<  Retour au portail Polytechnique Montréal

Latency versus transmission power trade-off in free-space optical (FSO) satellite networks with multiple inter-continental connections

Jiahao Liang, Aizaz U. Chaudhry, John W. Chinneck, Halim Yanıkömeroğlu, Gunes Karabulut Kurt et Peng Hu

Article de revue (2023)

Document en libre accès dans PolyPublie et chez l'éditeur officiel
[img]
Affichage préliminaire
Libre accès au plein texte de ce document
Version officielle de l'éditeur
Conditions d'utilisation: Creative Commons: Attribution-Pas d'utilisation commerciale-Pas de modification (CC BY-NC-ND)
Télécharger (6MB)
Afficher le résumé
Cacher le résumé

Abstract

In free-space optical satellite networks (FSOSNs), satellites connected via laser inter-satellite links (LISLs), latency is a critical factor, especially for long-distance inter-continental connections. Since satellites depend on solar panels for power supply, power consumption is also a vital factor. We investigate the minimization of total network latency (i.e., the sum of the network latencies of all inter-continental connections in a time slot) in a realistic model of a FSOSN, the latest version of the Starlink Phase 1 Version 3 constellation. We develop mathematical formulations of the total network latency over different LISL ranges and different satellite transmission power constraints for multiple simultaneous inter-continental connections. We use practical system models for calculating network latency and satellite optical link transmission power, and we formulate the problem as a binary integer linear program. The results reveal that, for satellite transmission power limits set at 0.5 W, 0.3 W, and 0.1 W, the average total network latency for all five inter-continental connections studied in this work levels off at 339 ms, 361 ms, and 542 ms, respectively. Furthermore, the corresponding LISL ranges required to achieve these average total network latency values are 4500 km, 3000 km, and 1731 km, respectively. Different limitations on satellite transmission power exhibit varying effects on average total network latency (over 100 time slots), and they also induce differing changes in the corresponding LISL ranges. In the absence of satellite transmission power constraints, as the LISL range extends from the minimum feasible range of 1575 km to the maximum feasible range of 5016 km, the average total network latency decreases from 589 ms to 311 ms.

Mots clés

Binary integer linear program; free-space optical satellite networks; latency; minimization; satellite transmission power

Département: Département de génie électrique
Centre de recherche: POLY-GRAMES - Centre de recherche avancée en micro-ondes et en électronique spatiale
Organismes subventionnaires: CRSNG/NSERC
URL de PolyPublie: https://publications.polymtl.ca/56751/
Titre de la revue: IEEE open journal of the Communications Society (vol. 4)
Maison d'édition: IEEE Communications Society
DOI: 10.1109/ojcoms.2023.3325203
URL officielle: https://doi.org/10.1109/ojcoms.2023.3325203
Date du dépôt: 23 janv. 2024 12:31
Dernière modification: 29 sept. 2024 18:21
Citer en APA 7: Liang, J., Chaudhry, A. U., Chinneck, J. W., Yanıkömeroğlu, H., Karabulut Kurt, G., & Hu, P. (2023). Latency versus transmission power trade-off in free-space optical (FSO) satellite networks with multiple inter-continental connections. IEEE open journal of the Communications Society, 4, 3014-3029. https://doi.org/10.1109/ojcoms.2023.3325203

Statistiques

Total des téléchargements à partir de PolyPublie

Téléchargements par année

Provenance des téléchargements

Dimensions

Actions réservées au personnel

Afficher document Afficher document