"What's important about that is how fast you regain
coverage once you get unblocked," said Fraley. "It's
important that you ride through that and maintain your connection to the
satellite and the IP contacts."
"The user experience can be very disappointing if you
don't recover from those kinds of things quickly," he added
Not all connectivity must be satellite based, Hennessy pointed out.
The WIN-T program is designed to create an on-the-move
"meshed" network. If a vehicle drives between tall buildings,
it should remain connected as long as it can maintain contact with
others.
"If he can see any other vehicle in the network, he's
connected," said Hennessy.
Weiss said this "meshing" capability was demonstrated
during the Fort Dix test.
Aerostats, unmanned aerial vehicles, or regular aircraft patrolling
in the area of operations could also provide on-the-move links, Johansen
said, although he said numerous studies have shown that satellites are
more cost efficient.
RELATED ARTICLE: Promise of 'Revolution' in satellite
communications faces challenges.
ORLANDO, Fla. -- On Oct. 11, the Air Force launched the first of
five Wideband Global Satcom spacecraft, marking the first in a series of
four constellations that will revolutionize the military's ability
to communicate with forces on the ground, Air Force officials have said.
Part of an overarching strategy, the transformational
communications architecture, the Defense Department is promising
thousands of times more bandwidth by the middle of the next decade.
But as often is the case whenever it comes to the tricky business
of space systems, there are technological and bureaucratic hurdles to
overcome. And satellite acquisition programs do not enjoy a good
reputation after several projects fell behind schedule and exceeded
their cost estimates.
The Air Force has reformed satellite acquisition processes by
adopting a "block" approach. This involves measured steps
deigned to prove new capabilities before the satellite is launched. A
Government Accountability Office report released in August generally
gave this strategy good marks, however, it warned of an impending budget
crunch. The Defense Department's investment for all major space
acquisitions is expected to rise over the course of the next three years
from $6.3 billion to $9.2 billion, a 46 percent jump, GAO said.
One of the four planned space communications systems, the
Transformational-Satellites, better known as T-Sat, may be the first
victim of this budget crunch. Defense appropriators slashed its funding
for the 2008 cycle.
Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Sorenson, special assistant to the secretary of
the Army and the service's chief information officer, said the Air
Force has gotten lucky because some of the current communication
constellations are surviving beyond their expected lifetimes.
"From an Army perspective, from a joint force perspective, we
just can't continue to rely on luck ... We need to maintain
schedules," he said.
The following is a look at the four constellations, their
capabilities and when they're expected to go into service.
Wideband Global Satcom. In-flight check-outs on the first WGS,
formerly known as the Wideband Gapfitler Satellite, are expected to be
completed in January. The manufacturer, Boeing Co. will hand over the
satellite to the Air Force then. At that moment, it will become the
military's highest capacity communications satellite.
Boeing is under contract to build five, with launches scheduled
every eight to 10 months.
In a unique arrangement, the Australian military has signed a
contract to buy a sixth satellite. This will allow its forces to use
one-sixth of the constellations' global capacity from the outset of
the program.
Each satellite will have 3 gigabytes per second of capacity, 18
moveable spot beams employing X-and Ka- band transponders with on-board
channelizers that will that will allow signals to switch between the two
bands. In other words, a signal can be transmitted from an unmanned
aerial vehicle to the satellite in Ka-band and relayed to a headquarters
in the X-band, said Marc Johansen, director of space and intelligence
systems at Boeing Co.
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"This is going to be a major improvement in terms of our
wideband communications," he said.
They will replace the aging fleet of defense satellite
communications systems III (DSCS III), which has been called the
"workhorse" of military communications satellites, but are
based on 1980s technology.
The first WGS will have a footprint over the Pacific, reaching
roughly from the West Coast of the United States to China. The second
spacecraft to follow later this year will cover the Middle East,
Johansen said.
Advanced EHF. The first of three advanced EHF satellites, designed
to augment, and eventually replace, the current Milstar constellation,
is scheduled for launch in late 2008.
The Space and Systems Center in Los Angeles Air Force Base and
contractor Lockheed Martin completed systems tests in October that
ensured that the spacecraft will be compatible with ground terminals. It
will provide data rates up to 8 megabytes per second. The
three-satellite constellation will provide 10 times the transmission
capacity as the Milstar's five spacecraft, according to Air Force
fact sheets.
Advanced EHF will link commanders to ships, submarines, aircraft
and ground stations with encrypted, secure communications designed to
continue working during a nuclear conflict.
Congress during the last two budget cycles has expressed interest
in funding a fourth spacecraft to augment the military's
communication capacity as it awaits the development of the T-Sat.
Lt. Gen. Michael Hamel, commander of space and missiles command,
said extending the program might cause significant production and
engineering challenges. Among the issues is whether the parts would be
available since the service only planned for three satellites. "We
are looking at how we would go about doing that," he said.
Mobile User Objective System (MUOS). The MUOS satellites, slated
for launch in 2010, require new terminals that were scheduled to be
developed under the Joint Tactical Radio System. However, JTRS has run
into technical setbacks, funding delays and may not exist for several
more years.
The Navy, which oversees satellites that use narrowband
communications, has not synchronized with the Army the deployment of the
satellites to the development of the JTRS terminals, said Bryan Scurry,
director of operations at the Navy's program executive office for
space systems, at the Milcom conference.
The Defense Department ordered that the MUOS satellite also connect
to the global information grid so users can access the Pentagon's
proprietary networks such as SIPRNET and NIPRNET. The capability has
been built into the satellites, but the Defense Information Systems
Agency has yet to come up with a connection into ground-based teleports
to support that capability.
Scurry said network connectivity was a "requirement without
funding." DISA has no financial authority over the services, and no
money of its own so far to solve the teleport problem.
The narrowband system will not be a white elephant for the
foreseeable future because of the failing health of the ultra-high
frequency follow-on communications (UFO) satellites that they are
designed to replace, he said.
MOUS will have legacy payloads that will duplicate the UFOs'
capability. UHF is the only radio frequency that can penetrate clouds,
foliage and urban structures.
The four planned MUOS satellites are due to begin launching at a
rate of one per year starting in 2010, he said. That leaves a 15month
gap between the projected failure of the next UFO satellite and the
first launch.
The newly opened Operationally Responsive Space Office under U.S.
Strategic Command has been asked to provide solutions to the close this
capability gap.
Scurry said if one more UFO satellite fails prematurely, there will
be a loss of capability for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.
About 85 percent of MUOS capability is intended for the Army and
the Marine Corps.
The Navy is starting to "turn the tide" to push the Army
to issue requirements to develop terminals and radios to support MUOS
capability, Scurry said.
"The requirement wasn't there, the funding wasn't
there ... so we're still at a roadblock as far as pursuing that
terminal," Scurry said.
"Once that capability gets field ed, then that capacity goes
through the roof," Scurry said. One MUOS will equal 10 UFO
satellites, he said.
"We need to get those terminals moving faster and fielded much
quicker than we are currently projected."
Sorenson said, "We're still working, trying to figure out
what is that interface is going to be. What is that soldier going to
walk around with to basically take advantage of that capability?"
"We still have some work to do," he said without
providing any timelines.
Transformational-Satellite (T-Sat). Scheduled to have its first
launch as early as 2016, T-Sat is designed to dramatically boost the
bandwidth that can be pushed to the lowest echelons by employing
powerful Ku-band transponders and laser-based communications that are
nearly impossible to jam.
The five-satellite constellation will support the Marine Corps and
Army's vision of space-based on the-move communications, which
entails sending and transmitting live streaming video to and from a
humvee, Stryker or other vehicles as they speed down roads.
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