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World-first gigabit laser link between aircraft and geostationary satellite

"low-latency links", says the article. I wonder if they consider 500 ms ping to be low, or if they want to replace Geostationary with Low Earth Orbit.

5 hours agoMeneth

> "low-latency links", says the article. I wonder if they consider 500 ms ping to be low, or if they want to replace Geostationary with Low Earth Orbit.

Directional laser beams are orders of magnitude to jam compared to radio wave. That alone makes it of big interest for military applications, even with 500 ms latency.

There is several known cases where the jamming caused the loss of costly military drones.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93U.S._RQ-170_incid...

Laser comms could prevent that entirely.

4 minutes agoadev_

Getting it to work with one end stationary first sounds like a reasonable development plan. LEO adds a lot of complexity, but with huge benefits.

OTOH the number of engineers that focus on throughput over latency is quite staggering.

5 hours agofidotron

I guess if your goal is just to stream aircraft telemetry and black box like recordings then latency may not be high on the agenda.

5 hours agoIrishTechie

Black box data doesn't need that crazy throughput either though. Traditional RF is much easier to get right, and works even when the aircraft starts losing track of where it is and stops being able to track the satellite with its laser

3 hours agoconnicpu

I think it's the opposite? For small telemetry you want it now, but for the big data products there's no hope of "now" and so you settle for soon.

4 hours agoSiempreViernes

I’ll take 500ms ping for those speeds while temporarily on a plane.

2 hours agopottertheotter

No doubt! I’ve measured literal 5 minute ping times on airplanes. 300,000ms. Where are the buffering the packets!?

2 hours agooofbey

My guess is that you're getting retransmissions because of dropped frames, not because there's some huge buffer in the sky.

an hour agoraddan

There’s one huge buffer in the sky!

The huge buffers are at the two endpoints (:->

4 minutes agoBobbyTables2

I like "huge buffer in the sky".

That's where I imagine all my deleted data goes.

25 minutes agoJackFr

Indicated airspeed 280kts, ground speed 470kts, FL410, the packets are trying to catch up…

29 minutes agoreactordev

> These developments entail a future where travellers could enjoy reliable, high‑speed internet while flying, and where people on ships or in vehicles crossing remote regions can stay connected without interruption.

How reliable/feasible would this be on the ground? From what I understand, shining non-trivial lasers in the sky is a massive liability because of the potential to interfere with aircraft. I don't see anything about the wavelength used, but even if it's outside the visible spectrum, it would still be subject to interference from aircraft when used on the ground or at sea.

3 hours agotart-lemonade

Some miniaturization required.

4 hours agodb48x

But that means you need to have a different laser pointed at every single individual aircraft right? Doesn’t really scale.

6 hours agocm2187

You can probably do phased arrays. (It might already be a phased array.)

3 hours agoeqvinox

Pretty sure phased array LASERs are not yet a thing.

3 hours agomohaine

Lasers are coherent emitters; you can definitely make interference patterns with them, so I don't see why LASER MIMO wouldn't be possible, in theory.

2 hours agoaidenn0

Yeah but this is research, if they're to come up somewhere, where else would it be?

2 hours agoeqvinox

If starlink satellites get laser downlink, it might work :P

5 hours agovoidUpdate

I'm really curious how the tracking works in such a system, and how "bad" the beam spread is (my impression is that from the diffraction limit alone the beam has to be spread over at least a ~10m radius after travelling 36000km).

Some info on the laser itself would also be very interesting (power? wavelength?).

Really cool project though!

6 hours agomyrmidon

> and how "bad" the beam spread is

The spread makes the tracking easier, I suppose.

6 hours agoamelius

Perhaps a little, however. Different paths through the atmosphere will perturb the phase of the signal; depending on conditions not all of that ~10m beam width is going to decode with an acceptable bit error rate.

4 hours agoTimorousBestie

Tracking and actuation is nothing new or particularly challenging, IMHO. It's the laser/optical part combined with throughput at that distance that is the main area of R&D, I think.

4 hours agomytailorisrich

Impressive! I believe round trip latency would be 0.5 seconds.

7 hours agoxnx

That's ~162.5 MB in transit at any time

6 hours ago1e1a

There's a patent (2017/0280211 A1) for using this as a data storage method, and there was a company called Lyteloop trying to leverage the idea for data storage with estimations for petabytes across constellation.

an hour agokipchak

That could you used like RAM like the delay-line memory used by early computers!

2 hours agoarethuza

Shouldn't it be 1000/16 = 62.5? Impressive nonetheless, of course!

6 hours agohtgb

The article says 2.6 gigabits/second which is 2,600,000,000 bits/second, 2,600,000,000b/s * 0.5s / 8 is 162,500,000 bytes, 162,500,000 / 1,000,000 is 162.5 megabytes

5 hours ago1e1a

Right, thanks

3 hours agohtgb

Weird.

6 hours agozppln

> Because laser beams spread far less than radio waves, they provide more secure links

Basing your security on laser diffusion seems sus.

2 hours agophilipwhiuk

These beams are much harder to detect and eavesdrop upon. You increase the difficulty for a remote attacker. I wouldn't stop encrypting the data, however: The Alphasat TDP‑1 has a telescope with an 135mm aperture. The beam diameter is likely to be at least 700m wide according to the diffraction limit.

2 hours agoTepix

It's worth it as another layer of security. The beam width being so narrow means even intercepting it becomes harder. This is more relevant for down-to-earth links where the spot hitting the earth is so narrow it could be confined withing a geographically controlled area, rather than hitting an entire continent like longer wavelengths do.