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Orbital Edge Computing

Bradley Denby, Brandon Lucia

2020245 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Advances in nanosatellite technology and a declining cost of access to space have fostered an emergence of large constellations of sensor-equipped satellites in low-Earth orbit. Many of these satellite systems operate under a "bent-pipe" architecture, in which ground stations send commands to orbit and satellites reply with raw data. In this work, we observe that a bent-pipe architecture for Earth-observing satellites breaks down as constellation population increases. Communication is limited by the physical configuration and constraints of the system over time, such as ground station location, nanosatellite antenna size, and energy harvested on orbit. We show quantitatively that nanosatellite constellation capabilities are determined by physical system constraints.

Topics & Concepts

ConstellationLow earth orbitSatelliteBent molecular geometryOrbit (dynamics)Computer scienceSatellite constellationArchitectureRemote sensingPopulationAntenna (radio)Enhanced Data Rates for GSM EvolutionAerospace engineeringTelecommunicationsEngineeringPhysicsGeographyAstronomyArchaeologySociologyStructural engineeringDemographySatellite Communication SystemsIoT and Edge/Fog ComputingModular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
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