(A) (B)
(C) (D) (E)
(F) (G) (H)
(I) (J) (K)
(L) (M) (N)
(O) (P) (Q)
(R) (S) (T)
(U) (V) (W)
(X) (Y) (Z)
A...
Amplitude Modulation (AM)
The baseband signal is caused to vary the amplitude or height
of the carrier wave to create the desired information content.
Amplifier
A device used to boost the strength of an electronic signal.
Analog
A form of transmitting information characterized by
continuously variable quantities, as opposed to digital
transmission, which is characterized by discrete bits of
information in numerical steps. An analog signal is responsive
to changes in light, sound, heat and pressure.
Analog-to-Digital Conversion (ADC)
Process of converting analog signals to a digital
representation. DAC represents the reverse translation.
ANIK
The Canadian domestic satellite system that transmits
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's (CSC) network feeds
throughout the country. This system also carries long distance
voice and data services throughout Canada as well as some
transborder service to the U.S. and Mexico.
Antenna
A device for transmitting and receiving radio waves.
Depending on their use and operating frequency, antennas can
take the form of a single piece of wire, a di-pole a grid such
as a yagi array, a horn, a helix, a sophisticated
parabolic-shaped dish, or a phase array of active electronic
elements of virtually any flat or convoluted surface.
Aperture
A cross sectional area of the antenna which is exposed to the
satellite signal.
Apogee
The point in an elliptical satellite orbit which is farthest
from the surface of the earth. Geosynchronous satellites which
maintain circular orbits around the earth are first launched
into highly elliptical orbits with apogees of 22,237 miles. When
the communication satellite reaches the appropriate apogee, a
rocket motor is fired to place the satellite into its permanent
circular orbit of 22,237 miles.
Apogee Kick Motor (AKM)
Rocket motor fired to circulate orbit and deploy satellite
into geostationary orbit.
Attenuation
The loss in power of electromagnetic signals between
transmission and reception points.
Attitude Control
The orientation of the satellite in relationship to the earth
and the sun.
Audio Subcarrler
The carrier between 5 MHz and 8 MHz containing audio (or
voice) information inside of a video carrier.
Automatic Frequency Control (AFC)
A circuit which automatically controls the frequency of a
signal.
Automatic Gain Control (AGC)
A circuit which automatically controls the gain of an
amplifier so that the output signal level is virtually constant
for varying input signal levels.
AZ/EL Mount
Antenna mount that requires two separate adjustments to move
from one satellite to another;
Azimuth
The angle of rotation (horizontal) that a ground based
parabolic antenna must be rotated through to point to a specific
satellite in a geosynchronous orbit. The azimuth angle for any
particular satellite can be determined for any point on the
surface of the earth giver the latitude and longitude of that
point. It is defined with respect to due north as a matter of
easy convenience.
B...
B-Mac
A method of transmitting and scrambling television signals.
In such transmissions MAC (Multiplexed Analog Component) signals
are time-multiplexed with a digital burst containing digitized
sound, video synchronizing, authorization, and information.
Backhaul
A terrestrial communications channel linking an earth station
to a local switching network or population center.
Backoff
The process of reducing the input and output power levels of
a traveling wave tube to obtain more linear operation.
Band Pass Filter
An active or passive circuit which allows signals within the
desired frequency band to pass through but impedes signals
outside this pass band from getting through.
Bandwidth
A measure of spectrum (frequency) use or capacity. For
instance, a voice transmission by telephone requires a bandwidth
of about 3000 cycles per second (3KHz). A TV channel occupies a
bandwidth of 6 million cycles per second (6 MHz) in terrestrial
Systems. In satellite based systems a larger bandwidth of 17.5
to 72 MHz is used to spread or "dither" the television signal in
order to prevent interference.
Baseband
The basic direct output signal in an intermediate frequency
based obtained directly from a television camera, satellite
television receiver, or video tape recorder. Baseband signals
can be viewed only on studio monitors. To display the baseband
signal on a conventional television set a "modulator" is
required to convert the baseband signal to one of the VHF or UHF
television channels which the television set can be tuned to
receive.
