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149 lines
8.5 KiB
Text
149 lines
8.5 KiB
Text
==Phrack Inc.==
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Volume Two, Issue 21, File 5 of 11
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/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
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\/ \/
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/\ Satellite Communications /\
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\/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \/
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/\ By Scott Holiday /\
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\/ July 11, 1988 \/
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/\ /\
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\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
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Satellite communications systems employ microwave terminals on satellites and
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ground to earth stations for highly reliable and high-capacity communications
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circuits. The communication satellites are positioned in geosynchronous orbits
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about 22,000 miles above the earth. Thus the rotation of the satellite matches
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that of the earth, and the satellite appears motionless above earth stations.
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Three equally spaces satellites are required to cover the entire world.
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The satellite's microwave terminals receive signals from an earth station and
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retransmit those signals on another frequency to another earth station.
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Because of the long distances involved, the round-trip communications path
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takes about a half second. This is referred to as the propagation delay. The
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propagation delay on a regular terrestrial phone line is about 1 millisecond
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(ms) per 100 miles.
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Each microwave terminal on the satellite, designated as a repeater or
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transponder, includes a receiver for uplink transmissions and a transmitter for
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down-link transmissions. Separate bands of frequencies for up-link and
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down-link transmissions are designated in the 1.5-30 GHz frequency range (1.5
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GHz is equal to 1,500,000,000 Hz, or 1.5 billion hertz). Typical frequencies
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for communications satellites are 4-6 GHz for INTELSAT 5 and 12-14 GHz for
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Anik-B, a Canadian satellite.
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Each satellite transponder typically has twelve 36-MHz channels which can be
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used for voice, data, or television signals. Early communications satellites
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had some 12 to 20 transponders, and the later satellites have up to 27 or more
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transponders. INTELSAT 5, for example, has a total of 27 or more transponders
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providing 24,500 data/voice channels, one transponder providing two 17.5-MHz TV
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channels, and one SPADE transponder with 800 channels. SPADE (Single carrier
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per channel, Pulse code modulation, multiple Access, Demand assignment) is a
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digital telephone service which reserves a pool of channels in the satellite
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for use on a demand-assignment basis. SPADE circuits can be activated on a
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demand basis between different countries and used for long or short periods of
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time as needed.
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Propagation Delay:
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The approximate quarter second one-way propagation delay in satellite
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communications affects both voice telephone and data communications. Users of
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voice communications via satellite links face two objectionable
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characteristics; delayed speech and return echoes. Echo suppressors are
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installed to reduce the return echoes to an acceptable level. Data
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communications operations face more serious problems caused by propagation
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delay. Line protocol and error detection/correction schemes are slowed down
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dramatically by the quarter second of delay. User response time requirements
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can be difficult to meet because of these cumulative effects.
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Satellite delay compensation units are available to ensure a connection and
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afford better operation for the terrestrial communications terminal that were
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never designed to deal with the propagation delay of communications satellites.
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One delay compensation unit is required at each final destination. The units
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reformat the data into larger effective transmission blocks so that
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retransmision requests are sent back less frequently. This reduces the number
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of line turnarounds, each of which requires about a quarter second to go from
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or return to the destination terminal or computer. One error detection and
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correction method used, called GO-BACK-N, requires that all blocks of data held
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in the transmitting buffer, back to the one with the error in it, must be
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retransmitted. A more efficient method is to retransmit only the block of data
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with the error, but this requires more logic in the equipment at each end.
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Link to Earth Stations:
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Most users cannot afford a satellite earth station, so a land line is needed
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for a connection to the nearest earth station (Which they tell me is 65,000 bps
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for a leased line). Because of the great distance the signal must travel in
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space, the relatively short distance between the two users on earth becomes
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insignificant and actually does not affect the operating cost. It is generally
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not economical. This is particularly true of high-capacity or broadband
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applications. Even though operating costs are insensitive to distance,
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satellite companies may still charge more for longer distances based on
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terrestrial line competition.
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Nonterrestrial Problems:
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The nonterrestrial portion of satellite communications bypasses the problems
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encountered with broken phone lines, etc., but it has its own unique set of
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problems. Since satellite communications employ high-frequency microwave
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radio transmission, careful planning is required to avoid interference between
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the satellite and other microwave systems. Eclipses of the sun, and even the
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moon, can cause trouble because they cut off the source of energy for the
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satellite's solar batteries. Backup batteries are used to resolve most of
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these difficulties, but the problem that is the most severe is when the sun
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gets directly behind the satellite and becomes a source of unacceptable noise.
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This occurs 10 times a year for about 10 min each time. In order to obtain
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uninterrupted service, an earth station must have a second dish antenna a short
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distance away or the single dish antenna must have access to another satellite.
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Accessing the Satellite:
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There are three methods by which multiple users (earth stations) can access the
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satellite. The first is frequency-division multiple access (FDMA), whereby the
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total bandwidth is divided into separate frequency channels assigned to the
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users. Each user has a channel, which could remain idle if that user had no
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traffic. Time-division multiple access (TDMA) provides each user with a
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particular time slot or multiple time slots. Here the channels are shared, but
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some time slots could be idle if a user has no traffic to offer. With
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code-division multiple access (CDMA) each user can utilize the full bandwidth
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at any time by employing a unique code to identify the user's traffic. There
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are, of course, trade-offs among the three methods; they involve error rate,
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block size, throughput, interference, and cost.
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Advantages:
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o Satellite lines are exceptionally well suited for broadband applications
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such as voice, television, and picture-phone, and the quality of
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transmission is high.
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o Satellite lines are generally less expensive for all voice and data
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types of transmission, whether it be dial-up or a leased line that is not
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short. This is particularly true of overseas transmissions, and there is
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no underwater cable to create maintenance problems.
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Disadvantages:
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o The propagation delay of about a quarter second way requires the
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participants of a voice conversation so slightly delay their responses to
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make sure no more conversation is still on the way. The propagation delay
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has more of a severe effect on the transmission of data, and the effect
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becomes more pronounced with high speeds, half duplex operation, smaller
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blocks of data, and polling. Satellite delay units, front end processors,
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multiplexers, and other devices have been designed to get around these
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problems, but there is no solution to the half second lost in total
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response time for interactive applications.
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o Some of the modems currently in use today have not been designed to handle
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the long delay of the initial connection via satellite, and the result can
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be a lost connection. This can be frustrating when the common carrier
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elects to use satellite lines for regular dial-up calls up to say, 55
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percent of all calls out of a particular city during the busy traffic
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periods.
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Closing:
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Satellite communications is a very interesting topic to study. Perhaps even
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the present/and future satellite and Ham radio "Hackers" will one day be
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running a Bulletin Board off of a WESTSTAR satellite -- Who's to say there
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isn't one now? (Devious Snicker)
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--Scott Holiday
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