Abstract

CubeSats, which are limited by size and mass, have limited functionality. These miniaturised satellites suffer from a low power budget, short radio range, low transmission speeds, and limited data storage capacity. Regardless of these limitations, CubeSats have been deployed to carry out many research missions, such as gravity mapping and the tracking of forest fires. One method of increasing their functionality and reducing their limitations is to form CubeSat networks, or swarms, where many CubeSats work together to carry out a mission. Nevertheless, the network might have intermittent connectivity and, accordingly, data communication becomes challenging in such a disjointed network where there is no contemporaneous path between source and destination due to satellites’ mobility pattern and given the limitations of range. In this survey, various inter-satellite routing protocols that are Delay Tolerant (DTN) and Non Delay Tolerant (Non-DTN) are considered. DTN routing protocols are considered for the scenarios where the network is disjointed with no contemporaneous path between a source and a destination. We qualitatively compare all of the above routing protocols to highlight the positive and negative points under different network constraints. We conclude that the performance of routing protocols used in aerospace communications is highly dependent on the evolving topology of the network over time. Additionally, the Non-DTN routing protocols will work efficiently if the network is dense enough to establish reliable links between CubeSats. Emphasis is also given to network capacity in terms of how buffer, energy, bandwidth, and contact duration influence the performance of DTN routing protocols, where, for example, flooding-based DTN protocols can provide superior performance in terms of maximizing delivery ratio and minimizing a delivery delay. However, such protocols are not suitable for CubeSat networks, as they harvest the limited resources of these tiny satellites and they are contrasted with forwarding-based DTN routing protocols, which are resource-friendly and produce minimum overheads on the cost of degraded delivery probability. From the literature, we found that quota-based DTN routing protocols can provide the necessary balance between delivery delay and overhead costs in many CubeSat missions.

Highlights

  • CubeSats are a type of miniaturised satellite designed for space research

  • As discussed in [44,46,47,48,49,50,51], Delay Tolerant (DTN) routing protocols are categorized into three groups, namely: (i) flooding-based protocols in which an unlimited number of replicas for each generated bundle can be disseminated throughout the network; (ii) quota-based protocols in which the number of replicas is limited and fixed for every generated bundle; and, (iii) forwarding-based protocols where a single copy of messages/bundles is forwarded onto contacts until it reaches its destination or it has been dropped by the message dropping police

  • This paper highlights the main challenges in satellite communications, when the network suffers from intermittent connectivity

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Summary

Introduction

CubeSats are a type of miniaturised satellite designed for space research. These tiny spacecraft are limited in size (1U = 10 × 10 × 10 cm) and mass (around 1kg for 1U). In terms of size, CubeSats can(weight: be structured inCubeSats differentfall sizes, which satellites category. In comparison conventional satellites that cost thethe expenditure for constructing a

Standardthat
Challenges in CubeSat Communications
Routing Protocols in Connected CubeSat network
Single-Layer Routing for Satellite Networks
Multi-Layer
Discussion
DTN Routing Protocols in Disjointed Satellite Networks
DTN Flooding-Based Techniques
Limitations
DTN Quota-Based Techniques
DTN Forwarding-Based Techniques
Findings
Conclusions and Research Questions
Full Text
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