Baud
The rate of data transmission based on the number of signal
elements or symbols transmitted per second. Today most digital
signals are characterized in bits per second.
Beacon
Low-power carrier transmitted by a satellite which supplies
the controlling engineers on the ground with a means of
monitoring telemetry data, tracking the satellite, or conducting
propagation experiments. This tracking beacon is usually a horn
or omni antenna.
Beamwidth
The angle or conical shape of the beam the antenna projects.
Large antennas have narrower beamwidths and can pinpoint
satellites in space or dense traffic areas on the earth more
precisely. Tighter beamwidths thus deliver higher levels of
power and thus greater communications performance.
Bird
Slang for a communications satellite located in
geosynchronous orbit.
Bit
A single digital unit of information
Bit Error Rate
The fraction of a sequence of message bits that are in error.
A bit error rate of 10-6 means that there is an average of one
error per million bits.
Bit Rate
The speed of a digital transmission, measured in bits per
second.
Blanking
An ordinary television signal consists of 30 separate still
pictures or frames sent every second. They occur so rapidly, the
human eye blurs them together to form an illusion of moving
pictures. This is the basis for television and motion picture
systems. The blanking interval is that portion of the television
signal which occurs after one picture frame is sent and before
the next one is transmitted. During this period of time special
data signals can be sent which will not be picked up on an
ordinary television receiver.
Block Down Converter
A device used to convert the 3.7 to 4.2 KHz signal down to
UHF or lower frequencies (1 GHz and lower).
Business Television
Corporate communications tool involving video transmissions
of information via satellite. Common uses of business television
are for meetings, product introductions and training.
C...
C Band
This is the band between 4 and 8 GHz with the 6 and 4 GHz
band being used for satellite communications. Specifically, the
3.7 to 4.2 GHz satellite communication band is used as the down
link frequencies in tandem with the 5.925 to 6,425 GHz band that
serves as the uplink.
Carrier to Noise Ratio (C/N)
The ratio of the received carrier power and the noise power
in a given bandwidth, expressed in dB. This figure is directly
related to G/T and S/N; and in a video signal the higher the
C/N, the better the received picture.
Carrier
The basic radio, television, or telephony center of frequency
transmit signal. The carrier in an analog signal. is modulated
by manipulating its amplitude (making it louder or softer) or
its frequency (shifting it up or down) in relation to the
incoming signal. Satellite carriers operating in the analog mode
are usually frequency modulated.
Carrier Frequency
The main frequency on which a voice, data, or video signal is
sent. Microwave and satellite communications transmitters
operate in the band from 1 to 14 GHz (a GHz is one billion
cycles per second).
Cassegrain Antenna
The antenna principle that utilizes a subreflector at the
focal point which reflects energy to or from a feed located at
the apex of the main reflector.
CDMA
Code division multiple access. Refers to a multiple-access
scheme where stations use spread-spectrum modulations and
orthogonal codes to avoid interfering with one another.
Channel
A frequency band in which a specific broadcast signal is
transmitted. Channel frequencies are specified in the United
States by the Federal Communications Commission. Television
signals require a 6 MHz frequency band to carry all the
necessary picture detail.
Circular Polarization
Unlike many domestic satellites which utilize vertical or
horizontal polarization, the international Intelsat satellites
transmit their signals in a rotating corkscrew-like pattern as
they are down-linked to earth. On some satellites, both
right-hand rotating and left-hand rotating signals can be
transmitted simultaneously on the same frequency; thereby
doubling the capacity of the satellite to carry communications
channels.
Clamp
A video processing circuit that removes the energy dispersal
signal component from the video waveform.
Clarke Orbit
That circular orbit in space 22,237 miles from the surface of
the earth at which geosynchronous satellites are placed. This
orbit was first postulated by the science fiction writer Arthur
C. Clarke in Wireless World magazine in 1945. Satellites placed
in these orbits, although traveling around the earth at
thousands of miles an hour, appear to be stationary when viewed
from a point on the earth, since the earth is rotating upon its
axis at the same angular rate that the satellite is traveling
around the earth.
