S-38.116 Teletietotekniikka - Harjoitustyö

IRIDIUM



Pasi J. Ala-Mieto 42168J

palamiet@vipunen.hut.fi

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. The Future of Wireless Telecommunications 1
2. Iridium System Overview 2
3. Iridium System History 3
3.1 Iridium Timeline 4
4. Industrial Partners 5
5. Space Segment 6
6. Ground Segment 9
6.1 Gateway 9
7. Subscriber Equipment 12
8. The Call Process 13
9. Controlled System Access and Gateway Roles 14
10. Market Outlook 15
11. Conclusions 17
12. Index - Iridium System Facts 18
13. References 19

TABLE OF FIGURES

Figure 1. Intersatellite crosslinks. 7
Figure 2. Satellite footprints. 7
Figure 3. Gateway block diagram. 10
Figure 4. Iridium in action 11
Figure 5. Mobile exchange units (MXUs). 11
Figure 6. Dual-mode in operation. 12
Figure 7. Composition of a subscriber number. 14

  1. The Future of Wireless Telecommunications

Wireless telecommunications services have grown steadily since introduction. In the mid 1980's, terrestrial wireless telephone services was offered only in a few major metropolitan cities. Today, wireless communications is commonplace - inaugurated in large and small cities, towns and villages, and selected rural corridors, as an efficient means of providing telecommunication services.

Growth inspires varying degrees of standardisation. There are now various different wireless communication standards which are fighting with each others. Analogue technology is slowly replaced by digital technology. GSM standard has taken over Europe and got a foothold in Asia and the US Anyway, AMPS standard is still strong especially in the Americas, and CDMA is raising its head in different parts of the world. Also, there are other systems like PHS in Japan which have also supporters. Currently there are not any systems which allow the subscriber to travel world-wide with a single compatible telephone.

In 1998, the Iridium system is supposed to harmonise world-wide communications standards by providing service to hand-held, pocket-sized telephones located virtually anywhere on the surface of the earth.

  1. Iridium System Overview

The Iridium system is a satellite-based, wireless personal communication network designed to permit any type of telephone transmission - voice, data, fax, paging - to reach its destination anywhere on earth, at any time. It will bring a new dimension of capability to the commercial, rural and mobile sectors by providing universal, portable service.

The system is being financed by a private international consortium of telecommunications and industrial companies and is expected to begin initial operation in 1998. Motorola is the prime contractor and creator of the original system concept.

Subscribers will use wireless, pocked-sized Iridium telephones, transmitting through digital facilities, to communicate with any other telephone in the world. Unlike conventional telecommunications networks, the 66-satellite system will track the location of the telephone hand-set, providing global transmission even if subscriber's location is unknown. In areas where compatible cellular service is available, the dual-mode phone will provide the option of transmitting a call via the cellular system.

Iridium uses many of the techniques that have been in use with GSM terrestrial mobile systems. As these satellites are relatively near the earth's surface, small low powered hand-sets can be used providing full duplex voice services covering all oceans, deserts and polar regions

Applications for the system vary widely including business use for persons who must stay in touch with the offices located continents away, service for developing nations with lack telecommunications infrastructure, communications for rescue and supply efforts during natural disasters, and personal use.

  1. Iridium System History

The Iridium system was conceived in 1987 by engineers at Motorola's Satellite Communications Division, in Arizona, USA. With the goal of providing truly global communications coverage, engineers determined that the system would require a constellation of low earth orbiting (LEO) satellites with sophisticated electronics. The satellites would be relatively small and simple constructed so they could be build, launched and replaced economically.

As the system concept was being considered, Motorola conducted market analyses to determine the requirements for system capacity and financing. The analyses projected the existence of a strong potential market for a system that would provide high quality service at reasonable rates. A constellation of small satellites made particularly sound financial sense because the entire system could be upgraded in as little as three years to increase capacity and technical sophistication, research showed.

Working quietly, Motorola and its industrial partners spent more than US$ 150 million on research and developed on the project. In 1990, Motorola filed a request with the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for a license to construct and launch satellites for a world-wide system.

Representatives of the World administrative Radio Conference affirmed the importance of LEO satellites for global personal communications with allocation of global radio frequency for LEO mobile satellites services in February 1992. These actions ensured that the same spectrum will be available around the world, pending local licensing. They also established guidelines for the international co-ordination of mobile satellite systems like the Iridium system.

Also in 1992, the FCC granted an experimental license to construct and launch five satellites to demonstrate the feasibility of the Iridium system, with authorisation for full construction expected later. The launch of these satellites is planned for 1997.

