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Space Internet

and Starlink
Presented By:
Sahil Gupta
2017BITE045
Contents
• Introduction
• Space Internet
• Pros and Cons
• Working of Space Internet
• Starlink
• Features
• Working of Starlink
• Advantages
• Major Criticism
• Future
• Other competitors in market
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Introduction

• Internet services are now part • Because the traditional ways


of humanity’s basic to deliver the Internet —
infrastructure fiber-optic cables or wireless
networks — cannot take it
• It is important means of
everywhere on Earth.
delivering a wide variety of
public services to the world’s • In many remote areas or
people places with difficult terrain, it
is not feasible or viable to set
• Still currently, about 4 billion
up cables or mobile towers.
people, more than half the
world’s population, do not
have access to reliable
Internet networks

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Space Internet
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Space Internet
• Internet access provided through communication satellites
• Systems use satellites in geostationary orbit. This orbit is located at a height of 35,786 km over
the Earth’s surface, directly above the Equator.
• Theoretical data transfers at the speed of light.
• Involves 3 satellite dishes; one at the internet service providers hub, one in space and one
attached to your property. In addition to the satellite dish you also need a modem and cables
running to and from the dish to your modem.
• Latency: Average 638 ms
• Average uplink rate: 256 kbit/s
• Average downlink rate: 1 Mbit/s
• Maximum uplink rate: 1000 Mbit/s
• Maximum downlink rate: 1000 Gbit/s
• Additional services: VoIP, SDTV, HDTV, VOD, Datacast
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Space Internet

Advantages Disadvantages
• Can Reach remote areas • There is a time lag between a user seeking data, and the server
sending that data
• One big advantage of beaming signals from geostationary orbit
is that the satellite can cover a very large part of the Earth. • A transmission from a satellite in geostationary orbit has a latency
Signals from one satellite can cover roughly a third of the planet of about 600 milliseconds
— and three to four satellites would be enough to cover the • There is a limited bandwidth
entire Earth
• Terrestrial Blockage from trees, etc. limit the speed
• Also, because they appear to be stationary, it is easier to link to
them • Weather also factor in change in speeds

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Working of
Satellite Internet

Satellite Internet generally relies on three primary components:


• A satellite, typically in geostationary orbit (sometimes referred to as a geosynchronous Earth orbit, or GEO)
• A number of ground stations known as gateways that relay Internet data to and from the satellite via radio
waves (microwave)
• A small antenna at the subscriber's location, often a VSAT (very-small-aperture terminal) dish antenna with
a transceiver

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Starlink
Starlink
• Starlink is a satellite internet constellation being
constructed by SpaceX providing satellite
Internet access started in 2015
• The constellation will consist of thousands of
mass-produced small satellites in low Earth orbit
(LEO), working in combination with ground
transceivers
• Each Starlink satellite is compactly designed and
weighs about 260kg
• At the current time, 901 Starlink satellites are
operating at 550 km above the earth’s surface in
LEO

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Working of Starlink

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Click icon to add picture

Click icon to add picture

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Delivering the internet via satellite is so much more
efficient than by wire because the signal travels 47%
faster as a wave through the vacuum of space than it
does traveling along a fiber optic cable
Starlink Over
Traditional
Satellite
• Current internet satellites orbited around 35,786 kilometers above the earth which is really far
away
• So the coverage area of satellite is great but the distance also results in a time delay between
sending and receiving data
• Starlink satellites orbit significantly closer at around 550 kilometers above the earth's surface
• This means that they triangulate data much faster with minimal delay but also means that their
coverage area is far smaller
• So we need a load more of them to build up a comprehensive network that offers reliable global
coverage
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Major Criticism

Light Pollution Space debris

• The planned large number of satellites has met with • Space debris or space junk is a term for defunct human-
criticism from the astronomical community because of made objects in space—principally in Earth orbit—
concerns for light pollution which no longer serve a useful function.
• Astronomers claim that the number of visible satellites • The first batch of SpaceX’s Starlink satellites had at
will outnumber visible stars and that their brightness in least 5% “dead” or unresponsive units that were
both optical and radio wavelengths will severely impact expected by the company to deorbit naturally and burn
scientific observations up in the atmosphere.
• Because the Starlink satellites can autonomously • Once thousands of these satellites rise to a higher orbit,
change their orbits, observations cannot be scheduled to it’s reasonable to assume that a number of them will
avoid them malfunction.

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Future
• The public Starlink beta began on October 26,
2020, in select areas of the United States and
Canada
• Starlink told its early internet beta testers
"expect to see data speeds vary from 50Mbps
to 150Mbps and latency from 20ms to 40ms
[milliseconds] over the next several months as
we enhance the Starlink system. There will
also be brief periods of no connectivity at all".
• The future goal of Starlink is to create a
constellation of 42000 satellites around the
earth.

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Other competitors in market
• Globalstar – an operational low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellation for
satellite phone and low-speed data communications
• Iridium satellite constellation – an operational constellation of LEO satellites
for global satellite phone service
• Kuiper Systems – a planned 3236 LEO satellite Internet constellation being
built by an Amazon subsidiary
• OneWeb satellite constellation – a former competitor for a LEO internet
constellation, future plans unclear after bankruptcy
• Orbcomm – an operational constellation used to provide global asset
monitoring and messaging services from its constellation of 29 LEO
communications satellites orbiting at 775 km

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Thank
You
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