Open Access Presentation + Paper
11 June 2021 A trade-off study of lunar-earth optical communication links
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 11852, International Conference on Space Optics — ICSO 2020; 118521X (2021) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2599331
Event: International Conference on Space Optics — ICSO 2021, 2021, Online Only
Abstract
A new era of manned lunar exploration is dawning. Optical communication technology is expected to become indispensable for high-speed data transmission from lunar explorers to the Earth. This paper describes the expectations for contents from the Moon and the estimated amount of information. Then, two types of Lunar-Earth optical communication systems are discussed, including a comparison between direct communication with an optical ground station (OGS) and communication through a data relay satellite in geostationary orbit (GEO) around the Earth.
Conference Presentation

1.

INTRODUCTION

The USA (NASA), EU (ESA), Russia (Roscosmos), Canada (CSA), Japan (JAXA), and other agencies have agreed to cooperate in manned exploration of the Moon and in developing a Lunar Orbiting Platform-Gateway (hereafter Gateway) in the late 2020s 1. In a large-capacity data transmission from Gateway and lunar explorers to the Earth, a transmission speed of several hundred megabits per second (Mbps) to some gigabits per second (Gbps) will be needed. However, transmission speed of some Gbps is difficult to realize by using radio frequency (RF) technology, thus optical communications are expected to be indispensable tools for the future lunar exploration.

Like communications with NASA’s LADEE lunar explorer 2, an optical communication system between the Earth and the Moon would use uplink beacons from an optical ground station (OGS) to a spacecraft on and around the Moon and downlink optical signal back. However, such system has a difficulty that optical signals are blocked by clouds. Moreover, the coverage is also problematic. Considering the Earth’s rotation, at least three OGSs for worldwide coverage for communicating between an OGS and a lunar spacecraft through Gateway, just like as NASA’s famous Deep Space Network (DSN) 3. This would enable a high operation rate only in the ideal condition with one antenna and an RF system not affected by the atmosphere, such as the S and X bands. However, in practice, ten or more OGSs located in remote locations worldwide would be needed to establish a reliable operational optical link between the Moon and the Earth.

On the other hand, an optical communication terminal in space is not affected by the atmosphere. An optical communication terminal on a data relay satellite in geosynchronous orbit (GSO) around the Earth can reliably perform optical communication for almost half of each day.

This paper is organized as follows. Section 2 discusses the expected type and amount of mission data sent between the Moon and the Earth. This is a statement of the fundamental requirements for an optical up- or downlink (between the Moon to the Earth). The author reports on a preliminary study of optical return links, including an estimated link budget in section 3. Both links between the Moon and the Earth, with and without a data relay satellite in GEO, are discussed. Section 4 is a study of the trade-off between using several OSGs or several relay satellites. Section 5 is the summary and conclusion of this paper.

2.

EXPECTATIONS: THE TYPE AND VOLUME OF LUNAR MISSION DATA

Except for tangible samples such as rocks, sand, and dust, all extraterrestrial results are in the form of acquired data, which is transmitted from the spacecraft. Also, commands are communicated to the spacecraft. The communication and power subsystems are essential components of the spacecraft infrastructure. This section considers the requirements for optical data transmission between the Moon and the Earth. Large amounts of observational data by many kinds of sensor and video data are transmitted during a mission, but commands and other information sent to the Moon are orders of magnitude less than that. Thus, only the data link from the Moon to the Earth is discussed in this section.

The KAGUYA lunar orbiter was launched by JAXA in 2007 in cooperation with the Japan Broadcasting Corporation and was equipped with a high-definition television (HDTV) camera. Its mission was to acquire detailed HDTV images of the entire Moon 4. Beyond the scientific value of high-resolution images, high-quality lunar images have sparked considerable public interest in space exploration and science. As a successor of KAGUYA HDTV, JAXA Space Exploration Center (JSEC), an execution unit of the ARTEMIS/GATEWAY program in Japan, is requesting to equip 8K ultra HDTV camera on the lunar explorer.

