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Communications Technology

The First Detailed Look at How Elon Musk's Space Internet Could Work (newscientist.com) 130

SpaceX has been granted permission by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to set up a vast network of thousands of low Earth orbit communication satellites. But the company has been tight-lipped about the project, known as Starlink. Mark Handley, University College London built a simulator based on public details from the FCC filings to understand the latency properties of the network. New Scientist reports: Although Musk has said he wants more than half of all internet traffic to go through Starlink -- Handley's simulation suggests that the project will be most appealing to high-frequency traders at big banks, who might be willing to fork out large sums for dedicated, faster connections. To create the simulation, Handley took what information he could from SpaceX's public FCC filings and combined this with his knowledge of computer networks. Initially, Starlink will consist of 4425 satellites orbiting between 1100 and 1300 kilometres up, a greater number of active satellites than are currently in orbit. There is only one way to arrange this many in a configuration that minimises collisions, says Handley. So he is confident that his simulation reflects what SpaceX is going for.

When sending an internet message via Starlink, a ground station will begin by using radio waves to talk to a satellite above it. Once in space, the message will be fired from satellite to satellite using lasers until it is above its destination. From there, it will be beamed down to the right ground station using radio waves again. Between distant places, this will allow messages to be sent about twice as fast as through the optical fibres on Earth that currently connect the internet, despite having to travel to space and back. This is because the speed of the signal in glass is slower than it is through space.

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The First Detailed Look at How Elon Musk's Space Internet Could Work

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  • Elon Musk (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @12:46PM (#57617632) Homepage

    Solving the worlds problems, step by step.

    • Re:Elon Musk (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 09, 2018 @12:58PM (#57617682)

      Or more like building the technological infrastructure needed for a Mars colony, step by step.

      • Or more like building the technological infrastructure needed for a Mars colony, step by step.

        Maybe but a lot of those problems are the same problems we have here on earth. We need electric powered vehicles to reduce oil dependence. We need low cost to orbit rockets. We need solar powered homes. We need cheaper/better tunnel making. We need more ubiquitous internet access globally. Whether you like Musk or not, you have to admit he's working on solving serious and important problems. (and if you don't think those are serious problems then you don't understand the problems) The fact that ther

    • by dkman ( 863999 )

      What is missing is the NSA collection point.

      This runs into the same problem that started that whole thing - having a large portion of traffic running through one company (or country as was the case).

      If one entity "handles" the traffic then they can abuse users by sniffing that traffic.

      I'm not saying there's any good solution to get around that, just be aware. L3 and other entities handle large portions today.

      • What is missing is how countries will try to jam this to maintain their national censorship and local monopolies. China will not want their citizens using an uncensored internet.
  • by cellocgw ( 617879 ) <cellocgw.gmail@com> on Friday November 09, 2018 @12:47PM (#57617636) Journal

    Just dropping by to mention that, while existing fiberoptic networks have index of refraction around 1.7 (so signal speed is c/1.7) , there is a relatively new thing referred to as "holey fiber." It's essentially analogous to microwave hollow guides, with the hole pattern sized to match the TE/TM modes of the injected light. The speed thru these waveguides is close to the vacuum limit.

    • None of it's in the ground, but would be a lot less polluting than hanging 4400+ sats in LEO. Go into any town in the US and look around at the pollution of cable, phone, electrical lines + the madness of cell towers multiplying in the night.

      This isn't disruptive, it's another less-is-more problem. Latency is a problem only for the rich and those in need of killing orcs online. Once congestion builds, another 4400+ will go up. Then they'll use lasers for security... and a second skin will cover the earth, a

      • And while holey fiber provides improvement over classical fiber, it does not provide improvement to the speed of light OTA.

        • And so, if both transports are of the same velocity, then the shorter distance wins the speed contest.

          Problem is: speed serves only a few individuals for the effort and money spent, until a new medium that's either shorter or more dense (!!!) wins. Fiber's rarely been a bad investment. However, radio is a finite resource, even with better modulation schemes.

          • And so, if both transports are of the same velocity ...

            Ah, therein lies the rub.

            Transports don't move. Light moves within the transport and no two transports (unless they are the same) allow light to travel at the same speeds.

            Look at the speed of light in water, copper, aluminum, fiber, OTA ... and appreciate that "light" is not limited to the visible spectrum.

            ... until a new medium that's either shorter or more dense ...

            Sorry. Wrong, and wrong. The medium carrying information, even if shorter, does not reduce the distance say, from New York to London. And, you went the wrong way regarding density. Light travels faster i

            • It's true, transports don't move. They're layer 1.

