Design of Novel Reconfigurable Single-Board Satellite for Enhanced Space Environment Detection
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Space Environment Detection Needs Analysis
2.1. Analysis of Balloon Satellite Detection Needs
- An energy unit, including solar panels, to provide power to all units;
- A GNSS unit for recording position and velocity;
- A communication unit for ground-based data transfer;
- A controller unit for mode control and GNSS data integration.
2.2. Analysis of Ionospheric Occultation Detection Needs
- An energy unit, including solar panels, to provide power to all units;
- A GNSS unit for recording pseudo-range and phase data;
- A communication unit for ground-based data transfer;
- A controller unit for mode control and GNSS data integration.
2.3. Summary
3. Design of a Single-Board Satellite
- Detection task state: In the specified detection mode, it performs atmospheric density measurements or occultation detection of the corresponding space environment.
- Data transmission state: During the satellite-to-ground communication windows, it is responsible for communication with ground stations, including data uplink and downlink. Data uplink refers to the process whereby ground stations send reconfiguration code data and telecommand instructions to the single-board satellite for storage. Data downlink involves transmitting onboard detection data and telemetry data to ground stations via the transceiver.
- Reconfiguration state: Primarily responsible for tasks involving software function changes and program execution address transitions carried out by the onboard microcontroller. This state facilitates updates to the onboard detection mode.
- Standby state: Entered when energy is insufficient. During this state, the satellite solely charges to provide power for subsequent detection tasks. Since lithium batteries are used to store energy, the specific switching of the standby state is determined based on the voltage.
- Design solar panels with front and backside-mounted patches to achieve near-omnidirectional coverage;
- Arrange the GNSS antennas in two sets of back-to-back antennas to attain near-omnidirectional coverage;
- Data transmission and communication antennas employ mature UV band omnidirectional antennas to achieve near-omnidirectional coverage;
- Implement a simplified reconfiguration using an ARM-based microcontroller (MCU) without the combination of traditional FPGA and SoC methods, offering low power consumption and miniaturization.
4. Feasibility Analysis
4.1. Communication Link Analysis
- denotes the space-to-ground communication link margin, which indicates link reliability. In real-world space-to-ground communication links, a value of 3–6 dB or higher is appropriate;
- EIRP stands for effective isotropic radiated power and represents the transmission power capability of the transmitter. It is related to the transmission of power , antenna gain , and feeder loss ;
- represents free space loss, a reduction in energy caused by the spherical spread of electromagnetic waves. It is primarily determined by transmission distance (in meters) and frequency (in Hz) and constitutes the most significant loss in the link;
- is the quality factor at the receiving end, referring to the gain-to-system noise ratio. It characterizes the system’s receiving capability. Here, is the receiving end’s antenna gain, is the receiving end’s feeder loss, and T is the equivalent noise temperature of the receiving antenna;
- encompasses other combined losses during propagation, including atmospheric loss, antenna polarization loss, and ionospheric loss. stands for code rate, represents Boltzmann’s constant, valued at −228.6 dB/Hz·K, and signifies the signal-to-noise ratio per code element, which can be found in standard tables [27].
4.1.1. Downlink Margin Analysis
4.1.2. Uplink Margin Analysis
4.1.3. Data Volume Analysis
- Balloon Satellite Atmospheric Density Data Volume Analysis
- 2.
- Ionospheric Occultation Data Volume Analysis
- 3.
- Data Transmission Capability Analysis
4.2. Energy Consumption Analysis
5. Software-Based Approach for Online Reconfiguration
6. Prototype and Verification of Online Reconfiguration Functionality
6.1. The Prototype
6.2. Verification of Online Reconfiguration Functionality
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Unit Name | Function | Requirement | Note | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Energy unit | Solar sails | Harvest solar energy | Near omnidirectional | |
Power circuit | Supply power to other modules | Includes battery | |||
2 | GNSS unit | GNSS antenna | Receive GNSS signals | Near omnidirectional | |
GNSS receiver | Obtain position, velocity, pseudo-range, and phase information | ||||
3 | Communication unit | Transceiver antenna | Send/receive satellite-to-ground signals | Near omnidirectional | |
Transceiver | Modulate send/demodulate receive signals | ||||
4 | Control and data processing unit | MCU | Mode switching Data integration | Low power consumption, online reconfiguration, and simple operations implemented | |
5 | Attitude control, propulsion, framework, thermal control, etc. | Not required |
Work Mode | Communication | Detection | Standby | Reconfiguration |
---|---|---|---|---|
Control and data processing unit | √ | √ | √ | √ |
GNSS unit | √ | √ | - | - |
Communication unit | √ | - | - | - |
Downlink | Uplink | Unit | |
---|---|---|---|
Transmit power | −3.0 | 15.0 | dBW |
EIRP | −6.5 | 25.0 | dBi |
Operating frequency | 433.0 | 170.0 | MHz |
Maximum transmission distance | 1193 | 1193 | km |
Free space path loss | −146.7 | −138.6 | dB |
Other losses | −5.8 | −5.8 | dB |
Q-factor | −8.8 | −33.5 | dB/K |
Bit rate | 9600 | 4800 | bps |
Eb/N0 | 10.5 | 13 | dB |
Receiver sensitivity | - | −117.7 | dBm |
Link margin | 10.5 | 25.9 | dB |
Work Mode | Communication | Detection | Standby | Reconfiguration |
---|---|---|---|---|
Control and data processing unit | 0.25 W | 0.25 W | 0.25 W | 0.25 W |
GNSS unit | 1.04 W | 1.04 W | - | - |
Communication unit | 2.12 W | - | - | - |
Power estimate | 3.41 W | 1.29 W | 0.25 W | 0.25 W |
Work Mode | Communication | Detection |
---|---|---|
Power estimate | 3.41 W | 1.29 W |
Period | 5 min | 90 min |
Parameters | Value | Note |
---|---|---|
Size | 11 × 0.5 × 4 cm | Stowed |
11 × 10.5 × 2.5 cm | Deployed | |
Weight | 266.9 g | |
Transmitter power | 27 dBm | |
Sensitivity | −120.0 dBm | |
Battery capacity | 3200 mAh | |
Solar panel | 12 | Double-sided installation |
Power | 3.2 W | Communication |
Size/cm | Weight/kg | Power/W | Reconfigurable | Independent Communication Capabilities | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
NJUST-1 | 10 × 10 × 10 | 1.3 | 6.8 | √ | √ |
PCBSat | 9.5 × 9 | 0.07 | 0.69 | × | × |
RyeFemSat | 9 × 9 | 0.1 | 0.75 | × | × |
StarDust | 6.5 × 5.5 | 0.03 | 0.68 | × | × |
Prototype | 11 × 10.5 × 4 | 0.27 | 3.2 | √ | √ |
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Wang, Y.; Tu, C.; Wei, F.; Hu, X. Design of Novel Reconfigurable Single-Board Satellite for Enhanced Space Environment Detection. Electronics 2023, 12, 4761. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12234761
Wang Y, Tu C, Wei F, Hu X. Design of Novel Reconfigurable Single-Board Satellite for Enhanced Space Environment Detection. Electronics. 2023; 12(23):4761. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12234761
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Yixiao, Cui Tu, Feng Wei, and Xiong Hu. 2023. "Design of Novel Reconfigurable Single-Board Satellite for Enhanced Space Environment Detection" Electronics 12, no. 23: 4761. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12234761
APA StyleWang, Y., Tu, C., Wei, F., & Hu, X. (2023). Design of Novel Reconfigurable Single-Board Satellite for Enhanced Space Environment Detection. Electronics, 12(23), 4761. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12234761