In August that same year, it was announced that the Iridium system design had been enhanced by reducing the number of satellites from the original 77 to the current 66. The changes increased to 48 the number of beams each satellite would project on the ground, improving system performance and ensuring less electronic interference during calls.

To gain equity, Iridium Inc. issued a private placement memorandum to potential investors world-wide. In August 1993, the company announced that it had obtained $US800 million in binding commitments and initial cash payments from investors, closing its first-round equity offering. The investment announcement was seen as a strong show of confidence in the Iridium system. In September 1994, Iridium Inc. completed its equity financing, bringing the total capital committed to the Iridium system to $US1.6 billion.

Shares in Iridium, Inc. were purchased by telecommunications operators and industrial companies world-wide. Countries represented include Brazil, Canada, China, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, the Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, Thailand, the United States and Venezuela.

  1. Iridium Timeline













































  1. Industrial Partners

Iridium, Inc. in 1993 signed a $US3.4 billion contract to purchase the Iridium space systems from Motorola's Satellite Communications Division. The company also signed a $US2.8 billion follow on contract with Motorola for operation and maintenance of the Iridium system over five years, beginning approximately in 1998. Motorola has signed a $US700 million contract with Lockheed Missiles & Space Co., Inc. for development of key elements of the program.

Among many other subcontractors, Raytheon Corporation will design the phased array antenna for communications between ground stations and Iridium telephones. The Canadian firm, Com Dev, will develop hardware for intersatellite conversation. Bechtel, Scientific Atlanta, Siemens, telespazio, and many others also will provide key elements of the system.

McDonnell Douglas Co. will launch the majority of the satellites on its Delta 2 launch vehicle. Khrunichev Space Center of the Russian Federation also will provide launch services aboard its Proton vehicles, and China Great Wall Industry Co. will provide services aboard its Long March 2c vehicles.

  1. Space Segment

The Iridium network of 66 satellites will orbit approximately 420 nautical miles above earth's surface. The constellation will include six orbital planes, with 11 operational satellites and one on-orbit spare per plane. Compared to geostationary communications satellites 22,300 nautical miles above the earth, the low orbit of the satellites will allow communications to low-power hand units on the ground with negligible time delay.

Echo will be minimised due to the satellites' low orbit, and the receiving antenna will be small enough to be carried on a hand-held subscriber unit. The satellites, weighing about 689 kilograms, will be electronically interconnected to provide continuous world-wide coverage. Communications will be relayed via satellite and through terrestrial gateways, where billing information and user location data will be stored.

In the Iridium system switching can be organised in the satellites. This is one of the major advantage compared to its rival mobile satellite systems, which are using "ground switching".

The Iridium system's use of intersatellite links is essential to provide truly global coverage. The system will cover the vast portions of the world where telecommunications networks cannot be economically justified, but also will serve polar and ocean areas. Through use of these links, the system will be capable of locating subscribers anywhere in the world.

Further, the ability to hand off a call from satellites in the same or adjacent orbiting planes will allow a user to maintain a call indefinitely, preventing the dropping of calls as will occur on systems in which satellites are not linked.

The Iridium system will use a combination of Frequency Division Multiple Access and Time Division Multiple Access (FDMA/TDMA) multiplexing to make the most efficient use of limited spectrum.

Intersatellite transmissions and transmissions to ground gateway locations and the system control segment - responsible for tracking and telemetry - will take place in the Ka-band frequencies. Communications between the satellites and Iridium subscriber units, pagers or solar-powered phone booths will use L-band frequencies.

Communications traffic will be routed throughout the Iridium network by intersatellite crosslinks, enabling call delivery regardless of terrestrial network availability. These K-band broadband crosslinks operating between 23.18-23.38 GHz will provide reliable, high-speed communications between neighbouring satellites, allowing call routing and administration to occur most efficiently within orbiting network.

Figure 1. Intersatellite crosslinks.

Each satellite will cast a footprint consisting of 48 spot beams onto the surface of the earth. These discretely focused and concentrated beams will support high voice quality between the Iridium satellites and pocked-sized telephones. The cluster of 48 hexagons beneath each satellite represent the theoretical cells formed by phase-array L-band antennas aboard the satellite.

Figure 2. Satellite footprints.

Satellite crosslinks provide the flexibility to place gateways virtually anywhere in the world. Even though there is not a gateway showing with one of the pictured hexagons, the crosslinks provide multiple possible paths between the subscriber and the gateway which "lands" his conversation. These multiple possible paths offer the Iridium network additional robustness and reliability. It should also noted that while crosslinks make it theoretically possible for just one gateway to serve the entire planet, higher quality and reliability in service will be obtained through geographic diversity.

