Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Communications

SpaceX Requests Starlink Gen2 Modification, Previews Gigabit-Speeds (satellitetoday.com) 70

Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from Via Satellite: SpaceX submitted a request to the FCC to modify the second generation, Gen2, of its Starlink satellite system with changes that SpaceX said will allow the constellation to deliver gigabit-speed broadband. SpaceX submitted the filing to the FCC on Oct. 11, and it was made public on Tuesday. The operator wants to make changes to the orbital configuration and operational parameters, and requests modifications for its Gen2 frequency authorization.

These modifications "will enable the Gen2 system to deliver gigabit-speed, truly low-latency broadband and ubiquitous mobile connectivity to all Americans and the billions of people globally who still lack access to adequate broadband," Jameson Dempsey, SpaceX director of Satellite Policy said in the filing. For comparison, Starlink's current statement on service speeds is that users typically experience download speeds between 25 and 220 Mbps, and a majority of users experience speeds over 100 Mbps. In 2022, the FCC partially approved SpaceX to deploy a Gen2 Starlink constellation of up to 7,500 satellites for fixed satellite services (FSS) in the Ku- and Ka-bands, then later authorized Gen2 operations using additional frequencies in the E- and V-bands. SpaceX reported that since then, it has deployed more than 3,000 satellites in the Gen2 system and the full Starlink constellation serves more than four million people.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

SpaceX Requests Starlink Gen2 Modification, Previews Gigabit-Speeds

Comments Filter:
  • Radio brightness (Score:5, Interesting)

    by pitch2cv ( 1473939 ) on Thursday October 17, 2024 @03:23AM (#64871337)

    Starlink was gonna do something about the radio brightness of their constellation. They did: their 2nd gen fleet is 32 times brighter.

    "Compared to the faintest astrophysical sources that we observe with LOFAR, UEMR from Starlink satellites is 10 million times brighter. This difference is similar to the faintest stars visible to the naked eye and the brightness of the full moon."

    "Without mitigations, very soon the only constellations we will see will be human-made."

    https://phys.org/news/2024-09-... [phys.org]

    So, I wonder what more noise they're gonna add.

    • by Random361 ( 6742804 ) on Thursday October 17, 2024 @03:55AM (#64871357)
      Man, what are we going to do when we build Spacedock?
    • by bgarcia ( 33222 ) on Thursday October 17, 2024 @05:16AM (#64871445) Homepage Journal

      So, I wonder what more noise they're gonna add.

      Next, they should launch telescopes.

      Once Starship is able to launch commercial payloads, it will become very cheap to put all sorts of telescopes in orbit where you no longer have to worry about atmospheric distortion and various satellites photo bombing your nighttime sky shots.

      • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Thursday October 17, 2024 @06:00AM (#64871487) Homepage

        Once Starship is able to launch commercial payloads, it will become very cheap to put all sorts of telescopes in orbit

        This.

        Filling the night sky with light, radio waves, etc. - it may not be pretty, but it is inevitable. The best place for astronomy is...somewhere else. Put telescopes far, far away from earth. A great spot would be the Lagrange point on the far side of the moon. That would give you a nice, big shield from all the radio and light noise from Earth. A relay station in polar lunar orbit, and the astronomers can have a field day.

        All of that will be possible in just a few years. Starship is a huge game-changer.

        • by rossdee ( 243626 )

          The best place for optical telescopes is on the dark side of the moon.

        • Re:Radio brightness (Score:4, Informative)

          by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot@worf.ERDOSnet minus math_god> on Thursday October 17, 2024 @03:21PM (#64872857)

          Filling the night sky with light, radio waves, etc. - it may not be pretty, but it is inevitable. The best place for astronomy is...somewhere else. Put telescopes far, far away from earth. A great spot would be the Lagrange point on the far side of the moon. That would give you a nice, big shield from all the radio and light noise from Earth. A relay station in polar lunar orbit, and the astronomers can have a field day.

          All of that will be possible in just a few years. Starship is a huge game-changer.

