most desirable real estate (geosychronous orbits etc) must be getting a bit crowded by now. How long till someone realises we need to start removing some of the 'clutter' (old, defunct satellites) to make way for the new. Or do they assume that they will just fall to Earth, or drift off into space?
Re:Congestion (Score:5, Informative)
GSO has a radius of 42,164 km. And a circumference of 132479 km. So if you had a bird every 10km there would be space for 13247 of them, which sounds pretty good to me.
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geo satellites orbit the equator.. you can't have one orbit the "poles."
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They orbit at a speed that matches how fast the earth is spinning, so from the ground they appear to hang at the same spot in the sky.
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oO
Jebus. Of course they orbit. They just happen to have an orbital velocity that matches the rotational velocity of earth.
Re:Congestion (Score:5, Informative)
So, the highly prized areas you are referring to are for communication satellites, and to a slightly lesser degree, television satellites.
North America and Europe are the two largest markets, but you're discounting Asia rather heavily.
To optimize the satellite's placement in relation to population density, you'll find sats towards the West side of the Atlantic, over the equator, serving the eastern seaboard of the U.S. along with the eastern part of South America and the Caribbean. Sats over the Atlantic towards the East will service western Europe and western Africa. Sats placed over the Indian ocean will service Southeast Asia, the Middle East, East Africa and western Australia. Sats over the Pacific will service East Asia (China, Japan) and the eastern seaboard of Australia, along with the west coasts of North and South America.
There is some overlap. For example, I can tune into AOR-W (Atlantic Ocean Region - West) or IOR (Indian Ocean Region) sats while I'm in the Mediterranean, but, I generally get the best reception on AOR-E due to it's location over the east Atlantic.
Polar orbit sats are still used, but they are not optimal due to most population centers in the world being near the equator, and you would need several sats in the same loop for 24/7 operation, as when your antenna tracked the satellite falling off the southern horizon, it would need another sat rising in the north to retune to.
This isn't a prob for the geosynch'd sats.
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Very informative. Thanks for that. Would mod you up if I had points.
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Your assertion is that television isn't communication?
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For instance there are probably very few GEO satellites over the poles.
Truer words were never spoken.
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The 2 degrees is an allowance for the ground antennas, so they don't jam or pick up interference from, adjacent satellites.
Also, btw, "clutter" is removed from GEO. When a satellite nears the end-of-life, the last bit of hydrazine fuel is used to push it up into a higher orbit to avoid potential problems in the Clarke belt.
Maybe in the far off future archeologists will be able to examine these defunct sate
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Radius 42,164 --> circumference 264,924..
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This is a possible application of all the anti-satellite and anti-anti-satellite technology coming out of the U.S. and China as of late. Blow them up. Hell, why not?
Re:Congestion (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a possible application of all the anti-satellite and anti-anti-satellite technology coming out of the U.S. and China as of late. Blow them up. Hell, why not?
Because then, instead of being a little congested with big debris that you can track and moves in a known path, you get a bunch of small debris, in erratic orbits, that you might not be able to track. Steering them into a higher orbit, or back into the atmosphere is much better.
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At end-of-life, geostationary satellites are moved into a higher orbit to make way for new ones.
This has only recently started to happen and doesn't cope with older satellites that are not designed to do this or satellites that malfunction.
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Re:Congestion (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, they do get rid of old satellites. These days many satellites are built with small rockets that are used to de-orbit them at the end of their useful life. Alternatively, they are boosted into a higher "graveyard" orbit.
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Now-a-days, operators are supposed to "deorbit" satellites. For geosynchronous satellites, that means boosting them up out of that orbit by a few 100 km, while for LEOs that generally means putting them into the atmosphere.
I thought that there was a formal requirement to do this, but this article [satnews.com] indicates that it is just an informal agreement :
There is a "gentlemens agreement" to either de-orbit the satellite when in low earth orbit, or raise it to a "graveyard" orbit some 300kms above the geo-synchronou
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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Yea, I'm clueless too. Try this link specifically.
http://www.uhf-satcom.com/faq.html [uhf-satcom.com]
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,url:http://science.nasa.gov/Realtime/jtrack/3d/JTrack3d.html>
The pico satellites sound interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
It's interesting to see the trend of sizes of commercial and governmental satellites. The commercial sats are getting larger and outfitted with better hardware that can support more simultaneous users. The governmental sats are getting smaller and work in tandem to do their work.
Given that satellites can't last forever, I wonder which model pays off better in the long run. Does having many smaller satellites work better than having fewer larger sats? If so, could we find an optimal size or configuration of these small fries?
