[Starlink] System and method of providing a medium access control scheduler
Ulrich Speidel
u.speidel at auckland.ac.nz
Thu Feb 23 19:51:00 EST 2023
Did you mean to say 20 km diameter or 20 km^2 area?
For those not familiar with RF engineering terms: A 3 dB contour as Oleg
shows it below in blue is the line where the power flux density from the
satellite drops to half of the value at the centre of the beam. That's
important as in RF engineering of cellular or beam division networks,
the minimum power you need to receive a signal successfully can be
several orders of magnitude larger than the amount of power you need to
cause interference to off-beam unintended receivers. So in terms of
their interference contour, beams are actually much wider than just a
cell or so, and a power flux density half as high as at beam centre
doesn't mean that it's the perimeter of the beam as such - the beam will
happily interfere with anyone up to a few cells down the road at least.
Incidentally, I'm seeing Dishy use more power when it's receiving at
higher rates, which is what you'd expect if its DSP is busy digging out
intended signals from unintended ones.
On 24/02/2023 1:18 pm, Oleg Kutkov via Starlink wrote:
>
> Yes. The cell size is ~20 km
>
> On 2/24/23 02:08, David Lang wrote:
>> they can only narrow the radio beam so much (probably whatever their
>> cell size is). They can't change the footprint without changing the
>> antenna, so unless they have the beam move around in the cell, the
>> footprint should be slightly larger than the cell size
>>
>> sometimes there is a lot of data going to one station, but sometims
>> it's only going to be a trival amount (think ack packets for a lot of
>> uploads), so they can save airtime by using one timeslot to transmit
>> to many stations at once.
>>
>> David Lang
>>
>> On Fri, 24 Feb 2023, Oleg Kutkov via Starlink wrote:
>>
>>> Date: Fri, 24 Feb 2023 01:47:05 +0200
>>> From: Oleg Kutkov via Starlink <starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net>
>>> Reply-To: Oleg Kutkov <contact at olegkutkov.me>
>>> To: starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
>>> Subject: Re: [Starlink] System and method of providing a medium
>>> access control
>>> scheduler
>>>
>>> Oh, that's interesting.
>>>
>>> >> the satellite broadcasts the downlink radio frame to all the user
>>> terminals in a group and they each retrieve their respective data
>>> from the downlink radio frame
>>>
>>> I thought the satellite beamformer only sends data frames to the
>>> appropriate UT. It looks like the given satellite covers the whole
>>> cell at one TX channel.
>>> Otherwise, it would be too complex, I guess.
>>>
>>> On 2/23/23 23:53, Dave Taht via Starlink wrote:
>>>> For those of you that don't look at patents, don't look at:
>>>>
>>>> https://patents.justia.com/patent/11540301
>>>>
>>>> But I would welcome comment from those that do.
>>>>
>>>> H/T virtuallynathan.
>>>>
>>>
> --
> Best regards,
> Oleg Kutkov
>
> _______________________________________________
> Starlink mailing list
> Starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
> https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink
>
--
****************************************************************
Dr. Ulrich Speidel
School of Computer Science
Room 303S.594 (City Campus)
The University of Auckland
u.speidel at auckland.ac.nz
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~ulrich/
****************************************************************
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.bufferbloat.net/pipermail/starlink/attachments/20230224/33c80393/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: dUsO08OKzqrAgrTa.png
Type: image/png
Size: 35251 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <https://lists.bufferbloat.net/pipermail/starlink/attachments/20230224/33c80393/attachment-0001.png>
More information about the Starlink
mailing list