Although only one HDTV camera was installed on the KAGUYA, several 8K cameras will be installed on the lunar orbiter and at the lunar surface, including the Gateway, during the international manned lunar exploration. Moreover, it is expected that multiple 8K videos will be transmitted to the Earth in real time, in contrast to the transmission of the KAGUYA’s HDTV video which was delayed twenty times by store-and-forward transmitting over the 10 Mbps X-band link 4.

An 8K camera can acquire high-quality images, but the volume of data is enormous. The generated data rate of high-definition imaging is at least 24 Gbps and can reach a maximum of 144 Gbps 5. The most often used transmission speed seems to be 48 Gbps. In this paper, the 8K high-definition television data is assumed to be transmitted at 48 Gbps. Even if the 8K video in the international joint manned lunar exploration is subject to delays on the order of the KAGUYA mission, this performance will be acceptable for raw data transmission of such tremendous data volume. In the terrestrial broadcasting (which has already begun), it is not easy to deliver such a large amount of 8K HDTV data to each household, thus it is transmitted after irreversible compression to 80-100 Mbps by H.265 in reference 6. Such lossy compressed image quality will be sufficient for monitoring and publicity on Earth, and real-time transmission will be essential.

From the above, the transmission requirements for an optical communication system for 8K camera video from the lunar mission is as follows.

  • 1. Real-time transmission of lossy compression 8K video data 100 Mbps * 5-10 ch = 0.5-1 Gbps

  • 2. Stored for delayed transmission of raw data for one channel of 8K video data 2.4 Gbps (note: 1/20 store-and-forward transmission)

Under these assumptions, only 1/100th to 1/200th of the raw 8K real image data for all 5 to 10 channels can be sent. Suppose the selection method is to check the lossy compressed video transmitted in real time in advance and choose the raw data to be sent. This approach would need many recording devices for each 8K camera for at least several hours. Another method would decide in advance that only part of the raw data would be necessary. The acquisition, storage, and transmission of raw data would be limited to scientifically necessary data.

In any case, it will be necessary to devise a method to make the recording device as small as possible by filming, storing, and transmitting partial data in a planned manner.

Furthermore, scientific data and housekeeping telemetry would be sent from the Gateway, lunar orbiter, lunar lander, and rover. Considering that 100Base-T is the currently used data bus for experimental equipment in the Japanese Experiment Module of the ISS 7, at least 1 Gbps Ethernet will be used in the Gateway Based on Gateway’s official documentation 8, Giga-Ethernet will be used as the data bus on Gateway. Therefore, we must assume that there will be requests to send data at up to 1 Gbps in addition to 8K video data.

These requirements will generate a total of 3.9 to 4.4 Gbps of user data during lunar missions. If the demand for raw data is low, it can be sent within the Ethernet’s 1 Gbps. In this case, 1.5 to 2.0 Gbps user data will be created in Lunar missions.

Therefore, a total of 3.9 to 4.4 Gbps (or 1.5 to 2 Gbps) of data needs to be sent from the Moon. Furthermore, since error correction codes and so on are added to this data volume, a modulation/demodulation speed (hereafter channel rate) of the link from the Moon must be about 5 Gbps (or 2.5Gbps). From the above, in this paper, a channel rate of 5 Gbps and 2.5 Gbps is assumed to be the transmission requirement to the Earth of the future (assuming the 2030s) lunar mission. Moreover, large data transmission capacity, seamless and real-time 8K data transmission (hereafter “real-time transmission”) will also be needed because of demands of human bi-directional communication accompany with 8K video data.

3.

PRELIMINARY STUDY OF LUNAR-EARTH OPTICAL COMMUNICATIONS LINK

In this section, the author discusses the preliminary study results of the Lunar-Earth optical communications link.

