System Design of an Integrated Terrestrial-Satellite Communications Network for Disaster Recovery

This thesis describes a possible integrated terrestrial-satellite network system for disaster recovery and response. The motivation of this thesis was based on the adjacent spectrum allocations between the Virginia Tech terrestrial Local Multiple Distribution Service (LMDS) system and a Ka-band sate...

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Main Author: Loo, Suem Ping
Other Authors: Electrical and Computer Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/9956
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02202004-095500
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-99562020-09-29T05:46:28Z System Design of an Integrated Terrestrial-Satellite Communications Network for Disaster Recovery Loo, Suem Ping Electrical and Computer Engineering Bostian, Charles W. Safaai-Jazi, Ahmad Pratt, Timothy J. VSAT TCP/IP 30/20 GHz Integrated Network LMDS Ka-band SPACEWAY This thesis describes a possible integrated terrestrial-satellite network system for disaster recovery and response. The motivation of this thesis was based on the adjacent spectrum allocations between the Virginia Tech terrestrial Local Multiple Distribution Service (LMDS) system and a Ka-band satellite system, and potentially being able to provide as an additional Ka-band satellite network backbone to the Virginia Tech terrestrial LMDS system for better and faster communications deployments. The Spaceway satellite system¡¦s design parameters were adopted typically for a Ka-band satellite system. The LMDS system was assumed to use IEEE 802.16 standard protocols although it currently uses its own proprietary protocols. Four possible topologies integrating both terrestrial and satellite network were investigated. The study showed that the task was more problematic and complicated than anticipated due to incompatible network protocols, limitations of available hardware components, the high path loss at Ka-band, and the high cost of the equipment, although the adjacent frequency bands do suggest a possible integrated network. In this thesis, the final selected topology was proposed and designed. The technical characteristics of the earth station used for coupling both terrestrial and satellite networks were determined by a link budget analysis and a consideration of network implementations. The reflector antenna used by the earth station was designed. In addition, other system design concerns and engineering tradeoffs, including adjacent satellite interference, rain attenuation, antenna pointing error, noise temperature, and modulation and multiple access selection, were addressed. Master of Science 2011-08-06T16:01:39Z 2011-08-06T16:01:39Z 2004-04-16 2004-02-20 2004-06-08 2004-06-08 Thesis etd-02202004-095500 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/9956 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02202004-095500 SPLoo_Thesis.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic VSAT
TCP/IP
30/20 GHz
Integrated Network
LMDS
Ka-band
SPACEWAY
spellingShingle VSAT
TCP/IP
30/20 GHz
Integrated Network
LMDS
Ka-band
SPACEWAY
Loo, Suem Ping
System Design of an Integrated Terrestrial-Satellite Communications Network for Disaster Recovery
description This thesis describes a possible integrated terrestrial-satellite network system for disaster recovery and response. The motivation of this thesis was based on the adjacent spectrum allocations between the Virginia Tech terrestrial Local Multiple Distribution Service (LMDS) system and a Ka-band satellite system, and potentially being able to provide as an additional Ka-band satellite network backbone to the Virginia Tech terrestrial LMDS system for better and faster communications deployments. The Spaceway satellite system¡¦s design parameters were adopted typically for a Ka-band satellite system. The LMDS system was assumed to use IEEE 802.16 standard protocols although it currently uses its own proprietary protocols. Four possible topologies integrating both terrestrial and satellite network were investigated. The study showed that the task was more problematic and complicated than anticipated due to incompatible network protocols, limitations of available hardware components, the high path loss at Ka-band, and the high cost of the equipment, although the adjacent frequency bands do suggest a possible integrated network. In this thesis, the final selected topology was proposed and designed. The technical characteristics of the earth station used for coupling both terrestrial and satellite networks were determined by a link budget analysis and a consideration of network implementations. The reflector antenna used by the earth station was designed. In addition, other system design concerns and engineering tradeoffs, including adjacent satellite interference, rain attenuation, antenna pointing error, noise temperature, and modulation and multiple access selection, were addressed. === Master of Science
author2 Electrical and Computer Engineering
author_facet Electrical and Computer Engineering
Loo, Suem Ping
author Loo, Suem Ping
author_sort Loo, Suem Ping
title System Design of an Integrated Terrestrial-Satellite Communications Network for Disaster Recovery
title_short System Design of an Integrated Terrestrial-Satellite Communications Network for Disaster Recovery
title_full System Design of an Integrated Terrestrial-Satellite Communications Network for Disaster Recovery
title_fullStr System Design of an Integrated Terrestrial-Satellite Communications Network for Disaster Recovery
title_full_unstemmed System Design of an Integrated Terrestrial-Satellite Communications Network for Disaster Recovery
title_sort system design of an integrated terrestrial-satellite communications network for disaster recovery
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/9956
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02202004-095500
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