Paper
19 March 2013 Mountain-top-to-valley optical link demonstration as part of a miniature terminal development
Martin Mosberger, Thomas Dreischer, Michael Bacher
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A mountain-top-to-valley optical link demonstration was performed in Switzerland between Säntis mountain, 2’502m altitude, and Dübendorf airfield, 448m altitude. The link distance at very low elevation angle of 2° was 55km. Main goal was to evaluate an optical communication system for LEO-to-Ground links in realistic atmospheric conditions, though worst case, comprising the impact on data throughput and on pointing acquisition and tracking performance. Three wavelengths were tested simultaneously, a downlink at both, 1550nm and 808nm together with a 1064nm uplink, thus allowing for comparison of atmospheric transmission impact over a wide wavelength range. Alongside, all transmitters were designed to be eye-safe. The mountain top transmitter was installed inside a service building and the 60cm receiver telescope on the airfield was placed in an open stand. The link demonstration forms part of an on-going development activity started at RUAG Space with support from ESA in 2010. This activity is currently in the Engineering Model phase and aims at the Flight Model to be ready in 2016. Goal is to develop an optical downlink terminal that primarily addresses the needs of the emerging market of small satellites, the optical ground terminal and the ground network topology. The overall test approach is presented and explained together with a summary of all activities performed. Test results are presented and the discovered issues are addressed. Furthermore, a general overview is provided on the development activity and its current status.
© (2013) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Martin Mosberger, Thomas Dreischer, and Michael Bacher "Mountain-top-to-valley optical link demonstration as part of a miniature terminal development", Proc. SPIE 8610, Free-Space Laser Communication and Atmospheric Propagation XXV, 861007 (19 March 2013); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2002529
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Scintillation

Space telescopes

Laser safety

Atmospheric optics

Cameras

Satellites

Telescopes

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