The LADEE mission applied Pulse Position Modulation (PPM) method for communication. The PPM method applies a photon counter as a receiver in a typical Superconducting Single-Photon Detector (SSPD) and realizes a less than 1 photon per bit ultra-high sensitivity receiving and demodulating. The PPM method already been demonstrated by the LADEE lunar explorer using 622 Mbps data transmission with SSPDs as OGS receivers.2 The 1550 nm band was the standard downlink from spacecraft in the Consultative Committee of Space Data System (CCSDS).9,10 However, realizing a faster channel rate than LADEE is challenging because the SSPD performance is limited.11

In the previous section, the author discussed using a channel rate of 2.5 or 5 Gbps for Moon-to-Earth data transmission. Since applying PPM at 2.5 Gbps is impossible, the author suggests that the Phase Shift Keying (PSK) method is suitable for high-speed optical links from the Moon.

A PSK optical communication system uses the 1550 nm band, commonly employed in ground optical communications systems. Moreover, PSK optical communication system also applied in space optical communication systems as follows. On 29th November 2020, JAXA has launched the GEO optical data relay node called the Laser Utilized Communication System (LUCAS, [originally the Japan optical Data Relay System, JDRS] 12). LUCAS uses a 1.8 Gbps optical link from low earth orbit (LEO) earth observation satellites to a GEO relay node with a Ka-band feeder link from GEO to the ground. NASA will launch the Laser Communication Relay Demo (LCRD) 13 in 2021, which uses 1.224 Gbps data transmission (the channel rate is 2.88 Gbps). The European Data Relay System (EDRS) 14 of ESA, under operation on orbit, equips a Laser Communication Terminal (LCE) using a 1064 nm Homodyne system for 1.8 Gbps user data transmission (a 2.8125 Gbps channel rate), with a much higher data rate in the planning.15,16 PSK will meet the requirements for transmitting a 2.5 or 5 Gbps channel rate from the Moon.

Next to methods of optical communication, the author discusses the configurations of Lunar–Earth optical links. LADEE uses optical ground stations (OGSs) as Earth side communication terminals. The author calls this type of lunar optical communication system Type-1. The Type-2 system will be used for spacecraft on and around the Moon to communicate with an optical data relay satellite on GEO. Figure 1 indicates Type-1 and -2 concept.

Figure 1

A Concept of 2 types of optical link from the Moon to the Earth

00066_PSISDG11852_118521X_page_5_1.jpg

JSEC is planning to send 8K video data from the Moon and also requests a planned Type-2 system since the Type-2 will have a higher certainty of real-time transmission. This section discusses the preliminary study results of Type-1 and Type-2 optical communications applying PSK using the 1550 nm band. The PSK method using the 1550 nm band is under an enactment in CCSDS in the Experimental Book (Orange Book) and is introduced in references.17,18

3.1

Type-1: Lunar-OGSs optical link

This subsection discusses the Type-1 lunar optical communications system. The PSK method is chosen as the communication method. Table 1 shows the tentative optical link budget between the Moon and OGS. The downlink will handle a huge amount of 8K UHDTV data, but the uplink requirement is much smaller. The author assumes that the downlink channel rate is 2.5 Gbps and that of the uplink channel is 39.1 Mbps (2500 Mbps/64). To reject sunlight reflected from the Earth (during OGS daytime operation) and the Moon (during the lunar optical terminal fly over the Moon itself), an initial(coarse) acquisition sensor (CAS, i.e. InGaAs-QD) and a fine-tracking sensor (FTS, i.e. InGaAs-QD) are equipped for a very narrow band of 0.5 nm optical bandpass filter (BPF) in this table.

Table 1.

