High-data rate satellites capable of communicating with ground-based terminals circumvent the cost and effort required to physically lay networks of communication fiber in rural and metropolitan areas. However, the alternative of free-space laser communication has its own challenges. First, collimated beams incur dynamic pointing and wavefront errors when propagated through atmosphere. Additionally, due to the unknown tilt of the atmosphere during open loop transmissions, an uplink system with a single uplink assembly would suffer from low irradiance at the space terminal requiring the use of multiple independent uplink assemblies. Here we describe a bi-directional ground terminal comprised of four independent uplink telescopes with communication and beacon channels and a downlink telescope with integrated Adaptive Optics (AO) tracking schemes that maximize throughput for single mode fiber coupling. A 1μrad pointing error at 3.3σ CDF was achieved for simulated disturbances under atmospheric conditions with a fried parameter of approximately 7 cm, a Greenwood frequency of nearly 270 Hz, and a measured mechanical jitter of a gimbaled assembly with an 82cm aperture telescope. Open loop calibration was conducted and verified at full system integration under outdoor conditions with stars by taking multiple data sets in a single night with a target pointing error threshold of 37μrad rms.
Laser communication systems promise orders-of-magnitude improvement in data throughput per unit SWaP (size, weight and power) compared to conventional RF systems. However, in order for lasercom to make sense economically as part of a worldwide connectivity solution, the cost per terminal still needs to be significantly reduced. In this paper, we describe a coarse pointing mechanism that has been designed with an emphasis on simplicity, making use of conventional materials and commercial off-the-shelf components wherever possible. An overview of the design architecture and trades is presented, along with various results and practical lessons learned during prototype integration and test.
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