              If both have the same velocity factor, then the speed of light is the same between the two. For satellites, there is a mixture from the point of terrestrial origination in velocity factor. Once in the sat, sat-to-sat is fixed, then there is the next velocity factor of the signal's return to earth. Full duplex communications across the full link should be about the same, with some modest but controlled jitter.

              The proposed waveguide fiber has the characteristi

        • ...it does not provide improvement to the speed of light OTA.

          Nor does it solve the two most important terrestrial problems that exist with today's Internet: high speed coverage in rural areas, and last mile delivery that bypasses the local wire monopolies. Starlink promises to solve both of them. I just wish it were available RIGHT NOW, so I could tell both AT&T and Mediacomm to piss off.

          • Well, we are getting close to Christmas (void where prohibited), so let's add municipal WiFi and fiber to the list.

      • Actually starlink has another advantage disadvantage. Weather. A massive storm hits you will lose starlink access in the short term like you would cell reception. But once it passes you have full access again. No rebuilding of towers or stringing new lines in.

        I wouldn't want it as my only access but damn it would be a great backup. Depending how it does with roaming connections it might make an awesome cell provider.

        • Radio at those frequencies goes through clouds well. It doesn't have to penetrate at lower frequencies, clouds, fogs, and compete with bursts (lightning).

          The problem with cellular is the same as with Imsat phones: latency. The speed of light only goes so fast.

        • I'm not so sure about the disadvantage. There's plenty of microwave/radio spectrum to which clouds are transparent, and the power from thunderstorm radio noise, while broad-spectrum, is heavily concentrated at lower frequencies.

        • Satellite internet is rediculously expensive, normal people won't be buying this.
    • Typical fiber gets you 0.7c. Not c/1.7 (.588c).

  • Shortwave Trading (Score:5, Informative)

    by aaronb1138 ( 2035478 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @12:55PM (#57617662)
    High speed trading looking for a timing edge has already upgraded to shortwave which traverses an even shorter distance (bouncing through the lower atmosphere) right at the speed of light.

    https://sniperinmahwah.wordpress.com/2018/05/07/shortwave-trading-part-i-the-west-chicago-tower-mystery/
    • Re:Shortwave Trading (Score:5, Interesting)

      by DaMattster ( 977781 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @01:12PM (#57617738)
      The downside to shortwave is the relatively low amount of available bandwidth. It works for high frequency trading because the amount of data transferred is very small. Another problem is that shortwave is subject to so much atmospheric and solar disturbances. I am a licensed Amateur Extra and I know the fun of sometimes getting long distance contacts and sometimes not.
    • Actually... The way this works now is you buy server space adjacent to the exchange and configure and run your trading platform software from there. That way your latency is as low as possible as your algorithms are running in the next room. Latency to the human controller doesn't really matter anyway as the trades are triggered by software anyway.

      Surfaced based communication channels are soooo yesterday.

      • Well, one of the ways to profit from fast trading is by predicting the behavior of one stock on one exchange by the behavior of the same stock on another.
        For example: Gold price in New York has a relation with gold price in London. If you see Gold price diving in London. You may want to fast sell gold in New York before it dives too.
        Who ever places this order 1st gets the best result
        This cannot be done without distant trade links where latency matters.
    • The problem with fast trading excuse for this technology is that profit is found when you trade faster then other traders.
      This technology will be equal for all and available for all.
      Trading will be faster but no one will profit.
      • The problem with fast trading is that a bird 1100 km up will never be faster than a fiber 30km long on the ground.

        That is not a selling point. Ever.

        • > a bird 1100 km up will never be faster than a fiber 30km long on the ground.

          Not for 30km, but for 10's of thousands of kilometers, as is relevant to trading between international markets, yes it will. The key is that light travels about 47% faster in vacuum than in fiber-optic cables.

    • Light is always traveling at the speed of light.

      The qualifier you're looking for is the medium.

      And it is impossible for light to reach the theoretical limit of, "in a vacuum." There is no vacuum. That would violate Hiesenberg's Uncertainty Principle, for one thing. For another impediment, see "quantum vacuum."

      • "in a vacuum" is implied any time other qualifiers are left out. That's the only common reference point (and the inevitable virtual particles are *part of* that vacuum). Much like all gravitational potential energy is always measured as negative in space, because the energy at infinite distance is the only common reference that makes sense to use as zero.

  • When sending an internet message via Starlink, a ground station will begin by using radio waves to talk to a satellite above it. Once in space, the message will be fired from satellite to satellite using lasers until it is above its destination.

    Why it is almost as if they actually have an L2/L3 network! How could the reporter actually type the above text without passing out from the sheer excitement.