Optical link budget between the Moon and OGS (tentative) Use only communication beam (Down 1560nm, Up 1540nm)

 Downlink(1560nm) From Lunar to OGSUplink(1540nm) From OGS to Lunar
Initial AcquisitionFine TrackingCOMInitial AcquisitionFine TrackingCOM
Wavelength(nm)156015601560154015401540
Bit rate (M bps)250039.1
Transmitter power (dBm)40.040.040.046.040.040.0
Aperture of transmitter (m)0.090.090.090.140.140.14
EIRP (dBm)145.9145.9145.9146.2146.2146.2
Distance (km)380,000380,000380,000380,000380,000380,000
Space Loss (dB)-309.7-309.7-309.7-309.8-309.8-309.8
Atmospheric loss (dBm)6.06.06.06.06.06.0
Aperture of receiver (m)1.01.01.00.090.090.09
Receiver optical loss (dB)-8.0-8.0-7.0-3.5-8.0-7.0
Received power (dBm)-61.5-57.3-55.0-70.5-77.9-73.8
Minimum Requiredreceived power (dBm)-62.3-74.5-56.5-71.0-78.2-74.5
Margin (dB)0.817.21.50.50.30.7

Table 1 indicates the following technical requirements:

A) A high-sensitivity optical receiver, with high-speed (2.5 Gbps) and low-rate (39.1 Mbps) capability. Table 1 assumes a 7 photons/bit at a bit error rate (BER) of 1e-3 during demodulation. Those values are challenging even if high performance the coherent digital receiver 19 would be applied. Especially, low-rate has not be demonstrated even in the laboratory. The coherent digital receiver should also have a high-performance forward error correction code (FEC) like DVB-S2 16,17. These technologies are not mature under space environment (TLR=3), so further investigation and development will be needed.

B) Site diversity of OGSs. It is often necessary to combine several ground stations to operate efficiently, observe clouds, and perform optical communications when a station is cloud-free. Link availability must be 99% or more with the combination of three or more OGSs (even though an RF communication system can do this with a single antenna). According to studies from Japanese researchers, considering site diversity from meteorological satellite data using three stations in Japan, the link availability was 75% even at the best location 20. They are studying the number and placement of OGSs to realize at 99% or higher link availability.

C) Optical high-power amplifier (HPA) onboard spacecraft does not have a mature technology. A 10 W (+40 dBm) optical HPA is under development.21,22

3.2

Type-2; Lunar – GEO Data Relay Satellite optical link

The following subsection investigates the optical link between the Moon and a GEO Data Relay Satellite. Table 2 shows the tentative optical link budget for one. As in the earlier subsection, the PSK method is assumed for the return and forward links. Also, channel rate and BPF of CAS and FTS were assumed as same as in the earlier subsection.

Table 2.

Optical link budget between the Moon and GEO relay (tentative) Use only communication beam (Down 1560nm, Up 1540nm)

 Return linkFrom Lunar to GEOForward linkFrom GEO to Lunar
Initial AcquisitionFine TrackingCOMInitial AcquisitionFine TrackingCOM
Wavelength(nm)156015601560154015401540
Bit rate (M bps)250039.1
Transmitter power (dBm)40.040.040.040.040.040.0
Aperture of transmitter (m)0.090.090.090.140.140.14
EIRP (dBm)143.3143.3143.3146.2146.2146.2
Distance (km)380,000380,000380,000380,000380,000380,000
Space Loss (dBm)-309.7-309.7-309.7-309.8-309.80309.8
Aperture of receiver (m)0.350.350.350.090.090.09
Receiver optical loss (dB)-10.0-5.0-5.0-3.5-8.0-7.0
Received power (dBm)-65.6-57.5-56.1-70.8-71.9-67.5
Minimum Requiredreceived power (dBm)-67.4-74.6-56.5-71.0-78.2-74.5
Margin (dB)1.817.10.40.26.37.0

Table 2 presents some technical challenges as well:

A) A high-sensitivity optical receiver with high-speed (2.5 Gbps) and low-rate (39.1 Mbps) capabilities. The issues are the same as in subsection 3.1 A); moreover, a 2.5 Gbps demodulator will be on the GEO satellite. Realizing this link is much more complicated than 3.1 A) is, where the receiver is ground-based. The return link needs to be coded for high performance. Soft-decision FEC (i.e., DVB-S2) will be decoded on the ground since it is difficult to decode Gbps-order, high-performance, soft-decision FEC onboard.