C/No
Carrier-to-noise ratio measured either at the Radio Frequency
(RF) or Intermediate Frequency (IF)
Codec
Coder/decoder system for digital transmission.
Co-Location
Ability of multiple satellites to share the same approximate
geostationary orbital assignment frequently due to the fact that
different frequency bands are used.
Color Subcarrler
A subcarrier that is added to the main video signal to convey
the color information. In NTSC systems, the color subcarrier is
centered on a frequency of 3.579545 MHz, referenced to the main
video carrier.
Common Carrier
Any organization which operates communications circuits used
by other people. Common
carriers include the telephone companies as well as the
owners of the communications satellites, RCA, Comsat, Direct Net
Telecommunications, AT&T and others. Common carriers are
required to file fixed tariffs for specific services.
Companding
A noise-reduction technique that applies single compression
at the transmitter and complementary expansion at the receiver.
Composite Baseband
The unclamped and unfiltered output of the satellite
receiver's demodulator circuit, containg the video information
as well as all transmitted subcarriers.
Conus
Contiguous United States. In short, all the states in the
U.S. except Hawaii and Alaska.
Cross Modulation
A form of signal distortion in which modulation from one or
more RF carrier(s) is imposed on another carrier.
C/T
Carrier-to-noise-temperature ratio.
D...
DAMA
Demand-Assigned Multiple Access - A highly efficient means of
instantaneously assigning telephony channels in a transponder
according to immediate traffic demands.
DBS
Direct broadcast satellite. Refers to service that uses
satellites to broadcast multiple channels of television
programming directly to home mounted small-dish antennas.
dBi
The dB power relative to an isotropic
source.
dBW
The ratio of the power to one Watt expressed in decibels.
Decibel (dB)
The standard unit used to express the ratio of two power
levels. It is used in communications to express either a gain or
loss in power between the input and output devices.
Declination
The offset angle of an antenna from the axis of its polar
mount as measured in the meridian plane between the equatorial
plane and the antenna main beam.
Decoder
A television set-top device which enables the home subscriber
to convert an electronically scrambled television picture into a
viewable signal. This should not be confused with a digital
coder/decoder known as a CODEC which is used in conjunction with
digital transmissions.
Deemphasis
Reinstatement of a uniform baseband frequency response
following demodulation.
Delay
The time it takes for a signal to go from the sending station
through the satellite to the receiving station. This
transmission delay for a single hop satellite connection is very
close on one-quarter of a second.
Demodulator
A satellite receiver circuit which extracts or "demodulates"
the "wanted "signals from the received carrier.
Deviation
The modulation level of an FM signal determined by the amount
of frequency shift from the frequency of the main carrier.
Digital
Conversion of information into bits of data for transmission
through wire, fiber optic cable, satellite, or over air
techniques. Method allows simultaneous transmission of voice,
data or video.
Digital Speech Interpolation
DSI - A means of transmitting telephony. Two and One half to
three times more efficiently based on the principle that people
are talking only about 40% of the time.
Dual Spin
Spacecraft design whereby the main body of the satellite is
spun to provide altitude stabilization, and the antenna assembly
is despun by means of a motor and bearing system in order to
continually direct the antenna earthward. This dual-spin
configuration thus serves to create a spin stabilized satellite.
E...
Earth Station
The term used to describe the combination or antenna,
low-noise amplifier (LNA), down-converter, and receiver
electronics. used to receive a signal transmitted by a
satellite. Earth Station antennas vary in size from the.2 foot
to 12 foot (65 centimeters to 3.7 meters) diameter size used for
TV reception to as large as 100 feet (30 meters) in diameter
sometimes used for international communications. The typical
antenna used for INTELSAT communication is today 13 to 18 meters
or 40 to 60 feet.
Echo Canceller
An electronic circuit which attenuates or eliminates the echo
effect on satellite telephony links. Echo cancellers are largely
replacing obsolete echo suppressors.
Echo Effect
A time-delayed electronic reflection of a speaker's voice.
This is largely eliminated by modern digital echo cancellers.
