US2006276128A1PendingUtilityA1

System and method for implementing a constellation of non-geostationary satellites that does not interfere with the geostationary satellite ring

46
Assignee: VIRTUAL GEOSATELLITE LLCPriority: Sep 10, 1999Filed: Jun 12, 2006Published: Dec 7, 2006
Est. expirySep 10, 2019(expired)· nominal 20-yr term from priority
Y02D30/70H04B 7/195
46
PatentIndex Score
0
Cited by
0
References
0
Claims

Abstract

Provided is an improved system and method for implementing a constellation of satellites in inclined elliptical orbits. The satellites are operated during the portion of their orbits near apogee to emulate the characteristics of geostationary satellites. The orbits are configured to form a number of closely spaced repeating ground tracks around the earth. In each ground track the satellites operate only in arcs well above or below the equator to provide a large number of non-geostationary orbital slots that substantially increase global satellite capacity without interfering with the existing geostationary satellite ring. Minimum spacing is maintained between satellites in each active arc and between satellites in the active arcs of adjacent ground tracks to ensure that the satellites in the non-geostationary constellation do not interfere with each other.

Claims

exact text as granted — not AI-modified
1 . A satellite communications system, comprising: a ground station, including communications equipment and an antenna, located at a position on the earth; a plurality of satellites in orbits around the earth having apogees and perigees, each of the satellites having communications equipment thereon configured to communicate with the ground station only during a predetermined portion of the satellite's orbit proximate to apogee, the orbits of the plurality of satellites being configured to form at least two ground tracks on the earth displaced from each other longitudinally, each of the ground tracks repeating daily and having a number of active arcs, each active arc corresponding to the portion of the orbit of each satellite during which the communications equipment on the satellite is enabled to communicate with the ground station, the orbits of the plurality of satellites being further configured such that at all times there are at least two of the satellites in each of the active arcs and such that at all times each of the satellites in any one of the active arcs is separated by at least a predetermined angle, as observed from the ground station, from each other satellite in the same active arc and from any satellite in any other active arc.  
   
   
       2 . A system according to  claim 1 , wherein the orbit of each of the plurality of satellites has a mean motion that is one of 2, 3 and 4.  
   
   
       3 . A system according to  claim 1 , wherein the orbits of each of the plurality of satellites is inclined at critical inclination.  
   
   
       4 . A system according to  claim 1 , wherein the argument of perigee of the orbits of each of the plurality of satellites is in the range of 195 degrees to 345 degrees for apogees in the northern hemisphere and in the range of 15 degrees to 165 degrees for apogees in the southern hemisphere.  
   
   
       5 . A system according to  claim 1 , wherein each of the plurality of satellites has throughout its orbit an orbital height lower than a height necessary for geostationary orbits.  
   
   
       6 . A system according to  claim 1 , wherein the plurality of satellites are equally spaced in mean anomaly within their respective ground tracks.  
   
   
       7 . A system according to  claim 1 , wherein the orbits of the plurality of satellites are further configured such that the portion of the orbits during which the communications equipment on the satellites is enabled to communicate, is separated from the equatorial plane of the earth by at least a predetermined amount.  
   
   
       8 . A system according to  claim 1 , wherein the communications equipment on the plurality of satellites is further configured to communicate at frequencies allocated to geostationary satellites.  
   
   
       9 . A system according to  claim 1 , wherein each of the plurality of satellites has a power system configured to generate a first amount of power when the communications equipment on the satellite is enabled and a second amount of power more than the first amount of power when the communications equipment is not enabled, to store excess power generated when the communications equipment is not enabled, and to enable the communications equipment with both the stored excess power and the generated first amount of power.  
   
   
       10 . A constellation of satellites, comprising: a plurality of satellites in orbits around the earth having apogees and perigees, each of the satellites having communications equipment thereon configured to communicate only during a predetermined portion of the satellite's orbit proximate to apogee, the orbits of the plurality of satellites being configured to form at least two ground tracks on the earth displaced from each other longitudinally, each of the ground tracks repeating daily and having a number of active arcs, each active arc corresponding to the portion of the orbit of each satellite during which the communications equipment on the satellite is enabled to communicate, the orbits of the plurality of satellites being further configured such that at all times there are at least two of the satellites in each of the active arcs and such that at all times each of the satellites in any one of the active arcs is separated by at least a predetermined angle, as observed from the earth, from each other satellite in the same active arc and from any satellite in any other active arc.  
   
   
       11 . A constellation according to  claim 10 , wherein the orbit of each of the plurality of satellites has a mean motion that is one of 2, 3 and 4.  
   
   
       12 . A constellation according to  claim 10 , wherein the orbit of each of the plurality of satellites is inclined at critical inclination.  
   
   
       13 . A constellation according to  claim 10 , wherein the argument of perigee of the orbits of each of the plurality of satellites is in the range of 195 degrees to 345 degrees for apogees in the northern hemisphere and in the range of 15 degrees to 165 degrees for apogees in the southern hemisphere.  
   
   
       14 . A constellation according to  claim 10 , wherein each of the plurality of satellites has throughout its orbit a orbital height lower than a height necessary for geostationary orbits.  
   
   
       15 . A constellation according to  claim 10 , wherein the satellites in each of the two or more ground tracks are equally spaced in mean anomaly.  
   
   
       16 . A constellation according to  claim 10 , wherein the orbit of each of the plurality of satellites is further configured such that the portion of the orbits during which the communications equipment on the satellites is enabled to communicate, is separated from the equatorial plane of the earth by a least a predetermined amount.  
   
   
       17 . A constellation according to  claim 10 , wherein the communications equipment on each of the plurality of satellites is further configured to communicate at frequencies allocated to geostationary satellites.  
   
   
       18 . A constellation according to  claim 10 , wherein each of the plurality of satellites has a power system configured to generate a first amount of power when the communications equipment on the satellite is enabled and a second amount of power more than the first amount of power when the communications equipment is not enabled, to store excess power generated when the communications equipment is not enabled, and to enable the communications equipment with both the stored excess power and the generated first amount of power.  
   
   
       19 . A method for satellite communications, comprising: orbiting a plurality of communications satellites about the earth, the orbits having apogees and perigees; and enabling each of the plurality of communications satellites to communicate only during a predetermined portion of the orbits proximate to apogee; wherein the orbits of the plurality satellites form at least two ground tracks on the earth displaced from each other longitudinally, each of the ground tracks repeating daily and having a number of active arcs, each active arc corresponding to the portion of the orbit of each satellite during which the communications equipment on the satellite is enabled to communicate; and wherein the satellites are orbited such that at all times at least two of the satellites are in each of the active arcs and such that at all times each of the satellites in any one of the active arcs is separated by at least a predetermined angle, as observed from the earth, from each other satellite in the same active arc and from any satellite in any other active arc.  
   
   
       20 . A method according to  claim 19 , further comprising: configuring the orbits of each of the plurality of satellites to have a mean motion that is one of 2, 3 and 4.

Cited by (0)

No later patents cite this yet.

References (0)

No backward citations on record.