  1. Ground Segment

Once Iridium subscriber unit is activated, the nearest satellite, in conjunction with the Iridium network, automatically will determine account validity and the location of the user. The subscriber will select among terrestrial wireless or satellite transmission alternatives, depending on compatibility and system availability, to dispatch a telephone call.

If the subscriber's local terrestrial wireless system is not available, the telephone will communicate directly with a satellite overhead through an L-band frequency and the call will be transferred from satellite to satellite through the network to its destination, either another Iridium telephone, or an Iridium ground station. The ground stations, or gateways, will connect the network with land-based Public Switched Telephone Networks (PSTN) to reach fixed or wireless system world-wide.

  1. Gateway

Connections between the Iridium system and land-based PSTN will be achieved by Iridium gateway installations. The Iridium constellation will be connected to the gateway using high gain 3.048 meter parabolic tracking antennas operating at K-band feederlink frequencies in the 28GHz range , and housed in radomes approximately five meters in diameter. These co-located antennas will provide the necessary geographic diversity to overcome weather and atmospheric signal fading and blocking.

Individual L-band cells and channels are not "owned" by any particular gateway. Consequently, calls can be routed to the Iridium gateway most advantageously located. This flexibility permits efficient, cost effective call delivery and additional system delivery.

Figure 3. Shows a block diagram of an Iridium gateway. At the heart of the gateway is the Mobile Switching Center (MSC), a Siemens GSM-D900 switch. The MSC has two "sides", a land side which connects to the local telephone network, and a mobile side which connects to an Earth Terminal Controller (ETC). The ETC is analogous to the Base Side System (BSS) of a terrestrial GSM system, and it controls a set of Earth Terminals (ETs) which communicate with the constellation using 28 GHz K-band radio links. Information for physical subscriber equipment is kept in the Equipment Identification Register (EIR).

The gateway Message Origination Controller (MOC) supports a variety of messaging services such as direct messaging to Iridium pagers. The Gateway Management System (GMS) provides operations, administration, and maintenance support for each of the gateway subsystems.

Figure 3. Gateway block diagram.

The continuous, global coverage of the Iridium system will extend from the earth's surface to an altitude of 160 km, providing service to government and general aviation, and to high-altitude hypersonic transports of the future.

Local service providers will act as the intermediaries between Iridium gateways and individual system users. These service providers will be responsible for marketing Iridium services and billing and servicing subscribers. Rights to act as a service provider will be granted only by gateway operators, consistent with selection and performance criteria.

Because Iridium users can be located anywhere in the world, cellular, wireless and telephone operators may include Iridium services as an integral part of their service offerings.

Through co-operation with Iridium, Inc., telecommunications equipment manufacturers and providers will be able to offer world-wide roaming service, and to manufacture, sell and service Iridium-compatible hand-sets.

Figure 4. Iridium in action

Semiportable multi-line units, or MXUs, will provide remote location with access to telecommunications.

Figure 5. Mobile exchange units (MXUs).



  1. Subscriber Equipment

Working with the local earth-based wireless systems, the dual-mode Iridium phone will search for and use compatible ground-based wireless systems whether they are available - with user charges at prevailing local wireless rates. Whenever the local terrestrial wireless system is unavailable or non-existent, the dual-mode phone will route the call through the Iridium satellite constellation to its destination.

Figure 6. Dual-mode in operation.

The Iridium hand-set will be of digital design for maximum clarity and signal integrity. Voice, paging, fax, and data modem capability will be built in, as will data storage features. The phone will be pocket-sized and similar in design to many of Motorola's popular cellular phones.

Iridium services also will be available through solar-powered Iridium "phone booths" that will provide widely scattered populations with world-class communications capability virtually overnight.

  1. The Call Process

The call processing architecture of the Iridium system is patterned after the GSM standard. GSM is a popular digital cellular standard which offers a wealth of features to subscribers, and its continuously being enhanced new features. By adopting this standard, Iridium subscribers will benefit as appropriate advances in the GSM standard are transferred to the Iridium system. The flexibility of the GSM architecture will enable multiple value-added subscriber features including:

  1. Controlled System Access and Gateway Roles

Each Iridium subscriber will be assigned a "Home Gateway". A permanent record of subscriber service information will be kept at this Home Gateway in the Home Location Register (HLR). Iridium subscribers may be identified by any of the following numbers, all but one of which are transparent to the subscriber:

Irrespective of the location of the subscriber, the Home gateway can be determined by examining the "Iridium Numbering Plan Area" (INPA) fields of the MSISDN or INSI, which can be derived from Gateway lookup of a TMSI. Figure x shows the structure of an MSISDN number, and its associated INPA fields.