          You're underextimating the huge difficulty it is in launching stuff that far. James Webb was billions overbudget and a decade late, because it isn't an easy problem to move something that far away. It's even more difficult when you remember that it's got to work without anyone touching it for 20 years. Engineering something to work reliably for 20 years with absolutely no maintenance is a very costly problem, especially mechanical objects - things like greases and such can break down over time.

          The only thing Starship might do is bring down launch costs, but you're still talking about billions of dollars here. Sure, NASA and the ESA and such can cooperate to launch one telescope of that magnitude every decade, but that locks out basically everyone else on a more limited budget. Not everyone is Elon Musk who can throw tens of billions of dollars at something.

          A telescope on Earth though is far cheaper to build, maintain and operate, and likely will life lifetime costs way lower than a Starship launch.

          • by bgarcia ( 33222 )

            The only thing Starship might do is bring down launch costs, but you're still talking about billions of dollars here.

            For something like James Webb, probably. But that's because we're so used to the "we can only afford one so over-engineer it" approach.

            Starship launches should be cheap. And it can put a lot of stuff in orbit. So take the starlink approach instead of the Webb approach. Every university and college - and even community college - will be able to afford to put a small telescope in orbit th

        • I agree with putting telescopes in space.

          The problem is the amateurs and hobbyists will get screwed. Speaking as an amateur.......

          Its probably inevitable I guess.

          • Your hobby is not worth keeping a billion people offline, or with very poor alternatives. No offense.
            • Like I said, Its probably inevitable.

              All things change. And yeah, I rather have good internet service everywhere.

      • Astronomers might prefer to stare at orbital scopes for work but they get their start as kids looking up in the sky exploring on the ground. That's what creates the sense of wonder and amazement that got us off this rock in the 1st place.

        From what I've read that's all going away. The night sky will be so full of starlink sats you won't be able to see much of anything.
      • How exactlt are you planning to move things like, just to name two, China's Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope or Virginia's Green Bank observatories on the moon? Put them in a big rocket?

        Maybe you'll need 3000 of these and then surely Musk and his clientele will pay for that?

    • by bgarcia ( 33222 )

      "Compared to the faintest astrophysical sources that we observe with LOFAR, UEMR from Starlink satellites is 10 million times brighter.

      The only Starlink satellites I've ever noticed in anybody's photographs are the recently-launched trains of satellites that are still maneuvering into their final orbits. SpaceX has done a good job of keeping the albedo down once they're in a stable orbit.

      • Re:Radio brightness (Score:4, Interesting)

        by mlyle ( 148697 ) on Thursday October 17, 2024 @08:51AM (#64871827)

        My brother is a dedicated astrophotographer. A really big proportion of his pictures now have streaks. The one's we've investigated have been mostly Starlink.

      • That's in optical, light reflected by the sun. They dimmed that. But optical is only a minuscule part of the EM spectrum.
        For reference: if optical spanned one octave (12 keys) on a piano keyboard. A piano spans 7 octaves but we're listening to about 70 octaves in astronomy.

        Sattelites are inherently radio sources. And, as the article I linked to in first post points out, they leak huge amounts of EM beyond their designed transmission spectrum probably due to the onboard electronics working.

        The sky isn't just

    • Irrelevant. Starlink will pay for our ability to launch yet bigger telescopes into space, exploring the universe further. As a result, Starlink will help our understanding of the universe, not diminish it. It is also paying the cost of Starship development so in that regard, it is also helping our exploration of that same universe. That we can not observe it from the ground as usefully is a worthwhile cost to pay for the gains in access to space for both exploration and observation. Think of the new telesco
  • Gigabit speed... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Thursday October 17, 2024 @04:33AM (#64871395)

    ... assuming you're in the middle of nowhere and not in a city with many thousands of other people buying Starlink who thought the data rates would be all for them with no contention.

    • Re:Gigabit speed... (Score:4, Informative)

      by bgarcia ( 33222 ) on Thursday October 17, 2024 @05:22AM (#64871449) Homepage Journal

      Absolutely.

