Brief introduction to Satelite Communications and the integration PSTN netwokrs. by hybrid (hybrid@phunc.com) (darkcyde.8m.com/hybrid/hybrid.htm) This is just a very quick file to acomany lowtek's article on satelite communications. Just did a little research, and found a little more out about sateleites and the PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network). The majour players in the satelite industry are INTELSAT (International Telecommunications Satelite Organisation), and EUTELSAT (European Telecommunications Satelite service)- part of the European Space Agency (ESA) and PASAT (Pan American Satelite Inc) These organisations lease space on there satelites for other companys such as telcos, private sector operations, etc, etc. These systems are often interconnected to the PSTN and ISDN nets on the ground, and implement dishes with diameters ranging from 3.5 to 13m. An interesting development I discovered is called 'Briefcase satelite newsgathering (SNG) terminal'.. It is a small, lightweight system developed by a co-operation between Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), Teleglobe Canada, and Skywave Electronics Ltd. The system weighs only 14.5 kg, and is capable of providing good quality speech, still pictures, plus data packets. Again, this system is readily being intergrated into our PSTN. The system operates over INMARSAT-C links of 1.5 to 1.6 GHz to a hub earth station which operates in the 4 and 6 GHz band. Basically, I would imagine that satelite systems are connected to the PSTN in the following way: ___ _________|______ _______ | | ____ | | | | |::x:::| | SAT 1 | a) |:::::::::::| PSTN | |>-------|_______|::y:::| | |____| |_________|______| Base station |___| | A //// (customer A, in //// the UK) ____|__ //// <-- signal PSTN: Intra-lata exchange | | |//// carriers, operating over | | |// different switching and | | || Mid-way base signaling systems, such as | | |\\ station. the CO, 2 4ESS switches, |____|__|\\\\ DMS25O international gates. | \\\\ <-- signal \\\\ \\\\ _________|______ _______ | | ____ | | | | |::x:::| | | b) |:::::::::::| PSTN | |>-------|_______|::y:::| | SAT 2 |____| |_________|______| Base station |___| | B (customer B, in x= uplink Australia) y= downlink I will be honest here and say that I don't really know exactly how Earth to Satelite PSTN networking actually works, but if I was to guess it would be similar to my above diagram, and involve the following routing proccess over the PSTN... Say I was customer (A) and I wanted to call customer (B) over in Austrailia, here is what I believe would happen: I pick up the phone and begin to dial the international country code for Austrailia.. My local exchange recognises that conventional routing over the network will not terminate the call, so then forwards my number query over to a DMS international exchange unit, where the best route for my call is decided by call allocation software. Beacuse the distance of the call is not conviniant for land lines, or sub mersive transmission, I am then forwarded to a special telco satelite base station, where a channel is selected and researved for my call. An uplink and downlink channel is then setup betwwen Base station A and Base station B in Australia. Conventional Signaling protocols in Australia then setup the call acrross the many switches over there until an incoming call trunk transmission is detected by customer B's local office, which then routes a call translation and set's up a channel via it's PSTN back to the PSTN in the UK... B then picks up the phone and the data link is complete. Because Australia is the opposite side of the world to the UK, a base station in the middle would have to rebound the signal, and data transmission back upto the geo-stationary satelite over Australia. When the call is terminated, all channels, circuits, switches, contacts, are reset and are ready for another call. I would imagine there are litteraly 1OO's of geo- stationary satelites that are used by the telcos for international calling, note: for those of you who have not been paying attention! - geo-stationary means the satelite is in syncronous orbit with the earth, and would appear to be still if seen from the earths surface. The orbit at which these satelites reside is called 'the clarke belt' named after Authur C Clarkes vision of a place orbiting the earth that remains syncronous with the earths rotation. Anyways, this could go on forever, so I'm gonna conclude this short file. For more info on this subject, just do a web portal search for things like intelsat, eutelsat, pstn routing, geo-syncronous.. blah blah blah. Hope you enjoyed... ___ ___ _____.___.____________________ ____________ hybrid@b4b0.org / | \\__ | |\______ \______ \/_ \______ \ hybrid@ninex.com / ~ \/ | | | | _/| _/ | || | \ hybrid.dtmf.org \ Y /\____ | | | \| | \ | || ` \ ---------------- \___|_ / / ______| |______ /|____|_ / |___/_______ / \/ \/ \/ \/ \/