1 / 30

Australian Centre for Space Photonics

This presentation highlights the historical and ongoing involvement of Australia in the exploration of Mars and the communications problem that arises. It discusses the current bottleneck in communications and the need for increasing downlink rates. The presentation proposes the use of optical communications networks as a long-term solution, leveraging Australia's unique capabilities in key technologies. The Australian Centre for Space Photonics aims to expand these capabilities and research for an interplanetary high-data-rate optical communications link.

asaxon
Download Presentation

Australian Centre for Space Photonics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Australian Centre for Space Photonics Andrew McGrath Anglo-Australian Observatory

  2. This Presentation • Interplanetary communications problem • Long term solution • Historical Australian involvement • Further Australian involvement • Making it happen

  3. Exploration of Mars • Highlights the communications problem • Long term and substantial past and continuing international investment

  4. Exploration of Mars • 1960 Two Soviet flyby attempts • 1962 Two more Soviet flyby attempts,Mars 1 • 1964 Mariner 3, Zond 2 • 1965 Mariner 4 (first flyby images) • 1969 Mariners 6 and 7 • 1971 Mariners 8 and 9 • 1971 Kosmos 419, Mars 2 & 3 • 1973 Mars 4, 5, 6 & 7 (first landers) • 1975 Viking 1, 1976 Viking 2

  5. Exploration of Mars • 1988 Phobos 1 and 2 • 1992 Mars Observer • 1996 Mars 96 • 1997 Mars Pathfinder, Mars Global Surveyor • 1998 Nozomi • 1999 Climate Orbiter, Polar Lander and Deep Space 2 • 2001 Mars Odyssey

  6. Planned Mars Exploration • 2003 Mars Express • 2004 Mars Exploration Rovers • 2005 Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter • 2007+ Scout Missions 2007 • 2009 Smart Lander, Long Range Rover • 2014 Sample Return

  7. Interplanetary Communication • Radio (microwave) links, spacecraft to Earth • Newer philosophy - communications relay (Mars Odyssey, MGS) • Sensible network topology • 25-W X-band (Ka-band experimental)<100 kbps downlink

  8. Communications Bottleneck • Current missions capable of collecting much more data than downlink capabilities (2000%!) • Currently planned missions make the problem 10x worse • Future missions likely to collect ever-greater volumes of data

  9. Communications Bottleneck • Increasing downlink rates critical to continued investment in planetary exploration

  10. Communications Bottleneck • NASA's perception of the problem is such that they are considering an array of 3600 twelve-metre dishes to accommodate currently foreseen communications needs for Mars alone

  11. Communications Energy Budget • Consider cost of communications reduced to transmitted energy per bit of information received

  12. Communications Energy Budget • Assumptions: • information proportional to number of photons (say, 10 photons per bit) • diffraction-limited transmission so energy density at receiver proportional to (R/DT)-2 • received power proportional to DR2 • photon energy hc /  • So:Cost proportional to R2/ (DT2DR2)

  13. Communications Energy Budget Cost proportional to R2/ (DT2DR2) X-band transmitter  ~ 40 mm Laser transmitter  ~ 0.5-1.5 m Assuming similar aperture sizes and efficiencies, optical wins over microwave by > 3 orders of magnitude

  14. Long-term Solution • Optical communications networks • Advantages over radio • Higher modulation rates • More directed energy • Analagous to fibre optics vs. copper cables

  15. Lasers in Space • Laser transmitter in Martian orbit with large aperture telescope • Receiving telescope on or near Earth • Preliminary investigations suggest ~100Mbps achievable on 10 to 20 year timescale • Enabling technologies require accelerated development

  16. Key Technologies • Suitable lasers • Telescope tracking and guiding • Optical detectors • Cost-effective large-aperture telescopes • Atmospheric properties • Space-borne telescopes

  17. An Australian Role - till now • History of involvement • Launch sites • Development of early satellites • Communications • Deep Space Network • Parkes, ATNF • Continuing involvement

  18. An Australian Role - in the future • Australian organisations have unique capabilities in the key technologies required for deep space optical communications links • High-power, high beam quality lasers • Holographic correction of large telescopes • Telescope-based instrumentation • Telescope tracking and guiding

  19. The University of Adelaide • Optics Group, Department of Physics and Mathematical Physics • High power, high beam quality, scalable laser transmitter technology • Holographic mirror correction • Presently developing high power lasers and techniques for high optical power interferometry for the US Advanced LIGO detectors

  20. Anglo-Australian Observatory • Telescope technology • Pointing and tracking systems • Atmospheric transmission (seeing, refraction) • Cryogenic and low noise detectors • Narrowband filter technology

  21. Macquarie University • Centre for Lasers and Applications • Optical communications • Transmitter technology

  22. A Proposal • Use the ARC 'Centre of Excellence' programme to link these organisations to capitalise on Australia's strategic advantages to become an indispensable partner in the world-wide scientific space exploration effort

  23. Australian Centre for Space Photonics • To expand unique Australian capabilities and experience to progress research into key technologies for an interplanetary high-data rate optical communications link that are synergistic with near term space communication needs.

  24. Australian Centre for Space Photonics • Manage a portfolio of research projects in the key technologies for an interplanetary optical communications link • Work in close collaboration with overseas organizations such as NASA and JPL

  25. Australian Centre for Space Photonics • An Australian foothold into the well-established `big science' investment of the leading space agencies

  26. Australian Centre for Space Photonics • Closer ties to leading space agencies and their current and planned missions

  27. Australian Centre for Space Photonics • Australia's continued long term participation in the Deep Space Network

  28. Australian Centre for Space Photonics • Attract and retain the best Australian students and staff in optics and photonics

  29. Australian Centre for Space Photonics • Creation of photonics and space technology IP for commercial development

  30. Australian Centre for Space Photonics • Take advantage of unique Australian capabilities • Australian technology becomes critical to deep space missions • Continued important role in space FOR MORE INFO... http://www.aao.gov.au/lasers

More Related