Figure 7. Composition of a subscriber number.

  1. Market Outlook

The current growth of cellular service and the market outlook for broader personal communications suggests a strong demand for Iridium services. The world-wide market for personal communications will account for annual revenues of up to $US60 billion by the year 2000, and the number of cellular subscribers could reach 200-300 million world-wide according to industry predictions.

The largest single potential group of Iridium system users is expected to be business travellers. Top-level executives can be connected to their home offices no matter where they are - on a remote oil platform, in a major city without compatible terrestrial wireless infrastructure, or somewhere in the sky. A travelling business person's call from Tel Aviv will be as simple as making a call from home.

High-income customers and members of the press who want the convenience of global communications also will use the Iridium system, and it will be an invaluable tool for aeronautical and marine users.

For undeveloped areas in which telephone system infrastructure costs have been prohibitive, the Iridium system is aiming to provide governments and telecommunications providers with an economical alternative or interim service.

The system, which will be virtually impervious to earthquakes, floods, hurricanes and other natural disasters, also will be an important asset for disaster response. Unaffected by weather and damage to local telephone systems and power lines, portable, satellite-linked Iridium hand-sets can be air-dropped or carried to speed and simplify disaster relief efforts anywhere in the world.

Land mobile communication represents a significant opportunity within the developed and developing world. Here are some of the services which mobile satellite communications could provide:

Technology is advancing at a rapid pace and it will not be long before small hand portable telephones can be used over a satellite link. Already, there are a range of small earth stations that will fit inside a briefcase.

It is expected that satellite mobile communication systems will gain 1-3% market share of the total mobile communications markets. This is not much when considering that the satellite infrastructure requires quite huge investments to implement and to maintain. Anyway it is aimed that the very special group of users is willing and capable to pay clearly higher service charges.

One important factor for the increasing popularity of mobile satellite communications in the future might be the development of the third generation mobile communications systems; UMTS/ FPLMTS. These new systems will be launched approximately in the year 2002 and they are projected to be capable to operate hand-by hand with satellite systems as well.

  1. Conclusions

Global services will lead to universal benefits as service providers and subscribers make use of the Iridium system's seamless connectivity. Business travellers will have the freedom to roam world-wide with a single telephone. Previously remote and unserved regions will be able to interact with the rest of the world. Relief organisations, members of the press and countless other markets will have access to an unprecedented array of features, including voice, paging, fax, data services.

The Iridium system will represent much more than its satellites, ground stations, pocketable telephones and other infrastructure. It will become the ultimate instrument of global connectivity by connecting anyone, anywhere, anytime. For that goal the Iridium "project" needs excellent co-operation between the major bodies involved in the development. If international operators, technology suppliers and standardisation organisations were capable to have required "chemistry" , there could be enough space for the success of the Iridium system.




  1. Index - Iridium System Facts



Space Segment




Number of satellites 66 Interconnected

Number of orbital planes 6

Orbit height 780 kilometers

Inclination of orbital planes 86.4 degrees

Orbital period 100 minutes, 28 seconds

Coverage 5.9 square miles /satellite

Satellite weight 700kg

Spot beams/satellite 48

Link margin 16 decibels

Lifetime 5-8 years


Frequency Bands




L-Band service links 1616-1626.5 MHz, L-Band

Intersatellite links 23.18-23.38 GHz, Ka-Band

Gateway/TT&C links

Downlinks 19.4-19.6 GHz, Ka-Band

Uplinks 29.1-29.3 GHz, Ka-Band


Switching Equipment




Siemens GSM-D900


Signalling




GW to ISC PCM transmission and SS7-ISUP or MFCR2


Iridium Telephone Frequency Division/Time Division (FDMA/TDMA), Quaternary Phase Shift Keying (QPSK)




Transmission Rates




Voice Full-duplex, 2.4 kilobits per second

Data/Facsimile 2400 baud


Launch




McDonnell Douglas delta 2. Five Iridium satellites/launch

Khrunichev Proton Seven Iridium satellites/launch

China Great Wall Long March Two Iridium satellites/launch


  1. References

All the information for this study was collected from Iridium Inc. company and project information booklets, and the special Iridium Magazines.



Iridium. Inc.

1401 H Street, NW

Washington, D.C. 20005

USA

Phone: + 1.202.326.5600

Fax: + 1.202.842.0006