International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B1. Istanbul 2004
up-to-date computing products cheaply available on the market
to be used in spacecrafts and thus alleviate the computing
power on-board.
In certain cases there have been also advancements in the:
suppliers' side of these computing systems. Recently Xilinx
Corporation, manufacturer of field-programmable gate arrays,
has released their Virtex-II Pro series of FPGA chips, which
not only is an FPGA but also a simple PowerPC processor
bundled in one chip not much bigger than a thumbnail. These
chips enable not only the use of advanced PowerPC processing
capabilities in a very small area and with low power
consumption, but also give the manufacturer the tool to
customize the abilities of a designed and complete on-board
computing system for a different mission without having to
customize the PCB and its interfaces to the new mission
thereby reducing development cost. In the case of Virtex-II Pro,
Xilinx must have seen the opportunity to supply the spacecraft
industry with the computing system they need, so they actually
brought out a version of their system that has been targeted
exactly for space applications and is not only flexible like its
industrial counterpart but also radiation tolerant. -
The second problem of spacecraft computers is the lack of the
operator standing nearby. With modern day computers we are
all far too familiar with the CTRL+ALT+DEL combination
that saves our computer from a lock-up and sometimes and
there is no other way of getting that computer running again
other than rebooting by flicking the switch. This is a luxury
many satellites don’t have. The solution again is the use of
more than one processing unit. One can monitor the output of
the second and should there be more than a glitch in the output
of the second CPU the first one can instruct the power
subsystem to recycle the power on the first CPU's backbone.
This capability, combined with a regular watchdog timer to
look for software glitches causing endless loops and an
external software patching mechanism to reprogram the CPUs
in case a fault is discovered on the on-board computer, would
be as reliable as the more than million dollar expensive
systems available on the market and can be developed in-house
at the satellite building industry or at educational institutions
for everyone to use on their satellite.
3.3 Solutions in Communications
Communications is one of the tougher of the systems to
simplify and streamline than command and data handling. First
of all, the basic laws of communication have not changed and
laws of physics governing losses over distances will stay the
same regardless of technological advances as long as we
continue using RF links to transmit information. This does not
mean however that simplifications can not be achieved or
technological advances in other areas can not be put to use in
communications subsystems. In the modern wireless world,
power and space usage in RF link transceivers have been
optimized and advances have been made in employing higher
frequency data carriers that enable the use of smaller antennas.
The use of wireless communication for voice and digital data
has made many advances in terms of algorithms for error
correction and data encryption and brought out commercial
digital communication devices that would have taken years to
produce for one small satellite system.
Today, one can buy a wireless transceiver for as little as $700
from Microhard Corporation with output power as much as
IW, and with the proper authorization these devices can be
modified to have even more output power and gain antennas
can be used to deliver much better link margin results. Most of
these devices will come with all the extra features that
sometimes even the really expensive data transmission devices
from aerospace companies will not offer. In case of the $700
Microhard radio you will get data encryption, multi point
networked communication and relay capabilities, and error
correction built-in right into the system. And with 2.4 GHz or
900 MHz frequency allocations these devices require much
smaller antennas then their lower frequency counterparts. In
addition these devices, not even 6cm wide and 9.5 cm long and
2.5 cm high, take up almost no space in a satellite. Most of
these devices are transparent to the command and data
handling system and can be hooked up to any serial port of the
command system of the satellite and treated no different than
transferring data between your computer and your PDA.
Miniaturization through newer advances in communications
technology have yielded smaller and smaller patch antennas
that not only are less massive and do not require big and
expensive deploy mechanisms, but also provide better gains.
They probably do not have enough high-bandwidth to provide
communication capabilities for bigger links; however they can
be used for telemetry and housekeeping antennas. In regard to
the payload, a bigger antenna might be selected for the larger
payload data generated. The receiving antennas for these
smaller patch antennas can be made to be higher gain antennas
with the appropriate authorization from the ITU and its
national subsidiaries and whatever is lost in power dissipation
on the spacecraft through miniaturization can be compensated
for in the ground.
3.4 Solutions in Power Systems
Power systems are still considered to be one of the bigger parts
of a satellite in terms of mass and thermal requirement
generators. Not only are the batteries bulky and heavy but they
also require a narrower range in temperature to operate
efficiently. Most of the satellite surface is devoted to solar
cells and when that surface is not enough today's satellites
have to rely on heavy mechanical systems to deploy their solar
arrays. In this respect smaller satellites have an advantage over
larger ones: when scaling down a satellite, the ratio of
projected area to inner volume is much increased and since the
power consumption of the electronics remains proportional to
their mass and volume the power generation needs of smaller
satellites can be generally satisfied without the need of
deployable solar cells (Wertz and Larson, 1999).
Some progress has been made to achieve higher power
densities in batteries enabling them to store more in less space
and weight. The following table gives a good estimate on how
some of the newer technologies like lithium-ion and nickel-
hydrogen batteries compare to the older systems.
Type Wh/kg Wh/l Voltage | Cycle Life
Lead-acid | 35 80 2 400
Nickel- AS 80 12 71000
Cadmium
ca
sa
TI
ef
lil
NA
an
ar
sh
D
al