Or is having this many small things whizzing about going to cause trouble later on as we decide we need to add more birds to our skies? A few big birds are easier to spot and avoid than many little ones.
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Re:The pico satellites sound interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
Commercial sat's are getting larger, but they are TINY compared to some of them up there from the 60,s and 70's are the size of city busses!
when they say "birds are getting larger" I laugh. Call me when they are as large as what they threw up there in the beginning days.
P.S. some of those monsters are still operational. I get B&W slow scan satellite imagery from some of the really old polar orbiting ones when I want to test my SSTV receivers.
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As often, I think it depends it depends on what you are using them for. For standard geostationary communication satellites one big bird can replace several small. Government satellites often do something special and have a unique orbit.
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The US and Russian governments will sometimes chuck a relatively short-lifed satellite in an orbit optimised to cove a particular trouble spot (e.g. Georgia during last year's invasion). I think they keep them in stock, and can launch at a couple of days notice. The multi-ton civil comsats are very different and take years of preparation.
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They're doing different things, is the reason.
Most commercial sats these days are for broadcast, which need to be in GEO. It's no use putting something small into GEO, since it costs so much to get there anyway. They put something big that can last a while and serve a lot of customers (lots of transponders).
Government users (NASA and academic) are doing science, like remote sensing and atmospheric sampling and things. They don't care about having 100% coverage over the US, so they can put up tiny sats that
I think someone screwed up the masses (Score:3, Informative)
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Because 100,000 Kg just sounds BIGGER than a 100 megagrams! :-P
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Which is just rediculous, what is wrong with:
meters grams seconds?
Look at that, no prefixes! That sounds standard to me, and we can just add prefixes where needed.
Re:I think someone screwed up the masses (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I think someone screwed up the masses (Score:5, Informative)
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I think the figures refer to the combined mass of all aatellites over the period.
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Putting mass off the Earth into orbit around the Earth does not change the orbit of the combined (Earth + satellite) system.
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It's [youtube.com] cumulative [youtube.com].
A better satellite cloud? (Score:2)
The satellites in our orbit resemble our software. We reinvent the wheel and create a new program for each small task every time we want something done, instead of spending time on some research and find out how to reuse what we have. Most capitalists call this competition, which is fine to an extent, I guess. It is the lack of balance in applying this strategy that is the problem. Competition or not, most existing sattelites/software can be scrapped as such and its task done by combination of other satteli
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Think about logistics here. How expensive is it to launch a new comm or earth imaging satellite? Then, how expensive is it to launch HUMANS to the same altitude with repair tools and all of the consumables they require to get up and down safely.
When you add the fact that the tech up there is still advancing very rapidly, I don't think there's very much benefit in trying to create these super multi-purpose birds.
And when there is (like Hubble, whose time IS portioned out as you mentioned and a replacement co
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I don't think a cloud will help with DBS as they can only get about 50 main HD channels per sat.
Poorly worded (Score:2)
Given that the Shuttle can launch 24 tons to LEO, and Arianne V 21 tons to LEO, one has to wonder how, if
the expected satellite mass is expected to remain near or slightly above 100,000 kilograms ,
these satellites will be launched ? Of course, no one is launching 100 metric ton satellites. That is presumably satellite mass launched per year.
Both the slashdot post and the original article seemed to have munged this totally.
Which one? (Score:2)
Seems remarkably stupid (Score:1)
Interesting (Score:1)
the tide is changing (Score:2)
Most satellites are still simple "bent-pipe" kind, send data up in one frequency, translate, send it down in another frequency.
Boeing SDC (formerly Hughes Space and Comm) was (and probably still is) the leading company in DSP payloads and only one with the expertise to space qualify an IBM ASIC, but they have a broken business model and a hard time selling it to their customers. That and they have a very out-dated bus led to market deterioration over the years.
That aside, bigger satellites are just like big
20.8 satellites? (Score:2)
How do you launch four-fifths of a satellite? Or do you launch a whole one and the four-fifths is the fraction of the debris that stay in orbit after a collision?
DVB-S2 (Score:2)
The advanced FEC in DVB-S2 [wikipedia.org] has now allowed satellite transponder users to get about 10-20% more data through the satellite at the same downlink signal-to-noise ratio.
Thus many folks who have previously used DVB-S QPSK modulation are now moving to DVB-S2 8PSK modulation while retaining the same size dishes.
Of course, the other way to go is stay DVB-S2 QPSK but use smaller dishes...
Either way, DVB-S2 is making satellite transponder use more efficient, so perhaps this is marginally reducing the need for more s