HOME
ATI — Who We Are
Contact ATI Courses
Search Site
Attendees Testimonials
The ATI FAQ Sheet
Suggestions/Wait List
New Courses for 2009
Become an ATI Instructor
Acoustics & Sonar
Rockets & Space
ATI Blog
ATI Space News
ATI Site Map
ATI Staff Tutorials
ATI Sampler Page
Current Schedule
Onsite Courses
Register Online
Request Brochure
Free On-Site Price Quote
Download Catalog
Distance Learning

LEO, MEO, GEO

ATI's Satellite Communications Systems Engineering course

Summary:

    This three-day course is designed for satellite communications engineers, spacecraft engineers, and managers who want to obtain an understanding of the "big picture" of satellite communications. Each topic is illustrated by detailed worked numerical examples, using published data for actual satellite communications systems. The course is technically oriented and includes mathematical derivations of the fundamental equations. It will enable the participants to perform their own satellite link budget calculations. The course will especially appeal to those whose objective is to develop quantitative computational skills in addition to obtaining a qualitative familiarity with the basic concepts.
    View course sampler
    Read Recent Student Testimonials

Instructor:

    Dr. Robert A. Nelsonholds the degree of Ph.D. in physics from the University of Maryland and is a licensed Professional Engineer. He is coauthor of the textbook Satellite Communication Systems Engineering, 2nd ed. (Prentice Hall, 1993). He is a member of IEEE, AIAA, APS, AAPT, AAS, IAU, and ION.

    Contact this instructor (please mention course name in the subject line)

Course Objectives:

  • A comprehensive understanding of satellite communication.
  • An understanding of basic vocabulary.
  • A quantitative knowledge of basic relationships.
  • Ability to perform and verify link budget calculations.
  • Ability to interact meaningfully with colleagues and independently evaluate system designs.
  • A background to read the literature.

Course Outline:

  1. Mission Analysis. Kepler’s laws. Circular and elliptical satellite orbits. Altitude regimes. Period of revolution. Geostationary Orbit. Orbital elements. Ground trace.

  2. Earth-Satellite Geometry. Azimuth and elevation. Slant range. Coverage area.

  3. Signals and Spectra. Properties of a sinusoidal wave. Synthesis and analysis of an arbitrary waveform. Fourier Principle. Harmonics. Fourier series and Fourier transform. Frequency spectrum.

  4. Methods of Modulation. Overview of modulation. Carrier. Sidebands. Analog and digital modulation. Need for RF frequencies.

  5. Analog Modulation. Amplitude Modulation (AM). Frequency Modulation (FM).

  6. Digital Modulation. Analog to digital conversion. BPSK, QPSK, 8PSK FSK, QAM. Coherent detection and carrier recovery. NRZ and RZ pulse shapes. Power spectral density. ISI. Nyquist pulse shaping. Raised cosine filtering.

  7. Bit Error Rate. Performance objectives. Eb/No. Relationship between BER and Eb/No. Constellation diagrams. Why do BPSK and QPSK require the same power?

  8. Coding. Shannon’s theorem. Code rate. Coding gain. Methods of FEC coding. Hamming, BCH, and Reed-Solomon block codes. Convolutional codes. Viterbi and sequential decoding. Hard and soft decisions. Concatenated coding. Turbo coding. Trellis coding.

  9. Bandwidth. Equivalent (noise) bandwidth. Occupied bandwidth. Allocated bandwidth. Relationship between bandwidth and data rate. Dependence of bandwidth on methods of modulation and coding. Tradeoff between bandwidth and power. Emerging trends for bandwidth efficient modulation.

  10. The Electromagnetic Spectrum. Frequency bands used for satellite communication. ITU regulations. Fixed Satellite Service. Direct Broadcast Service. Digital Audio Radio Service. Mobile Satellite Service.

  11. Earth Stations. Facility layout. RF components. Network Operations Center. Data displays.

  12. Antennas. Antenna patterns. Gain. Half power beamwidth. Efficiency. Sidelobes.

  13. System Temperature. Antenna temperature. LNA. Noise figure. Total system noise temperature.

  14. Satellite Transponders. Satellite communications payload architecture. Frequency plan. Transponder gain. TWTA and SSPA. Amplifier characteristics. Nonlinearity. Intermodulation products. SFD. Backoff.

  15. The RF Link. Decibel (dB) notation. Equivalent isotropic radiated power (EIRP). Figure of Merit (G/T). Free space loss. Why does the free space loss depend on wavelength? Satellite EIRP and G/T footprints. Power flux density. Carrier to noise ratio. The RF link equation.

  16. Link Budgets. Communications link calculations. Uplink, downlink, and composite performance. Link budgets for single carrier and multiple carrier operation. Detailed worked examples.

  17. Performance Measurements. Satellite modem. Use of a spectrum analyzer to measure bandwidth, C/N, and Eb/No. Comparison of actual measurements with theory using a mobile antenna and a geostationary satellite.

  18. Multiple Access Techniques. Frequency division multiple access (FDMA). Time division multiple access (TDMA). Code division multiple access (CDMA) or spread spectrum. Capacity estimates.

  19. Polarization. Linear and circular polarization. Misalignment angle.

  20. Rain Loss. Rain attenuation. Crane rain model. Effect on G/T. Frequency dependence.

    In addition to the course notes, each participant will receive a book of collected tutorial articles written by the instructor, a reference manual of solved problems in satellite communication, and soft copies of the link budgets discussed in the course.

Tuition:

    Tuition for this three-day course is $1740 per person at one of our scheduled public courses. Onsite pricing is available. Please call us at 410-956-8805 or send an email to ati@ATIcourses.com.

::: Made with CoffeeCup : Web Design Software & Website Hosting :::
::: Made with CoffeeCup : Web Design Software & Website Hosting :::