EUTELSAT: POWERING THE FUTURE THROUGH … POWERING THE FUTURE THROUGH INNOVATION . ... geostationary...
Transcript of EUTELSAT: POWERING THE FUTURE THROUGH … POWERING THE FUTURE THROUGH INNOVATION . ... geostationary...
EUTELSAT: POWERING THE FUTURE THROUGH INNOVATION Yohann Leroy, Chief Technical Officer, Eutelsat
INNOVATION - PART OF EUTELSAT’S DNA
Innovation is a key element for success in a very competitive telecommunication market Eutelsat has always been at the forefront of satellite innovation 1984: First transmission in DVB-S standard
1996: Development of DiSEqC standard
2000: First satellite with electrical propulsion (E16C)
2000 & 2002: Maiden flights of Atlas 3, Atlas V, Delta IV
2002: First satellite with on-board multiplexing
2003: First HD demo channel
2004: First satellite with Lithium-Ion batteries
2010: Highest capacity satellite ever launched (KA-SAT)
2013: First UHD demo channel
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Innovation - all about finding the right balance between creativity and rigor Open innovation Continuous effort in collaboration with customers and
other external partners: research institutes, work shops, etc.
Evolution of the offer in our core market but also objective to address new or emerging markets (e.g. Internet of Things)
Invest into highly innovative projects and companies
Looking beyond the satellite itself Satellite is part of a system including ground segment
Innovation can be at satellite level, but it can also be on
the ground, in products and services or in the interaction between the satellite and the ground equipment
INNOVATION - PART OF EUTELSAT’S DNA
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EUTELSAT IS FOCUSED ON FOUR INNOVATION PRIORITIES
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IN SPACE ON GROUND
Improve the value-for-money of our capacity
Electric propulsion New multi-spot HTS architectures
developed for fast growing markets
New encoding schemes for higher compression
Enhanced access protocols for Interactive TV satellite services
Ensure protection of satellite communications
Signal prevention / detection techniques Increased resilience to jamming
Increase the flexibility of our satellite resources
Reconfigurable satellite payloads On board power allocation to optimize
commercial capacity
Multi-band reception systems C/Ku, Ku/Ka Hybrid set-top boxes
Enhance end-user experience
Smart LNB for DTH Connected TV - low cost terminal for consumer market
Multi-screen home IP distribution Home Automation and Internet of Things Mobile broadband (Eutelsat Air Access)
EUTELSAT - 4 INNOVATION PRIORITIES
Improve the value-for-money of Eutelsat satellite capacity
Ensure protection of satellite communications Increase the flexibility of our satellite resources
Enhance end-user experience
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EUTELSAT - 4 INNOVATION PRIORITIES
Improve the value-for-money of Eutelsat satellite capacity Electric propulsion High Throughput satellites Ensure protection of satellite communications Increase the flexibility of our satellite resources Enhance end-user experience
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PROPULSION IS REQUIRED FOR ORBIT RAISING AND STATION KEEPING
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Reach geostationary orbit following launch
ΔV~ 1500m/s
Geostationary Orbit
Geostationary Transfer Orbit
APOGEE
Altitude 35,786 km Radius=42,164 km Inclination=0 deg.
PERIGEE
Stay in geostationary orbit or change orbital location
ΔV~ 50m/s per year
Inclined orbit plane
Equatorial orbit plane
N
S Inclination angle
Satellite thrust manoeuvre to move inclined orbit to e.g.
equatorial orbit
Chemical propulsion Electric propulsion
TWO TYPES OF PROPULSION SYSTEM EXIST
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Propellant tanks
Thrusters Apogee Engine
Thrusters
PPU
ELECTRIC PROPULSION IS A GAME CHANGER, THANKS TO THE MASS SAVINGS IT INDUCES
More than 50% of the mass of a chemical propulsion satellite is made of propellant Electric propulsion is much more efficient than chemical propulsion The thrust per kilogram of propellant is much
higher with electric than with chemical propulsion
This can be used in two ways Either to reduce the mass of the satellite Or to increase the number of payload
equipment on-board… … or a mix of both
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ELECTRIC PROPULSION IS A WELL PROVEN TECHNOLOGY BUT WAS NOT USED SO FAR FOR ORBIT RAISING
Electric propulsion is well-proven technology Eutelsat is for example operating satellites using
electric propulsion for station-keeping since 2000
Electric propulsion was so far not used by commercial satellite operators for orbit raising Electric propulsion is more efficient, but less
powerful than chemical propulsion As a result, reaching the geo orbit takes longer in
electric than in chemical propulsion… and time is money!