      Starlink isn't meant to compete with existing broadband in well-served communities. It's competitive in under-served areas. People in urban and suburban areas shouldn't bother getting it.

      • Absolutely.

        Starlink isn't meant to compete with existing broadband in well-served communities. It's competitive in under-served areas. People in urban and suburban areas shouldn't bother getting it.

        I live in rural-ish suburbia and my only option is Comcast (need I say more). Is Starlink a viable option for me? I don't need super high bandwidth - I just need enough bandwidth and reliability to work from home. Anybody have experience with this?

        • It could be..... It depends on where you are, do you have a good view of the sky (north), and how many others are in your area. I live in rural colorado off grid, and work full time on starlink. This morning the speed test showed 226 down, 22 up, and 35ms latency. Out here where there is not even cell service, this is amazing. For my purposes, it is more than enough. Zoom calls all day long, git check ins, etc. No problems at all.

          That said, if you are a gamer requiring ultra low latency, are in a co
          • Latency of Starlink connections tend to be lower than for ground based connections as long as the distance to the host is more than about 100m (which in practice, is pretty much always true). This is because Starlink data will generally go at the speed of light straight between satellites, and then down to a ground station very near the data, rather than travelling at the speed of a signal in copper, and via a fairly circuitous path.

            • In practicality from people using it, the distance traveled to space and through their network system means latency is in fact higher than fiber. Fiber also travels as the speed of light, albeit in fiber. People often see 15ms or less on good fiber connections, rarely do you see below 30ms on the starlink system. The signal does not stay in the starlink system down to varying pops.... You are always on the same pop that is closest to you. So like in my case in Colorado, I am always downlinked to Denver
        • My parents live in suburbia and have a Starlink dish because their cable broadband is flaky. When I've run speed tests on it, it reliably clocks in 100mbps down with 40mbps up and is stable enough for video conferencing use.
    • In my experience they don't oversell their bandwidth. It takes quite a while to get a Starlink receiver in an area with high demand.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday October 17, 2024 @07:42AM (#64871629) Homepage Journal

      They won't even let people in cities buy it because they know they can't serve areas like that. It doesn't cope well with urban canyons either, it really needs a roof with a decent view of the sky. No putting it on your balcony to avoid whatever craptastic ISP is the only game in town.

      It's not without its uses, and it's good that they are improving the speeds (although it's not going to be gigabit symetrical like fibre), but the stuff about "truly low latency" is just nonsense. Can't change the laws of physics. Maybe if they started putting CDNs on the satellites, but that still wouldn't help for things like gaming and teleoperation.

      • by mlyle ( 148697 )

        There's no reason in the "laws of physics" that latency has to be bad. The satellite are at 340km. So the path from you, to the satellite back down to a ground station might be 340 * 2 * sqrt2 = 961km, or 3.2ms.

        Increased use of routing on the satellites could push this 3.2ms always in a useful direction, and distant sites could be reached at a lower latency than terrestrial networks.

        The big limitation in latency right now is the handling of the shared medium and the need for terminals to take turns. But

    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      That's the whole point.
      Densely populated cities are financially viable to deploy fibre, so do that.
      Sparsely populated areas in the middle of nowhere are not viable to deploy fibre, so that's why we have things like starlink.

      • by mlyle ( 148697 )

        But keep in mind there's the middle ground of fixed wireless.

        Current fixed wireless systems aren't always great, but they should offer greater spectral efficiency due to much lower path loss.

  • "truly low-latency broadband and ubiquitous mobile connectivity to all Americans " If they're claiming to be able to service all Americans, I can't help but question if they really have the capacity for this.
    • It's an Elon Musk company.

      Since when do they not say unbelievable horseshit in press releases that eventually comes true, but nowhere near the time scale in the press release?

  • I wonder what SpaceX will do if/when someone figures out how to target and disable its satellites. I can see some eco-warrior types trying this for a variety of reasons they justify in their heads. That will likely start the commercial space race and give Space Force something to do.

If all else fails, lower your standards.

Working...