Edge of Coverage
Limit of a satellite's defined service area. In many cases,
the EOC is defined as being 3 dB down from the signal level at
beam center. However, reception may still be possible beyond the
-3dB point.
EIRP
Effective Isotropic Radiated Power - This term describes the
strength of the signal leaving the satellite antenna or the
transmitting earth station antenna, and is used in determining
the C/N and S/N. The transmit power value in units of dBW is
expressed by the product of the transponder output power and the
gain of the satellite transmit antenna.
Elevation
The upward tilt to a satellite antenna measured in degrees
required to aim the antenna at the communications satellite.
When. aimed at the horizon, the elevation angle is zero. If it
were tilted to a point directly overhead, the satellite antenna
would have an elevation of 90 degrees.
Encoder
A device used to electronically alter a signal so that it can
only be viewed on a receiver equipped with a special decoder.
EOL
End of Life of a satellite.
Equatorial Orbit
An orbit with a plane parallel to the earth's equator.
ESC
Engineering Service Circuit - The 300-3,400 Hertz voice plus
teletype (S+DX) channel used for earth station-to-earth station
and earth station-to-operations center communications for the
purpose of system maintenance, coordination and general system
information dissemination. In analog (FDM/FM) systems there are
two S+DX channels available for this purpose in the 4,000-12,000
Hertz portion of the baseband. In digital systems there are one
or two channels available which are usually convened to a 32 or
64 Kbps digital signal and combined with the earth station
traffic digital bit stream. Modern ESC equipment interfaces with
any mix of analog and digital satellite carriers, as well as
backhaul terrestrial links to the local switching center.
F...
F/D
Ratio of antenna focal length to antenna diameter. A higher
ratio means a shallower dish.
FDMA
Frequency division multiple access. Refers to the use of
multiple carriers within the same transponder where each uplink
has been assigned frequency slot and bandwidth. This is usually
employed in conjunction with Frequency Modulation.
Feed
This term has at least two key meanings within the field of
satellite communications. It is used to describe the
transmission of video programming from a distribution center. It
is also used to describe the feed system of an antenna. The feed
system may consist of a subreflector plus a feedhorn or a
feedhorn only.
Feedhorn
A satellite TV receiving antenna component that collects the
signal reflected from the main surface reflector and channels
this signal into the low-noise amplifier (LNA)
FM
Frequency Modulation - A modulation method whereby the
baseband signal varies the frequency of the carrier wave.
FM Threshold
That point at which the input signal power is just strong
enough to enable the receiver demodulator circuitry successfully
to detect and recover a good quality television picture from the
incoming video carrier. Using threshold extension techniques, a
typical satellite TV receiver will successfully provide good
pictures with an incoming carrier noise ratio of 7db. Below the
threshold a type of random noise called "sparkles" begins to
appear in the video picture. In a digital transmission, however,
signal is sudden and dramatically lost when performance drops
under the threshold.
Focal Length
Distance from the center feed to the center of the dish.
Focal Point
The area toward which the primary reflector directs and
concentrates the signal received.
Footprint
A map of the signal strength showing the EIRP contours of
equal signal strengths as they cover the earth's surface.
Different satellite transponders on the same satellite will
often have different footprints of the signal strength. The
accuracy of EIRP footprints or contour data can improve with the
operational age of the satellite. The actual EIRP levels of the
satellite, however, tends to decrease slowly as the spacecraft
ages.
Forward Error Correction (FEC)
Adds unique codes to the digital signal at the source so
errors can be detected and corrected at the receiver.
Frequency
The number of times that an alternating current goes through
its complete cycle in one second of time. One cycle per second
is also referred to as one hertz; 1000 cycles per second, one
kilohertz; 1,000,000 cycles per second, one megahertz: and
1,000,000,000 cycles per second, one gigahertz.
Frequency Coordination
A process to eliminate frequency interference between
different satellite systems or between terrestrial microwave
systems and satellites. In the U.S. this activity relies upon a
computerized service utilizing an extensive database to analyze
potential microwave interference problems that arise between
organizations using the same microwave band. As the same C-band
frequency spectrum is used by telephone networks and CATV
companies when they are contemplating the installation of an
earth station, they will often obtain a frequency coordination
study to determine if any problems will exist.