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SESAT 1
KA-SAT
Electric propulsion satellites can be launched with Ariane 5 in the lower position, but this was the only cost-effective solution With the arrival of the Falcon 9 rocket from SpaceX, satellite operators now have two options Savings in launch costs compensate delayed OSD, and mass savings gives some room of manoeuver to enhance the satellite performance (higher power to improve the bit/s/Hz ratio, more flexibility,…)
SPACEX HAS CHANGED THE RULE OF THE GAME
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Ariane V
Falcon 9
EUTELSAT - 4 INNOVATION PRIORITIES
Improve the value-for-money of Eutelsat satellite capacity Electric propulsion High Throughput satellites Ensure protection of satellite communications Increase the flexibility of our satellite resources Enhance end-user experience
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KA-SAT, launched in 2010 over Europe was the highest capacity commercial satellite ever built Ka-band HTS Capacity over Latin America will be put into service in first half 2016 with EUTELSAT 65 West A Ka-band is the band of choice for consumer broadband HTS. For other verticals, it all depends on the trade-off between availability and cost of bandwidth
EUTELSAT - A PIONEER OF HTS CAPACITY
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EUTELSAT 65 West A
F1 F2 F1 F2
(Polarisation 1)
(Polarisation 2)
HTS Payload Total Bandwidth = 4.5 GHz (18x250MHz) High
Throughput Satellite
Capacity of a satellite is limited by the amount of spectrum it can operate
With traditional wide-beam satellites, each frequency can be used only once
If coverages are tighter, then the same frequency can be used over separate zones, without creating interferences
HTS - FREQUENCY RE-USE COMBINED WITH SPOTBEAMS
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FSS/BSS Satellite
Conventional FSS Payload Total Bandwidth = 1.0 GHz (4x250 MHz)
F1 F2 F1 F2
(Polarisation 1)
(Polarisation 2)
LEO CONSTELLATIONS - A COMPLEMENT TO GEO HTS SYSTEMS
LEO constellations is something Eutelsat is currently looking at The main benefit of LEO orbit is that it reduces the latency compared to GEO
Cost of an LEO satellite part of a constellation is expected to be much lower than GEO Standardized design and manufacturing in
series Satellite failures in a large constellation can
be more easily accommodated But GEO satellites design and manufacturing
process are expected to benefit as well from industrial progress brought by LEO
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LEO CONSTELLATIONS – NOTICEABLE ADVANTAGES
But: Most Internet applications, in particular the
most bandwidth-hungry ones, are not latency sensitive
Unlike GEO, LEO satellites are not fixed. Three negative consequences: LEO satellites fly most of the time above regions
where there is nobody to serve. Tracking antennas are needed. To serve a given region, you need a lot of LEO
satellites up and running from day 1
Specific space debris mitigation plans will also need to be set up as in LEO, the risk of collision is much higher than in GEO, and with a large constellation, this risk increases exponentially and chain reaction could occur
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EUTELSAT - 4 INNOVATION PRIORITIES
Improve the value-for-money of Eutelsat satellite capacity Electric propulsion High Throughput satellites Ensure protection of satellite communications Increase the flexibility of our satellite resources Enhance end-user experience
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Eutelsat Q
uan
tum
Eutelsat satellite are designed such that they incorporate flexibility features: ability to change orbital location, coverages, frequency plan We need flexibility to adapt to market uncertainties, and market evolution over the 15 years of a typical satellite lifetime Flexibility can be dealt with at satellite level, but also at fleet level. This is much easier for satellite operators with a large fleet of satellites We believe flexibility at satellite and fleet level has value for the customer as well
FLEXIBILITY: IMPORTANT FOR US… AND FOR OUR CUSTOMERS
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EUTELSAT QUANTUM: BRIEF OVERVIEW
Courtesy Airbus Defence & Space
Today, classical satellites are defined by static definitions: its coverage (pattern generated mechanically) its amplification chains (« transponders »)one amplifier per chain its frequency plan (depends on ITU region and applications: TV, internet, governmental,
news gathering, etc.)
These are optimized to best meet market requirements and evolution forecast. Has worked very well and will continue to do so, but: Applications need to adapt to the satellite resources in orbit Higher flexibility is key in fleet management (relocation of satellites along the
geostationary arc, for regional regulation, to match to applications, etc.) Extra complexity and flexibility has typically meant increased cost
EUTELSAT QUANTUM – WHY?
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Eutelsat Quantum enables a dynamic response to a changing world
A B C
A B
C
Clients The satellite adapts to the applications in terms of coverage,
power and frequency allocation Better match for governmental, institutional, mobility
and surge requirements for data applications
Satellite operators Better synergy within the fleet (several of the same kind around the world)
Industry Building bricks independent from applications and ITU regions in the world Pre-production of satellite hardware Reduction in production cost Reduction in production cycle
EUTELSAT QUANTUM – WHAT IT BRINGS
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Eutelsat Quantum is a leap forward in the value proposition
FLEXIBLE POWER ALLOCATION – DEPENDING ON THE TIME OF DAY
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Dynamic approach can be applied to unintentional and intentional interference and jamming
EUTELSAT QUANTUM – ANTI-INTERFERENCE
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Potential Interferer Coverage reshaped
EUTELSAT - 4 INNOVATION PRIORITIES
Improve the value-for-money of Eutelsat satellite capacity Electric propulsion High Throughput satellites Ensure protection of satellite communications Increase the flexibility of our satellite resources Enhance end-user experience: ‘Smart LNB’
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The Smart LNB: a low-cost return-link via satellite to connect satellite TV The Smart LNB - An IP bi-directional and low cost solution representing a new opportunity for growth in other collateral fields: Low-cost Internet Access The Smart LNB can be used to provide anywhere internet access Forward link up to 8 Mbps & Return link up to 160 kbps per user Low-cost satellite terminal
Machine to Machine / Internet of Things Low equipment cost – consumer grade terminal Low service cost - high-efficient protocol for message-based transmissions Targeting Smart Grids, Environment Monitoring, Wireless Sensor Networks, …
ENHANCE END-USER EXPERIENCE
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THANK YOU! Yohann Leroy, Chief Technical Officer Eutelsat Americas Seminar