/?pid=21455

Updated:05:04 AM EST Jan 22


this is ggmania.com subsite Here's how just four satellites could provide worldwide internet - TechAmok

Here's how just four satellites could provide worldwide internet - [technology]
06:51 AM EST - Jan,18 2020 - post a comment

A new study led by engineers at The Aerospace Corporation and published in Nature Communications proposes a counterintuitive approach that turns these degrading forces into ones that actually help keep these satellites in orbit. If it worked, it would mean just four satellites could provide continuous global coverage for a fraction of the cost. Currently, the orbits for these satellites are elliptical, which means they have to burn their thrusters at the closest approach to Earth to keep from falling out of orbit. Patrick Reed at Cornell University and his colleagues wanted to make the orbits more circular, letting the satellites get by with fewer propulsive maneuvers and lower propellant requirements. And they wanted to do this in such a way that the satellites could still provide nearly global coverage. The team ran simulations that looked at what types of orbital configurations could best turn degrading forces into ones that actually fostered a stable, circular orbit. Instances where, say, the sun's gravity or high elevations would normally drag a satellite back to Earth could now boost a satellite's altitude higher. The simulations were for four-satellite constellations that would spend at least 6,000 days (16.4 years in orbit).

After analyzing the simulations using the Blue Waters supercomputer at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the team found two models that could work. In one, the constellation completes an orbit in a 24-hour period, at an altitude of 22,000 miles, and achieves continuous coverage for about 86% of the globe. The other works on a 48-hour period at an altitude of 42,000 miles and covers 95% of the globe. Any areas that experienced outages would face no more than about 80 minutes of downtime a day. Granted, the internet speeds would be slower because of the extra time it takes to send the signal from a much higher orbit. "For most people using data systems, however, an additional quarter-second delay is difficult to sense, since there are so many other delays in computers and data networks," says Roger Rusch, the president of telecom consulting firm TelAstra. In these systems, the satellites (each weighing about 1.2 tons) would need about 60% less propellant over the entire 6,000-day period than if they were orbiting in more conventional configurations, potentially reducing their mass by over one-half and making it much easier to build and launch them. It could also make room to install better instrumentation and power systems (high-altitude satellites need more power to beam signals back to Earth). Reed says the work was motivated by a desire to let smaller countries or companies operate constellations that give near-continuous coverage. The argument goes that with costs down, it would be easier for these groups to build, launch, operate, and track just a few satellites in a higher orbit, versus a sprawling constellation of thousands in low Earth orbit. Experts like Rusch are bullish about the new study's findings: he says the capital and operating costs of a LEO satellite system are three to five times higher than those of a high-altitude system with the same capability. Astronomers and space debris experts who are nervous about the negative effects of projects like Starlink might also appreciate the concept.


Add your comment (free registrationrequired)

Short overview of recent news articles

Jan,22 2026 Xbox Developer Direct Livestream 2026 | Fable, Forza Horizon 6,
Jan,22 2026 Iridium Begins Testing its own Satellite Service for Phones
Jan,22 2026 AMD Releases Adrenalin Edition 26.1.1 WHQL Drivers
Jan,18 2026 AI in 2050
Jan,17 2026 iOS 26.2 Fixes Major Security Flaws
Jan,17 2026 Google Links its AI to Your Gmail and Photos for "Personal
Jan,17 2026 Fastest Koenigsegg v Fastest Bugatti: DRAG RACE
Jan,17 2026 Creating a 48GB NVIDIA RTX 4090 GPU
Jan,14 2026 CES was frickin weird, guys
Jan,12 2026 Lee Cronin's The Mummy - Official Teaser Trailer (2026) Jack
Jan,12 2026 Ferrari SF90 XX v Xiaomi SU7 Ultra: DRAG RACE
Jan,10 2026 Welcome to the Wasteland - Fallout (American TV series) fan video
Jan,09 2026 GOOD LUCK, HAVE FUN, DON'T DIE Trailer 2 (2026) Sam Rockwell
Jan,07 2026 NVIDIA Releases GeForce 591.74 WHQL Drivers with DLSS 4.5 Support
Jan,07 2026 Predator: Badlands Exclusive Deleted Scene (2025)
Jan,06 2026 Greenland 2: Migration - Official Trailer 3 (2026) Gerard Butler,
Jan,05 2026 The Best Laptops of 2025 - For Gaming, Creators & Students!
Jan,05 2026 Punkt Updates its Privacy-Focused Smartphone
Jan,05 2026 Clicks Launches New Ways to Add a Physical Keyboard to Your Life
Jan,05 2026 Building a PC for the First Time
Jan,03 2026 Building a PC in 2026
Jan,02 2026 I want this phone so bad... - Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold
Jan,02 2026 The Real Finewine Strikes Again: Ryzen 5600X, 5700X & 5800XT Revisit
Jan,02 2026 Nokia N8 Symbian Re-Awakened With Passion
Jan,02 2026 Europe Forces Apple to Open up More of iOS
Jan,02 2026 Must have Privacy and Security Tweaks: 2026 Edition
Jan,01 2026 How Did RAM Get So Expensive?!
Dec,31 2025 GeForce RTX 5090 prices to soar to $5,000 as NVIDIA and AMD prep GPU
Dec,30 2025 Hacker arrested for KMSAuto malware campaign with 2.8 million
Dec,29 2025 Killer Whale - Official Trailer (2026) Virginia Gardner, Mel
Dec,28 2025 NVIDIA Showed Me Their Supercomputer
Dec,28 2025 2026 CPU Launches! AMD, Intel & NVIDIA: Buy Now or Wait?
Dec,27 2025 Disable this Windows Feature that Secretly Eats Up RAM!
Dec,27 2025 New Windows 11 vs Old Malware: Will it survive?
Dec,27 2025 Samsung TriFold Durability Test: We found the limit
Dec,26 2025 TRUST WALLET CONFIRMS SECURITY BREACH
Dec,26 2025 Xiaomi 17 Ultra Leads And Samsung To Follow With A 10 Percent Price
Dec,25 2025 Merry Christmas Gaming Insanity
Dec,24 2025 Battlefield 6 - Official PS5 Features Trailer
Dec,24 2025 NVIDIA GeForce Hotfix Driver 591.67 Released
>> News Archive <<

TechAmok - Privacy Policy        loading time:0.01secs