SpaceX Starlink 'space lasers' successfully
tested in orbit for the first time
SpaceX has revealed the first successful test of Starlink
satellite 'space lasers' in orbit, a significant step along the path to an
upgraded "Version 2" constellation.
In simple terms, those "lasers" are a form of optical
(light-based) communication with an extremely high bandwidth ceiling,
potentially permitting the wireless, high-speed transfer of vast quantities of
data over equally vast distances. Of the ~715 Starlink satellites SpaceX has
launched over the last 16 months, some 650 are operational Version 1 (v1.0)
spacecraft designed to serve a limited group of customers in the early stages
of the constellation. Prior to SpaceX's September 3rd announcement, it was
assumed that none of those satellites included laser interlinks, but now we
know that two spacecraft - presumably launched as part of Starlink-9 or -10 in
August - have successfully tested prototype lasers in orbit.
Ever since CEO Elon Musk first revealed SpaceX's satellite
internet ambitions in early 2015, those plans have included some form of
interconnection between some or all of the thousands of satellites the company
would need to launch. While a functional low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite
internet constellation doesn't intrinsically need to have that capability to function
or be successful, inter-satellite links offer some major benefits in return for
the added spacecraft complexity and cost.
The single biggest draw of laser interlinks is arguably the major
reduction in connection latency (ping) they can enable compared to a similar
network without it. By moving a great deal of the work of networking into
orbit, the data transported on an interlinked satellite network would
theoretically require much less routing to reach an end-user, physically
shortening the distance that data has to travel. The speed of light (300,000
kilometers per second) may be immense but even on the small scale of the planet
Earth, with the added inefficiencies inherent in even the best fiber optic
cables, routing data to and from opposite ends of the planet can still be
slowed down by high latency.
Without interlinks, Starlink and internet constellations like it
function by acting more like a go-between for individual users and fixed ground
stations that then connect those users to the rest of the Internet. Under that
regime, the performance of constellations is inherently filtered through the
Earth's existing internet infrastructure and is necessitates the installation
of ground stations relatively close to network users. If a satellite without
interlinks can 'see' (and thus communicate with) customers but can't 'see' a
ground station from the same orbital vantage point, it is physically incapable
of connecting those communications with the rest of the internet.
This isn't a showstopper. As SpaceX's very early Starlink
constellation has already demonstrated through beta testers, the network is
already capable of serving individual users 100 megabits per second (Mbps) of
bandwidth with latency roughly comparable to average wired connections. The
result: internet service that is largely the same as (if not slightly worse and
less convenient than) existing fiber options. To fully realize a LEO internet
constellation's potential of being much better than fiber, high-performance
laser interlinks are thus a necessity.
With laser interlinks, the aforementioned connection dropout
scenario would be close to impossible. In the event that an active satellite
finds itself serving customers without a ground station in reach, it would
route those forlorn data packages by laser to a different satellite with
immediate ground station access. One step better, with enough optimization,
user communications can be routed by laser to and from the ground stations
physically closest to the user and their traffic destination. With a
free-floating network of satellites communication in vacuum along straight
lines, nothing short of a direct, straight fiber line could compete with the
resulting latency and routing efficiency.
Interlinks offer one last significant benefit: by sacrificing
latency, an interlinked network will be able to service a larger geographic
area by allowing the connections of users far from ground stations to be routed
through other satellites to the nearest ground station. Large-scale ground
station installation and the international maze of permitting it requires can
take an inordinate amount of time and resources for nascent satellite
communications constellations
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