Title :
Exo-atmospheric telescopes for deep space optical communications
Author :
Hurd, William J. ; MacNeal, Bruce E. ; Ortiz, Gerardo G. ; Moe, Rud V. ; Walker, Jon Z. ; Dennis, Michael L. ; Cheng, Edward S. ; Fairbrother, Debora A. ; Eegholm, Bente ; Kasunic, K.J.
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA
Abstract :
For deep space optical communications, optical telescopes located above the Earth´s atmosphere would have significant performance advantages over telescopes mounted on the Earth´s surface. Link outages due to cloud cover would be eliminated, atmospheric attenuation would be eliminated, and signal degradation due to stray light would be reduced. A study has been conducted to compare various exo-atmospheric platforms for the Earth end of the optical link. The three most promising platforms among many initially considered were selected for detailed study: satellites, free-flying airships and tethered airships. System configurations were compared that would have data rate capability comparable to a 6-m to 10-m diameter ground-mounted telescope, 100 percent line-of-sight coverage to a deep space spacecraft in the ecliptic, and at least 80 percent coverage in the event of failure of one Earth terminal. Based upon technical feasibility and readiness, life-cycle cost, performance and risk, a satellite platform is recommended. However, it is noted that airship technology may be advanced in the next decade or so to a level where airships should be reconsidered. Finally, this study provides a basis for a future study to compare systems using Earth-mounted and exo-atmospheric telescopes
Keywords :
Earth; optical communication equipment; optical fibre communication; space communication links; telescopes; terrestrial atmosphere; Earth atmosphere; Earth surface; Earth-mounted telescopes; atmospheric attenuation; cloud cover; deep space optical communications; deep space spacecraft; exo-atmospheric telescopes; free-flying airships; ground-mounted telescope; link outages; optical link; optical telescopes; signal degradation; stray light; tethered airships; Clouds; Degradation; Earth; Optical attenuators; Optical fiber communication; Satellites; Space technology; Stray light; Telescopes; Terrestrial atmosphere;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2006 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9545-X
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2006.1655834