B) Large optical antenna for the GEO data relay with 35 cm diameter. 35 cm diameter or larger optical antenna is usual for passive optical sensor, since highly precise laser transmission direction control is included in space optical communication, an optical antenna must have a higher transmitted wave surface accuracy and alignment stability than a passive optical sensor. In most cases, an optical antenna on a 2-axis gimbal or mirror gimbal is driven by a motor, and an angle encoder is also needed for pointing for a counter optical terminal. Moreover, since this optical antenna is onboard equipment, it must be stiff and lightweight. Therefore, developing a 35 cm optical antenna for space optical communication is still challenging. The already developed optical antenna from KIRARI (OICETS) is 26 cm 23, and that of LUCAS is only 14 cm 12.

C) The 10 W (+40 dBm) onboard optical HPA is the same as in subsection 3.1 C).

4.

RESULTS OF THE TRADE-OFF STUDY: OGS VS. GEO RELAY

Up to the previous section, we have described the needs for data transmission from the Moon and the preliminary examination results of the two types of optical link called Type-1 and -2 when transmitting this by the PSK method, and described the technical issues for realization. In this section, we will discuss and compare the development and operation aspects of Type-1 and -2 shown in the previous section.

To realize a stable Earth-Lunar optical link, at least ten OGSs worldwide will be required in case of Type-1 as discussed in this section, or in case of Type-2, GEO data relay, will require at least two GEO nodes. At development point of view, over USD 100 million will likely be required for the initial setup of a GEO relay. Some million USD will be used in constructing an OGS; an OGSs network system will be less expensive than using a GEO relay.

At operation aspect, considering the Earth’s rotation, this combination of OGS network systems will be required:

  • - 3 or more OGSs network systems in East Asia and Oceania continent,

  • - 3 or more OGSs network systems in the Americas continent, and

  • - 3 or more OGSs network systems in Europe and Africa continent.

Each network must be over 99% available for optical links to avoid cloud cover. OGSs network operation must be done with frequent and unexpected handovers between OGSs to avoid cloud coverage. Since each handover must accompany a Pointing, Acquisition, and Tracking (PAT) sequence that interrupts communication, the OGSs-Lunar link will be interrupted often. This means that optical links using OGS do not meet the future requirement of real-time data transmission. Therefore, despite the high cost, the Type-2, GEO relay, has two advantages over Type-1, OGSs network:

  • - A GEO relay will operate under a planned schedule, including switching, since spacecraft orbit is precisely predicted. This also means that GEO relays already satisfy the requirement of real-time data transmission.

  • - A GEO relay will never be disturbed by clouds.

Concerning the GEO relay’s expense, the total cost is expected to drop as the lunar GEO relay system is developed together with a GEO optical data relay system for LEO satellites.

5.

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION

This paper discusses the required data transmission rate needed for a link from the Moon to the Earth. Results showed that a minimum 2.5 Gbps channel rate would be needed to transmit multi-channel compressed 8K UHDTV video data and 1 Giga Ethernet in the Gateway. Also discussed are lunar-OGS optical and Lunar-GEO relay satellite optical communication types, with a preliminary budget. The technical issues to be solved to realize the project within budget are extracted and discussed.

Based on the above issues, the author presents his perspective on lunar optical communication here, including his expectations. At first, optical communication between the Moon and OGS will be realized in the next ten years. The optical communication system between the Moon and OGS involves frequent handovers between OGSs under network control, so frequent optical link outages will hinder real-time data transmissions, like 8K UHDTV live video.

In the decade of 2030, the demand for 8K UHDTV video data will increase until real-time data transmission will become obligatory for an Earth-lunar optical link. Therefore, a highly reliable and stable GEO relay-lunar optical link must be realized by that date.

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© (2021) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Tomohiro Araki "A trade-off study of lunar-earth optical communication links", Proc. SPIE 11852, International Conference on Space Optics — ICSO 2020, 118521X (11 June 2021); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2599331
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