G...
Gain
A measure of amplification expressed in dB.
Geostationary
Refers to a geosynchronous satellite angle with zero
inclination. so the satellite appears to hover
over one spot on the earth's equator.
Geosynchronous
The Clarke circular orbit above the equator. For a planet the
size and mass of the earth, this point is 22,237 miles above the
surface.
Gigahertz (GHz)
One billion cycles per second. Signals operating above 3
Gigahertz are known as microwaves. above 30 GHz they are know as
millimeter waves. As one moves above the millimeter waves
signals begin to take on the characteristics of Iightwaves.
Global Beam
An antenna down-link pattern used by the Intelsat satellites,
which effectively covers one-third of the globe. Global beams
are aimed at the center of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian
Oceans by the respective Intelsat satellites, enabling all
nations on each side of the ocean to receive the signal. Because
they transmit to such a wide area, global beam transponders have
significantly lower EIRP outputs at the surface of the Earth as
compared to a US domestic satellite system which covers just the
continental United States. Therefore, earth stations receiving
global beam signals need antennas much larger in size (typically
10 meters and above (i.e.30 feet and up).
Gregorian Dual-reflector antenna system employing a
paraboloidal main reflector and a concave ellipsoidal
subreflector.
G/T
A figure of merit of an antenna and low noise amplifier
combination expressed in dB. "G" is the net gain of the system
and "T" is the noise temperature of the system. The higher the
number, the better the system.
Guard Channel
Television channels are separated in the frequency spectrum
by spacing them several megahertz apart. This unused space
serves to prevent the adjacent television channels from
interfering with each other.
H...
Half Transponder
A method of transmitting two TV signals through a single
transponder through the reduction of each TV signal's deviation
and power level. Half-transponder TV
carriers each operate typically 4 dB to 7 dB below
single-carrier saturation power.
Headend
Electronic control center - generally located at the antenna
site of a CATV system - usually including antennas,
preamplifiers, frequency converters, demodulators and other
related equipment which amplify, filter and convert incoming
broadcast TV signals to cable system channels.
Hertz (Hz)
The name given to the basic measure of radio frequency
characteristics. An electromagnetic wave completes a full
oscillation from its positive to its negative pole and back
again in what is known as a cycle. A single Hertz is thus equal
to one cycle per second.
Hub
The master station through which all communications to, from
and between micro terminals must flow. in the future satellites
with on-board processing will allow hubs to be eliminated as
MESH networks are able to connect all points in a network
together.
I...
IBS
INTELSAT Business Services.
Inclination
The angle between the orbital plane of a satellite and the
equatorial plane of the earth.
INMARSAT
The International Maritime Satellite Organization operates a
network of satellites for international transmissions for all
types of international mobile services including maritime,
aeronautical, and land mobile.
INTELSAT
The International Telecommunications Satellite Organization
operates a network of satellites for international
transmissions.
Interference
Energy which tends to interfere with the reception of the
desired signals, such as fading from airline flights, RF
interference from adjacent channels, or ghosting from reflecting
objects such as mountains and buildings.
ISDN - Integrated Services Digital Network.
A CCITT standard for integrated transmission of voice, video
and data. Bandwidths include: Basic Rate Interface - BR (144
Kbps - 2 B & 1 D channel) and Primary Rate - PRI (1.544 and
2.048 Mbps).
Isotropic Antenna
A hypothetical omnidirectional point-source antenna that
serves as an engineering reference for
the measurement of antenna gain.
ITU
International Telecommunication Union.
J...
JPEG
ISO Joint Picture Expert Group standard for the compression
of still pictures.
K...
Ka Band
The frequency range from 18 to 31 GHz.
Kbps
Kilobits per second. Refers to transmission speed of 1,000
bits per second.
Kelvin (K)
The temperature measurement scale used in the scientific
community. Zero K represents absolute zero, and corresponds to
minus 459 degrees Fahrenheit or minus 273 Celsius. Thermal noise
characteristics of LNA are measured in Kelvins.
