5G Deployment Important for Urban
Air Mobility, Defense Communications,
Wind River Says
The aerospace and
defense (A&D) sector "is largely interested in 5G for its
relevance to Urban Air Mobility as well as the potential to maintain global
technology leadership and ensure defense communications are optimized and
secure," according to the report. The new Wind River report finds that 5G
offers significant promise and challenges for communication services providers.
"The networks
must be dense and complex and can potentially impose high operating and
maintenance costs on carriers," the report said. "Many, if not most,
applications on 5G will require extremely low or deterministic latency. And of
course, security is a factor to contend with as well."
Capabilities that can
overcome the security risks, "given the distributed and sometimes remote
nature of 5G far edge nodes," include Trusted Platform Module (TPM)
to secure edge site hardware via cryptographic keys; Quick Assist Technology
(QAT) with key protection; secure, Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI)
boot; and zero touch updates, according to Wind River.
The deployment of 5G
will be challenging, as the networks are dense and complex and come with
potentially high operations and maintenance costs.
Wind River said that
5G will likely affect the design and architecture of the Radio Access Network
(RAN), a collection of edge-located functions that connect a mobile device to
the communication service provider's core network.
To enable the low
latency and high network loads of 5G, Wind River is offering a a new,
cloud-based Virtual RAN (vRAN) approach under the the Wind River Cloud
Platform. For the high density network requirements, Wind River is pursuing a
Massive Multiple In Multiple Out (Massive MIMO) approach to wireless networking
that maximizes data transfer through simultaneous sending and receiving and
allows for the use of multiple antennas in data transmission and greater speed
per antenna.
A Wind River survey published in
April of 400 top executives in the United States and China found that a
significant percentage are ramping up their 5G investments due to the effects
of COVID-19. In the United States, 37 percent of industry 5G projects,
including those in aerospace, have accelerated because of COVID-19, while, in China,
63 percent of such projects have moved up, the survey said.
5G is likely to be an
important future technology for the military, as 5G is to enable
high-bandwidth, real-time, densely-connected networks that will be central to
leap-ahead defense command, control, and communications.
To that end, the Pentagon’s technology office
has partnered with the Air Force Warfare Center to build a
mobile 5G cellular network at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada that will host
software prototype tests starting next January, according to Avionics' sister
publication, Defense Daily.
The network is to
feature relocatable cell towers that can be set up and taken down in less than
an hour, as officials look to test possibilities for mobile operations centers
and using 5G on the move.
The Pentagon fiscal
year 2021 budget requested $449 million in research and development for 5G,
$249 million more than provided by Congress last year.
On the commercial
side, Gogo is developing new antennas and modems designed to enable the world’s
first in-flight connectivity 5G air-to-ground (ATG) network by
next year. Gogo has said that it is teaming with Cisco, Airspace, and First RF in
Gogo’s development of its 5G system and network.
While Gogo furloughed
600 employees this month because of COVID-19's impact on aviation, the company
also said that the lay-offs would not affect the timeline of 5G. In a May 11
earnings call with investors, Barry Rowan, the chief financial officer for
Gogo, said that the company is spending about $100 million for 5G development.
"Our spending for
this [5G] program peaks at just under $50 million during 2021," he said.
"We could delay our Gogo 5G spending if required to meet our financial
objectives. So what is the outcome of these detailed planning exercises? Even
under the worst-case scenario, we meet our key financial objectives of
maintaining the minimum liquidity we need to run the company and making our
interest payments."
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