Abstract

The advanced communications technology satellite (ACTS) is an experimental communications satellite being developed by NASA's Lewis Research Center. Low burst rate (LBR) traffic stations will access the ACTS multibeam communications package (MCP) through two hopping beams that can be directed at certain cities and areas in the continental United States. An onboard baseband processor (BBP) demodulates uplink traffic received via two up-link (30 GHz) hopping beams, switches the traffic between uplink and downlink beams at baseband, and then remodulates the traffic for retransmission at 20 GHz via two downlink hopping beams. This study concentrates on the demand assigned operation of the ACTS LBR system where the onboard switch is remote from both the traffic stations and the centralized master control station (MCS). Network control uses inbound and outbound orderwire channels and a BBP control channel thereby allowing the MCS to coordinate assignment of individual 64-kb/s channels in the spacecraft. Models are developed to simulate the dynamics of the demand assignment process in order to verify call blocking behavior, to predict control channel loads, and to evaluate alternative algorithms for burst time plan rearrangement that becomes necessary to minimize blocking under conditions of high-traffic intensity.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">&gt;</ETX>

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