Welcome
to The COMSAT Legacy Project, Advanced Communication Technology Satellite (ACTS) Program.
COMSAT Labs' research is part of
the Advanced Communications
Technology Satellite program-ACTS,
for short. ACTS is a NASA project
aimed at developing an experimental satellite that will combine
for the first time a number
of advanced technologies
which have developed
independently.
COMSAT Labs serves as
a subcontractor to RCA,
the program's prime contractor. Also
on the team are TRW and Motorola.
COMSAT Corporation's role, according to Bill Schmidt, associate
director of the Labs' ACTS Program
management office, is to design,
build and install the "brains" of the
system. The Labs' ACTS staff of 77
full-time employees draws on expertise from across the Labs, including
the Microwave Technology, Network
Technology and System Development
Divisions and elements of the Design
and Fabrication Center. Irv Dostis,
ACTS PMO director, heads up the
program within COMSAT Corporation.
To appreciate COMSAT Corporation's contribution , it helps to
understand generally how the new
satellite will work.
Picture two satellites perched sideby-side, 23,000 miles over the United
States. One uses today's technology,
the other is the ACTS satellite.
Satellites don't emit light, but to
visualize how the two would work,
try to imagine their energy as light.
In this scenario, today's satellite is
equipped with a single floodlight
shining across the entire United
States. Its light is quite dim, but it
reaches every corner of the country.
allowing earth stations with sufficient
power to operate with it. Much of its
energy is wasted: it is covering areas
that don't need satellite service and
its energy is constant instead of being
used only when needed.
Continuing the example , the ACTS
satellite is equipped with a number of
powerful spotlights. Instead of
blanketing the entire country with
dim light, the ACTS satellite concentrates its energy into powerful beams,
each of which focuses on a single
area at a time. The satellite serves the
entire country, but it does so by moving its beams rapidly across the landscape, stopping only for a thousandth
of a second to send and receive
messages from earth stations below.
In fact, the satellite wastes no time
searching around for messages. It is
programmed to target its beams to a
particular area only on a demand
basis-that is, when there are
messages to be delivered or picked
up.
The ACTS satellite, then, uses both
energy and time efficiently, enabling
it to handle many more transmissions
than today's relatively inefficient
models. As Schmidt explains it, if the
satellite were equipped with four spot
beams-one for each time zone, for
example-it would have four times
the capacity of today's satellite that
blankets the entire nation with one
beam, because the precious frequency
spectrum is used four times.
Several different technologies will
be tested through the ACTS program,
Schmidt says. The satellite itself will
allow researchers to experiment with
use of the higher-frequency Ka-band,
which operates at 30/20 GHz and offers twice as much capacity as the
Ku- and C'-band frequencies
combined.
On board the satellite, two different
systems for sending and receiving
messages will be tested. One will handle "high burst rate" transmissions to
and from larger, more powerful earth
stations, interconnecting the correct
tip-link and down-link spot-beams by
analog switches. The other, called a
baseband processor, will handle what
are called "low burst rate" transmissions from smaller, less powerful
earth stations.
The baseband processor, according
to Schmidt, is often described as the
"heart" of the system. He compares
it to an earth station in the sky. Its
job is to take analog signals it
receives from the ground, convert
them to a digital format, sort then
according to destination, store them
until there is an available time slot to
their destination, retransmit them to
earth stations by routing them to the
appropriate down-line, and amplifying them as required.
A central part of COMSAT Labs'
role, Schmidt says, is to provide the
ground-based computer controls-the
hardware and software that will
choreograph the movement of the
satellite's spot-beams and direct the
baseband processor. In fact, the Labs'
contribution to the project will ensure
that the satellite operates at optimum
efficiency, using available capacity by
placing its energy where it is needed
only when it is needed.
Ultimately, COMSAT Corporation's
ground controls will he located at the
NASA Lewis Research Center in
Cleveland, Ohio. For now, the
preliminary design of the system's
complex controls are contained in a
three volume report.
Exactly when those steps will begin
to be implemented remains uncertain,
according to Schmidt. When NASA
began funding ACTS in 1984, plans
called for a 1989 launch date. Congress recently decided to provide $77
million in funding for 1987, assuring
the program's completion. The launch
date, however, may be delayed until
1991-92. Beyond the launch date,
several years of testing will precede
any commercial application of the
experimental ACTS satellites.
COMSAT Labs' participation in
the design of the ACTS satellite
represents a valuable investment in
the company's future. Once satellites
similar to ACTS are ready for commercial duty, COMSAT Corporation
will have a leg up in understanding
the capacities of the technology and
applying them to the marketplace.
Currently, there are 46
photos in this collection,
Steven L. Teller
Custodian
COMSAT Legacy Archives
20140 Scholar Drive
Suite 309A
Hagerstown, Maryland 21742
Email: teller@comsatlegacy.com
Phone: (301) 892-6256
Fax: (651) 691-2940
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