Kilohertz (kHz)
Refers to a unit of frequency equal to 1,000 Hertz.
Klystron
A type of high-power amplifier which uses a special beam
tube.
Ku Band
The frequency range from 10.9 to 17 GHz.
L...
L-Band
The frequency range from 0.5 to 1.5 GHz. Also used to refer
to the 950 to 1450MHz used for mobile communications.
Leased Line
A dedicated circuit typically supplied by the telephone
company.
Low Noise Amplifier (LNA)
This is the preamplifier between the antenna and the earth
station receiver. For maximum effectiveness, it must be located
as near the antenna as possible, and is usually attached
directly to the antenna receive port. The LNA is especially
designed to contribute the least amount of thermal noise to the
received signal.
Low Noise Block Downconverter (LNB)
A combination Low Noise Amplifier and downconverter built
into one device attached to the feed.
M...
MAC (A, B, C, D2)
Multiplexed analog component color video transmission system.
Subtypes refer to the various methods used to transmit audio and
data signals.
Margin
The amount of signal in dB by which the satellite system
exceeds the minimum levels required for operation.
Master Antenna Television (MATV)
An antenna system that serves a concentration of television
sets such as in apartment buildings, hotels or motels.
Megahertz (MHz)
Refers to a frequency equal to one million Hertz, or cycles
per second.
Microwave
Line-of sight, point-to-point transmission of signals at high
frequency. Many CATV systems receive some television signals
from a distant antenna location with the antenna and the system
connected by microwave relay. Microwaves are also used for data,
voice, and indeed all types of information transmission. The
growth of fiber optic networks have tended to curtail the growth
and use of microwave relays.
Microwave Interference
Interference which occurs when an earth station aimed at a
distant satellite picks up a second, often stronger signal, from
a local telephone terrestrial microwave relay transmitter.
Microwave interference can also be produced by nearby radar
transmitters as well as the sun itself. Relocating the antenna
by only several feet will often completely eliminate the
microwave interference.
Modulation
The process of manipulating the frequency or amplitude of a
carrier in relation to an incoming video, voice or data signal.
Modulator
A device which modulates a carrier. Modulators are found as
components in broadcasting transmitters and in satellite
transponders. Modulators are also used by CATV companies to
place a baseband video television signal onto a desired VHF or
UHF channel. Home video tape recorders also have built-in
modulators which enable the recorded video information to be
played back using a television receiver tuned to VHF channel 3
or 4.
Multiplexing
Techniques that allow a number of simultaneous transmissions
over a single circuit.
N...
Noise
Any unwanted and unmodulated energy that is always present to
some extent within any signal.
Noise Figure (NF)
A term which is a figure of merit of a device, such as an LNA
or receiver, expressed in dB, which compares the device with a
perfect device.
NTSC - National Television Standards Committee
A video standard established by the United States (RCA/NBC}
and adopted by numerous other countries. This is a 525-line
video with 3.58-MHz chroma subcarrier and 60 cycles per second.
O...
Orbital Period
The time that it takes a satellite to complete one
circumnavigation of its orbit.
P...
Packet Switching
Data transmission method that divides messages into
standard-sized packets for greater efficiency of routing and
transport through a network.
PAL - Phase Alternation System
The German developed TV standard based upon 50 cycles.per
second and 625 lines.
Parabolic Antenna
The most frequently found satellite TV antenna, it takes its
name from the shape of the dish described mathematically as a
parabola. The function of the parabolic shape is to focus the
weak microwave signal hitting the surface of the dish into a
single focal point in front of the dish. It is at this point
that the feedhorn is usually located.
Phase-Locked Loop (PLL)
A type of electronic circuit used to demodulate satellite
signals.
Polarization
A technique used by the satellite designer to increase the
capacity of the satellite transmission channels by reusing the
satellite transponder frequencies. In linear cross polarization
schemes, half of the transponders beam their signals to earth in
a vertically polarized mode; the other half horizontally
polarize their down links. Although the two sets of frequencies
overlap, they are 90 degree out of phase, and will not interfere
with each other. To successfully receive and decode these
signals on earth, the earth station must be outfitted with a
properly polarized feedhorn to select the vertically or
horizontally polarized signals as desired.