  • by Zarquon ( 1778 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @01:26PM (#57617828)
    SpaceX's revised FCC filing calls for about 1.6k of the initial 4.4k constellation to be at 550km orbit. Brings the minimum latency down to 15ms, instead of 25-35ms.
    https://www.theverge.com/2018/... [theverge.com]
    https://forum.nasaspaceflight.... [nasaspaceflight.com]
  • by polar red ( 215081 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @01:46PM (#57617970)

    Who gave them the authority to do that? They should probably only be allowed to have a say about the airspace above the US.

    • by jmichaelg ( 148257 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @06:43PM (#57619714) Journal

      The FCC only has authority over the U.S. radio spectrum. Now he's got some 200 more approvals to go.

      Iridium did the same thing on a smaller scale back in the 90's when the company was owned by Motorola . The tech was worked out very quickly. It was the politics that slowed them to a crawl. Motorola found out exactly how hard it was to get all the world governments and incumbent telcos to agree to give them a sliver of spectrum. They had initially planned on direct satellite to phone communications until several telcos raised their hand and said no way, they had to go through ground stations where they could listen in on the conversations as well as charge access fees.

      Musk just fired Starlink's executive team because they couldn't meet his timeline. If they were bogged down trying to get spectrum, it's no surprise - it took Motorola years and thousands of meetings and bribes to pull it off. Motorola's final approval only came after a Motorola lobbyist waited until a specific country's representatives fell asleep. The lobbyist knew the reps were going to vote against approving the worldwide spectrum at an international telecom conference. The lobbyist delayed until 4am in the morning when very few representatives were present and the known going-to-vote-no guys were present but asleep. Only then did he bring Motorola's request up for a vote. It passed and Iridium was born

      After all that drama, Motorola/Iridium ended up with a very skinny slice of spectrum. More spectrum means more bandwidth. Bandwidth is something Iridium isn't known for.

  • by DamonHD ( 794830 ) <d@hd.org> on Friday November 09, 2018 @01:53PM (#57618006) Homepage

    I still prefer the notion of a network of ocean line-dancing sharks supporting a mesh net of laser beams just skimming the surface.

    The training and fish bill is high, and this network facilitates phishing too, but you can't have everything.

    Rgds

    Damon

  • by Anonymous Coward

    "There is only one way to arrange this many [satellites] in a configuration that minimises collisions, says Handley."

    Hadley's statement above is actually false. It suffices to present two viable configurations to prove his statement false.

    There are at least two basic configurations for plotting the vertices in a geodesic dome: class one and class two. Thus there is more than one way to arrange this many [satellites] in a configuration that minimises collisions.

    If the satellites are not plotted like the v

  • I think this has great promise. And in theory will be awesome, quick and high capacity. Right up until China reroutes all the traffic through Beijing.
  • What do we know? About SpaceX SAT architecture, network topology and service niche opportunity?

    Even the simulator doesn't layout the business case much less a technological opportunity for SAT use.

    • by jd ( 1658 )

      The architecture and protocols, I have listed above.

      A range of simulators that could be helpful:

      https://github.com/mlab-upenn/... [github.com]
      http://ssfnet.org/homePage.htm... [ssfnet.org]
      https://www.nsnam.org/ [nsnam.org]

    • by anegg ( 1390659 )

      What do we know? About SpaceX SAT architecture, network topology and service niche opportunity?

      Well, this is slashdot. Full of uncountable self-appointed experts in all matters, both technical and otherwise. We still don't understand why business people all over the world don't flesh their concepts out with input from slashdot so as to make sure they are only wildly successful.

      My personal opinion is that if SpaceX has $$ that they are willing to throw at this, they probably have done some of the basic back of the envelope calculations necessary to justify it. Unless they like lighting $100 bills

  • by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @04:50PM (#57619034) Journal

    Handley's simulation suggests that the project will be most appealing to high-frequency traders at big banks, who might be willing to fork out large sums for dedicated, faster connections.

    Well that's just dumb. High frequency traders at big banks merely locate their data center / computing presence in close physical proximity to the point where the trades occur. Relying on a massive, expensive space network to come into existence just for high frequency trading is absurd.

    This will most appeal to the millions of people that do not have broadband. The money to be made is in the masses, not in "high-frequency traders at big banks".

    • High frequency traders at big banks merely locate their data center / computing presence in close physical proximity to the point where the trades occur.

      Not only in close physical proximity (eg Paternoster Square in London) but also for direct line-of-sight via microwave link. Eg the HFT microwave links in Aurora Illinois. [youtu.be] Those will always be faster than a round-trip via satellite.

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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