satellite communication 5274357 (1)

25
A Seminar on INTRODUCTION TO SATELLITE Presented By SWAPNIL G. THAWARE 20100764 Under the Guidance of Prof. HIVRE S. R. Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Technological University, Department Of Information technology Engineering LONERE-402 103 2011-2012

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Page 1: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

A

Seminar on INTRODUCTION TO SATELLITE

Presented By

SWAPNIL G. THAWARE

20100764

Under the Guidance of Prof. HIVRE S. R.

Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Technological University, Department Of Information technology Engineering

LONERE-402 1032011-2012

Page 2: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

CONTENTS :What’s mean by satellite ?History of Satellites :Layer Of Atmosphere : Generalized communication system : What are the components of a satellite? How Satellites Work ? How do satellite stay in orbit ?Why satellite are launched 36,000 Km from centre of earth ?Types of bands :Types of orbits :Global position system :Advantages And Disadvantages Of satellite : Uses of satellite :References :

Page 3: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

what’s mean by sATELLITE ?

Passive Satellites Active satellitesI. Natural satellites II. artificial satellites.A passive satellite only

reflects received signals back to earth.

Ex.moon is a natural satellite of earth

Active satellites are complicated structures having a processing equipment called Transponder .

An active satellite acts as a REPEATER

A Satellite is a solid object which revolves around some body due to the effect of gravitational forces ORa satellite is an object which has been placed into orbit by human endeavour.

Page 4: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

History of Satellites :

First satellite that was used for communication purpose in INDIA was -ARYABHATTA (19 April 1975)

The first geostationary communication satellite -SYNCOM 3(19 Aug 1963).

Father of geostationary communication satellite is

-HAROLD ROSEN (Aircraft

engineer)

The world's first artificial satellite is the Sputnik 1was launched in 1957

Page 5: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Layer Of Atmosphere : TROPOSPHERE :

STRATOSPHERE :

MESOSPHERE :

THERMOSPHERE :

EXOSPHERE :

Page 6: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

INFORMATIO

N SOURC

E

Uses of

informatio

n

TRANNSMITTER

ReceiverChannel1 2 3 4

1= Message signal.

2 = tranmitted signal.

3 = received signal.

4 = message signal.

Generalized communication system :

NOISE OCCUR

Page 7: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

What are the components of a satellite?

Many satellites are powered by rechargeable batteries.

Small thrusters provide attitude i.e. stabilize the satellite's position in space.

Page 8: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

How Satellites Work :I. A Earth Station sends

message in GHz range (Uplink).

II. Satellite Receive and retransmit signals back. (Downlink)

III. Difference between Downlink and Uplink frequency is

2 GHz.

Page 9: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Why geostationary satellite are launched 36,000 km from the center of the earth?  1.Gravitational force=

attraction between any two objects, given by

2.Centrifugal force=an outward-directed force that normally balances the inward-directed centripital force

There are two relevant forces involved in this problem

Page 10: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Equate that 2 eqn=

i.e.

The tangential velocity of the satellite (vs) is related to its orbital period, T so,

Eqating that 2 eqn=

As we know

Then T=? and sqaring

We know:G = 6.67 x 10-11 Nm2kg-2

me = 5.97 x 1024 kgwe = 7.29 x 10-5 rad s-1

Hence, substituting the above constants into

gives:

R = 35,786 km for center of earthNear about 36,000 km.

Page 11: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

How do satellites stay in orbit?

Satellites stay in orbit due to the balance of two factors:

i. Velocity andii. Gravitational pull

between the Earth and the satellite.

  Satellites never fall into the Earth this because Earth is round and curves.

Page 12: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Satellite Frequency Bands : There is a inverse relationship between frequency and wavelength.

Different kinds of satellites use different frequency bands.

L–Band: 1 to 2 GHz, S-Band: 2 to 4 GHzC-Band: 4 to 8 GHzX-Band: 8 to 13 GHzKu-Band: 13 to 18

GHzK-Band: 18 to 28 GHzKa-Band: 28 to 40

GHz

As wavelength increases (and frequency decreases), larger antennas (satellite dishes) are necessary to gather the signal.

Page 13: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

C-band :C-band is the most

common frequency spectrums used by today’s satellite.

C-band satellite transmissions occupy the 4 to 8 GHz frequency range.

C-band antenna is approximately 2-3 meters in diameter

Page 14: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Ku-band : Ku-band satellite transmissions occupy the 13 to 18 GHz frequency range.

Ku-band antennas can be as small as 18 inches in diameter

 These very high frequency transmissions mean very small wavelengths and very small diameter receiving antennas.

Page 15: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

TYPES OF ORBITSLow-Earth-Orbit (LEOs)

Medium-Earth-Orbit (MEOs)

Geostationary (GEOs)

Page 16: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Low-Earth-Orbit (LEO)Altitude (600-1000

KM) satellite gives it a

better signal strength

Advantages: Reduces

transmission delay

Disadvantages: Smaller coverage

area.Shorter life span (5-

8 yrs.)

Page 17: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Little LEOs Applications0.8 GHz range

Small, low-cost

Used for short communications.

Page 18: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Middle-Earth-Orbiting (MEO)MEOs orbits between the altitudes of 8,000 - 20,000 km above the earth.MEO satellites have a larger coverage.These orbits are primarily reserved for communications satellites that cover the North and South Pole.

MEOs are placed in an elliptical (oval-shaped) orbit.

Page 19: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Geosynchronous-Earth-Orbit (GEO)

From the ground level the satellite appears fixed.

GEO satellites have a 24 hour view of a particular area.

Coverage to 40% of area Of planet by this satellite

Page 20: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

The Global Positioning System :

EQUATORIAL ORBIT :

POLAR CIRCULAR ORBIT :

INCLINED ORBIT :

EACH SATELLITE COVER 40% AREA

SATELLITE MAKES AN ANGLE OF 120 WITH EACH OTHER.

Page 21: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF SATELLITE:

ADVANTAGES : DISADVANTAGES :Make repeated

observations over a given area .

At a time satellites observe a larger coverage

Minimum Satellite lifetime is about 10-15 years.  

Poor spatial resolution in the polar regions.

Launching satellites into orbit is costly.

Page 22: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

Uses of satellite:IT IS USED FOR LONG DISTANCE COMMUNICATION.

IT IS SPEEDY AND RELIABLE.

IT IS USED FOR WEATHER FORECASTING.(study of atmosphere ,rain ,sunshine at any place

at perticular time)

IT IS USED FOR TRANSMIT T.V. SIGNAL OVER LARGE DISTANCE COMMUNICATION.

POLAR SATELLITE IS USED FOR REMOTE SENSING.

Page 23: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

REFERENCES :http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

Geosynchronous_satellieGeostationary Satellite(Author- Louis

E.Frenzel) (Edition- Third) (Publication- Tata McGraw-Hill)

http://web.mit.edu/invent/iow/rosen.html

Page 24: Satellite Communication 5274357 (1)

-- >>BY SWAPNIL G. THAWARE