In some installations, the feedhorn has the capability of
receiving the vertical and horizontal transponder signals
simultaneously, and routing them into separate LNAs for delivery
to two or more satellite television receivers. Unlike most
domestic satellites, the Intelsat series use a technique known
as left-hand and right-hand circular polarization.
Polarization Rotator
A device that can be manually or automatically adjusted to
select one of two orthogonal polarizations.
Polar Mount
Antenna mechanism permitting steering in both elevation and
azimuth through rotation about a single axis. While an
astronomer's polar mount has its axis parallel to that of the
earth, satellite earth stations utilize a modified polar mount
geometry that incorporates a declination offset.
Polar Orbit
An orbit with its plane aligned in parallel with the polar
axis of the earth
PTT - Post Telephone and Telegraph Administration
Refers to operating agencies directly or indirectly
controlled by governments in charge of telecommunications
services in most countries of the world.
Pulse Code Modulation
A time division modulation technique in which analog signals
are sampled and quantized at periodic intervals into digital
signals. The values observed are typically represented by a
coded arrangement of 8 bits of which one may be for parity.
Q...
QPSK - Quadrature Phase Shift Keying
System of modulating a satellite signal.
R...
Rain Outage
Loss of signal at Ku or Ka Band frequencies due to absorption
and increased sky-noise temperature caused by heavy rainfall.
Receiver (Rx)
An electronic device which enables a particular satellite
signal to be separated from all others being received by an
earth station, and converts the signal format into a format for
video, voice or data.
Receiver Sensitivity
Expressed in dBm this tells how much power the detector must
receive to achieve a specific baseband performance, such as a
specified bit error rate or signal to noise ratio.
S...
Satellite
A sophisticated electronic communications relay station
orbiting 22,237 miles above the equator moving in a fixed orbit
at the same speed and direction of the earth (about 7,000 mph
east to west).
Scalar Feed
A type of horn antenna feed which uses a series of concentric
rings to capture signals that have been reflected toward the
focal point of a parabolic antenna.
Scrambler
A device used to electronically alter a signal so that it can
only be viewed or heard on a receiver equipped with a special
decoder.
Secam
A color television. system developed by the French and used
in the USSR. Secam operates with 625 lines per picture frame and
50 cycles per second, but is incompatible in operation with the
European PAL system or the U.S. NTSC system.
Sidelobe
Off-axis response of an antenna.
Signal to Noise Ratio (S/N)
The ratio of the signal power and noise power. A video S/N of
54 to 56 dB is considered to be an excellent S/N, that is, of
broadcast quality. A video S/N of 48 to 52 dB is considered to
be a good S/N at the headend for Cable TV.
Single-Channel-Per-Carrier (SCPC)
A method used to transmit a large number of signals over a
single satellite transponder.
Skew
An adjustment that compensates for slight variance in angle
between identical senses of polarity generated by two or more
satellites.
Slant Range
The length of the path between a communications satellite and
an associated earth station.
Slot
That longitudinal position in the geosynchronous orbit into
which a communications satellite is "parked". Above the United
States, communications satellites are typically positioned in
slots which are based at two to three degree intervals.
Snow
A form of noise picked up by a television receiver caused by
a weak signal. Snow is characterized by alternate dark and light
dots appearing randomly on the picture tube. To eliminate snow,
a more sensitive receive antenna must be used, or better
amplification must be provided in the receiver (or both).
Solar Outage
Solar outages occur when an antenna is looking at a
satellite, and the sun passes behind or near the satellite and
within the field of view of the antenna. This field of view is
usually wider than the beamwidth. Solar outages can be exactly
predicted as to the timing for each site.
Spectrum
The range of electromagnetic radio frequencies used in
transmission of voice, data and television.
Spillover
Satellite signal that falls on locations outside the beam
pattern's defined edge of coverage.
