Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
Abstrakty
The paper concerns radio amateur satellites that are built by international student teams. For contacting a satellite, a single ground station is usually used. In this configuration and with the satellite on the low Earth orbit (LEO), teams have contact only for about 40 minutes per day. If the satellite has service for radio amateurs, they use it for 20 hours per day. A lot of them have connection to Internet. This is a big difference. In this paper, is shown how they can use the radio amateur transceivers and antenna systems in order to build ground stations network named distributed ground station system (DGSS). Frequencies, types of modulations, calculation of power budge, and the ways to control amateur stations by the Internet are also shown. These are essential procedures, because radio amateurs have their standards and habits. Finally a proposal of implementation dedicated DGSS system for radio amateurs with and without use of APRS network is put forward. Distributed ground station is one of the experiments on PW-Sat satellite, which is being build on the Warsaw University of Technology.
Słowa kluczowe
Rocznik
Tom
Strony
72--75
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 9 poz., rys.
Twórcy
autor
autor
- Institute of Radioelectronics, Warsaw University of Technology, Nowowiejska st 15/19 00-665 Warsaw, Poland, M.Stolarski@elka.pw.edu.pl
Bibliografia
- [1] AMSAT, http://www.amsat.org
- [2] “Orbital mechanics with MATLAB”. Documents describes an interactive MATLAB script named npoe.m, http://www.cdeagle.com/ommatlab/npoe.pdf
- [3] M. O. Kolawole, Satellite Communication Engineering. New York: Marcel Dekker, 2002.
- [4] D. J. Bem, Telewizja satelitarna. Warszawa: Wydawnictwo SIGMA NOT, 1992 (in Polish).
- [5] J. A. Magliacane, “PREDICT: a satellite tracking/orbita prediction program”, http://www.qsl.net/kd2bd/predict.html
- [6] APRS International, www.aprs.org
- [7] APRS Poland, www.aprs.pl
- [8] S. Bernier and M. Barbeau, “A virtual ground station based on distributed components for satellite communications”, in 15th Ann. AIAA Conf. Small Satell., Logan, USA, 2001.
- [9] G. Niemirowski, “Cubesat microsatellite with balloon”, in 56th Int. Astronaut. Congr., Fukuoka, Japan, 2005.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-article-BAT8-0005-0016