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Small Satellite Constellations

2010
Control room with aerospace engineers monitoring small satellite constellation operations.

(generated image for illustration only)

A group of numerous small satellites orbiting in a coordinated formation to achieve a common objective that a single, larger satellite cannot. These constellations provide global or near-global coverage with high revisit rates. Key applications include global broadband internet (Starlink), daily Earth observation (Planet Labs), and maritime/aviation tracking (Spire Global), enabled by the low cost of individual satellites.

The concept of a satellite constellation is not new; the GPS system is a prime example. However, the ‘NewSpace’ revolution has been defined by mega-constellations composed of hundreds or thousands of small satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO). This architecture is fundamentally different from traditional geostationary (GEO) satellites. While a single GEO satellite can cover a large region, LEO satellites have a much smaller field of view and move rapidly across the sky. Therefore, a large number must be used in concert to provide continuous coverage.

This approach offers several advantages. The low altitude reduces signal latency, which is critical for applications like broadband internet. The high number of satellites provides high temporal resolution, or ‘revisit rate’, allowing for near-constant monitoring of the Earth’s surface. Furthermore, the system is resilient; the failure of a single satellite has minimal impact on the overall service. The primary challenge is deployment and maintenance. Launching thousands of satellites is a massive logistical and financial undertaking. On-orbit management requires sophisticated automation for station-keeping, collision avoidance, and de-orbiting at the end of life to mitigate the growing problem of space debris. For communications constellations, inter-satellite links (often using lasers) are necessary to route data around the globe without relying on ground stations.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 3302
– Aerospace engineering

Type

System Architecture

Disruption

Substancial

Usage

Widespread Use

Precursors

  • the Iridium satellite constellation concept from the 1990s
  • the global positioning system (GPS) as an early, highly successful military constellation
  • advances in mass manufacturing techniques applied to spacecraft
  • development of low-cost small satellite buses like the CubeSat
  • availability of affordable launch options through rideshare models

Applications

  • global satellite internet services (e.g., starlink, oneweb)
  • daily high-resolution imaging of the entire earth (e.g., planet labs’ dove constellation)
  • real-time ship and aircraft tracking (e.g., spire global’s lemur satellites)
  • internet of things (iot) connectivity (e.g., swarm technologies)
  • radio occultation for weather forecasting (e.g., geooptics)

Patents:

NA

Potential Innovations Ideas

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Related to: satellite constellation, LEO, mega-constellation, Starlink, Oneweb, Planet Labs, earth observation, global coverage, space debris, inter-satellite links.

Historical Context

Small Satellite Constellations

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2013-09-24
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(if date is unknown or not relevant, e.g. "fluid mechanics", a rounded estimation of its notable emergence is provided)

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