Spin Stabilization
A form of satellite stabilization and attitude control which
is achieved through spinning the exterior of the spacecraft
about its axis at a fixed rate.
Splitter
A passive device (one with no active electronic components)
which distributes a television signal carried on a cable in two
or more paths and sends it to a number of receivers
simultaneously.
Spot Beam
A focused antenna pattern sent to a limited geographical
area. Spot beams are used by domestic satellites to deliver
certain transponder signals to geographically well defined areas
such as Hawaii, Alaska and Puerto Rico.
Spread Spectrum
The transmission of a signal using a much wider bandwidth and
power than would normally be required. Spread spectrum also
involves the use of narrower signals that are frequency hopped
through various parts of the transponder. Both techniques
produce low levels of interference Between the users. They also
provide security in that the signals appear as though they were
random noise to unauthorized earth stations. Both military and
civil satellite applications have developed for spread spectrum
transmissions.
SSPA
Solid state power amplifier. A VSLI solid state device that
is gradually replacing Traveling Wave Tubes in satellite
communications systems because they are lighter weight and are
more reliable.
Stationkeeping
Minor orbital adjustments that are conducted to maintain the
satellite's orbital assignment within the allocated "box" within
the geostationary arc.
Subcarrier
A second signal "piggybacked" onto a main signal to carry
additional information. In satellite television transmission,
the video picture is transmitted over the main carrier. The
corresponding audio is sent via an FM subcarrier. Some satellite
transponders carry as many as four special audio or data
subcarriers whose signals may or may not be related to the main
programming.
Synchronization (Sync)
The process of orienting the transmitter and receiver
circuits in the proper manner in order that they can be
synchronized . Home television sets are synchronized by an
incoming sync signal with the television cameras in the studios
60 times per second. The horizontal and vertical hold controls
on the television set are used to set the receiver circuits to
the approximate sync frequencies of incoming television picture
and the sync pulses in the signal then fine tune the circuits to
the exact frequency and phase.
T...
T1
The transmission bit rate of 1.544 millions bits per second.
This is also equivalent to the ISDN Primary Rate Interface for
the U.S. The European T1 or E1 transmission rate is 2.048
million bits per second.
T3 Channel (DS-3)
In North America, a digital channel which communicates at
45.304 Mbps.
TDMA
Time division multiple access. Refers to a form of multiple
access where a single carrier is the shared by many users.
Signals from earth stations reaching the satellite consecutively
are processed in time segments without overlapping.
TI - Terrestrial Interference
Interference to satellite reception caused by ground based
microwave transmitting stations.
Transmitter
An electronic device consisting of oscillator, modulator and
other circuits which produce a radio or television
electromagnetic wave signal for radiation into the atmosphere by
an antenna.
Transponder
A combination receiver, frequency converter, and transmitter
package, physically part of a communications satellite.
Transponders have a typical output of five to ten watts, operate
over a frequency band with a 36 to 72 megahertz bandwidth in the
L, C, Ku, and sometimes Ka Bands or in effect typically in the
microwave spectrum, except for mobile satellite communications.
Communications satellites typically have between 12 and 24
onboard transponders although the INTELSAT VI at the extreme end
has 50.
TVRO
Television Receive Only terminals that use antenna reflectors
and associated electronic equipment to receive and process
television and audio communications via satellite. Typically
small home systems.
Tweeking
The process of adjusting an electronic receiver circuit to
optimize its performance.
TWTA
Traveling wave tube amplifier.
U...
Uplink
The earth station used to transmit signals to a satellite
V...
VSWR
Voltage Standing Wave Ratio. A measurement of mismatch in a
cable, waveguide, or antenna system.
VSAT
Very small aperture terminal. Refers to small earth stations,
usually in the 1.2 to 2.4 meter range. Small aperture terminals
under 0.5 meters are sometimes referred to Ultra Small Aperture
Terminals (USAT's)
W...
Waveguide
A metallic microwave conductor, typically rectangular in
shape, used to carry microwave signals into and out of microwave
antennas.
X...
X.25
A set of packet switching standards published by the CCITT.
Y...
Z... |