Paper
27 May 1998 Design of a ground terminal for the STRV-2 satellite-to-ground lasercom experiment
Eric J. Korevaar, John J. Schuster, Harel Hakakha, Ron Stieger, Prasanna Adhikari, Brian Riley, Carter Moursund, Joseph Koontz, Arunabh Lath, Micah Barclay
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A laser communications terminal built under funding from the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization (BMDO) will be flown as part of the Space Technology Research Vehicle 2 (STRV-2) experiment to be launched as part of Air Force mission TSX-5 in late 1998. The flight hardware, which weighs 31.5 pounds and is capable of communications data rates above 1 Gb/s, was delivered to JPL for integration in July 1997. The planned satellite-to-ground lasercom experiment is designed for slant ranges up to 2000 km and elevation angles above the horizon down to 15 degrees. The ground terminal, described in this paper, is being built now and will be used to measure various link parameters such as burst error rates due to scintillation in addition to demonstrating high speed communications.
© (1998) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Eric J. Korevaar, John J. Schuster, Harel Hakakha, Ron Stieger, Prasanna Adhikari, Brian Riley, Carter Moursund, Joseph Koontz, Arunabh Lath, and Micah Barclay "Design of a ground terminal for the STRV-2 satellite-to-ground lasercom experiment", Proc. SPIE 3266, Free-Space Laser Communication Technologies X, (27 May 1998); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.308705
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Cited by 7 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Satellites

Telescopes

Laser communications

Data communications

Mirrors

Satellite communications

Cameras

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