Registered users can unlock up to five pieces of premium content each month.
Satellite Networks Leveraging FSO Are on the Rise |
NEWS |
In recent years, a growing technology being implemented in Satellite Communications (SatCom) involves using the optical spectrum (1 Terahertz (THz)), which transmits information through lasers and optical telescopes instead of radio waves and transmitters. This technology, known as Laser Communications (lasercom) or Free-Space Optical (FSO) communications, allows for higher data rates. As a result, missions can send and receive more information in a single transmission compared to traditional radio wave systems. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) estimates that data rates for FSO are 40X higher compared to traditional Radio Frequency (RF( communication, particularly when comparing the Ku-band 5 Gigabits per Second (Gbps)) to optical (200 Gbps) bandwidth.
While FSO communications has been gradually developed over the past 30 years, it has been commercial satellite network Starlink's successful implementation of Optical Inter-Satellite Links (OISLs) routing network traffic that has energized the market. As a result, OISLs have now become highly sought after for new Low Earth Orbit (LEO) constellations, such as Amazon’s Project Kuiper, Telesat Lightspeed, the European Union’s (EU) Infrastructure for Resilience, Interconnectivity and Security by Satellite (IRIS2), and the Space Development Agency’s (SDA) Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture (PWSA). Even emerging Non-Terrestrial Network (NTN) platforms, such as High-Altitude Platform Systems (HAPS) operating at 18-Kilometer (km) to 25-km altitudes in the stratosphere, are being explored to support the emergence of Space-Air-Ground Integrated Networks (SAGINs) leveraging FSO communications, considered an indispensable component of potential future 6G networks.
Optical NTNs Will Be Critical for Unlocking 6G NTN |
IMPACT |
The development and use case expansion of FSO communications for NTNs has become a promising evolutionary path toward layered, multi-path low-latency communications via SAGINs. In this respect, it is anticipated that 6G networks will leverage a converged terrestrial and NTN architecture, where satellites connect user devices to the telco core network. In this way, optical connections will be crucial for transferring data between connected satellites and HAPS, ensuring seamless handoff to ground networks. Critically, this new non-terrestrial transport layer helps build redundancy and offers a potential alternative to subsea cables, with the added benefit of lowering NTN Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) due to reduced ground station infrastructure requirements and enhanced data transport capabilities. Moreover, the ability to support new emerging communications technologies over NTNs, such as Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) and Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC), makes the deployment of satellite optical networks increasingly attractive.
While FSO communications is susceptible to atmospheric turbulence, orientation errors, and beam scintillation effects, as noted in ABI Insight “Embracing Light: The Satellite Industry’s Transition from RF to Optical,” the industry is exploring remedies through software-defined network selection schemes for HAPS, ground stations, and interconnected satellites. Such a scheme would enable NTN optical networks to select the most suitable platform in space, in the air, and on the ground to connect and overcome impacts to connectivity. Such a network would require significant optical space and air assets, and a proliferated optical ground network to support ground station selection capabilities. While numerous companies, such as Mynaric (Germany), Cailabs (France), BridgeComm (United States), and Laser Light Communications (United States) are emerging to support direct-to-Earth communications for optical communications, Optical Ground Terminals (OGTs) remain an emerging technology.
Despite these factors, NTN networks continue to deploy satellite-based regenerative and optical payloads as the benefits and revenue potential from enhanced data transport are significant for mesh networking and delivering Direct-to-Cellular (D2C), broadband, and Internet of Things (IoT) applications. The impact of optical communications in NTNs is further explored in ABI Research’s latest report, The Future of Satellite Networking: Laser Communications in Space (PT-2610), where it is estimated that end-user revenue generated from transporting network traffic over laser satellite networks will equate to US$15.2 billion by 2027.
Capitalize on the Potential of Laser Communications |
RECOMMENDATIONS |
With optical communication links able to serve the unique connectivity needs of commercial and defense sectors, ABI Research projects that satellites with lasercom payloads will see a surge in deployments from over 4,000 satellites in 2024 to 12,600 by 2027. Companies in the lasercom ecosystem can take some of the following actions to capitalize on the opportunity: