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1. High-Level Requirements for Airborne Relays. Support communications systems of all respondersPolice, fire, medical, power, water, roads, National Guard, Coast Guard, etc.Voice, text, and data communications for all appropriate communication systemsPossibly include commercial cellularInterface
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2. 1 High-Level Requirements for Airborne Relays Support communications systems of all responders
Police, fire, medical, power, water, roads, National Guard, Coast Guard, etc.
Voice, text, and data communications for all appropriate communication systems
Possibly include commercial cellular
Interface to public telephone networks and internet
Provide regional coverage with large numbers of relayed communication channels
Regional areas spanning 200 miles or more
Will require far more comms channels than a single ground based repeater or base station
Potentially hundreds to thousands of simultaneously active relayed channels
Support channel frequency reuse over the region by dealing with inherent radio frequency interference problems
Support any geographic region on short notice
Self-deploying in all weather conditions is best, with sufficient speed to overcome headwinds
Ability to fly through national airspace on short notice
Best to not be dependent on a high data rate line-of-sight or satellite link to a ground station
Gateways, bridges, routers, and some data servers would need to be located on-board
3. 2 System Solution Range This briefing will focus on high capacity regional coverage approaches
Lower capacity solutions are subsets of this, and the technical issues are common to all
4. 3 Typical Signal Characteristics Frequency Division Multiplexed (FDM)
A comms channel is a frequency of a specified bandwidth and modulation
The frequency is dedicated or dynamically allocated (trunked)
Base method for Project 25
Well suited for long range relay
Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA)
Proprietary systems and in consideration for Phase 2 of Project 25
Often not well suited for long range relay to due timing issues
Simplex: transmit and receive on same frequency
Transmit or receive (not both) at a given time
Direct handset to handset. No repeater involved
Half-duplex: transmit on one frequency, receive on another
Transmit or receive (not both) at a given time
Signal retransmitted by a repeater or base station
Typical land mobile radio used by public safety
Full-duplex: transmit on one frequency, receive on another
Transmit and receive at the same time
Signal retransmitted by a repeater or base station
Typical of cell phones
5. 4 Typical Signal Characteristics (2) Trunked systems
The communications channel is assigned dynamically to maximize spectrum usage efficiency. The user’s radio requests a comms channel via a known control channel when needed. All radios in the call group are sent the comms channel when it is assigned.
Common in Land Mobile Radio Systems, and included in Project 25
Modern Commercial Cellular
CDMA
Well suited for long range operation – 185 km theoretical maximum
GSM and iDEN
Both are TDMA signal types – problems for long range operation due to timing issues
GSM is limited to 35 km maximum at normal rates, and 70 km at half rate
Military Comms
Of the types that would be used for disaster response, well suited to long range operation
6. 5 Background: Land Mobile Radio Repeaters High power repeater on a tall tower allows mobile units to communicate better
Mobiles don’t need much power
High tower gets over many obstacles
F1: Mobile Transmit Frequency
F2: Mobile Receive Frequency
Gn: Group of transmit and receive frequencies assigned to a repeater Cellular pattern of frequency group assignments on a map (idealized)
Same frequency groups are separated by enough distance that the signal loss is sufficiently great that no interference occurs.
Cells are connected by landline or microwave backhaul links
Allows greater total capacity than high power mobile radios
7. 6 Airborne Repeater Frequency Reuse Challenge Airborne repeater sees many cells at once
Signal loss is much higher near the ground than well above the ground, thus limiting range of ground based radios and repeaters, but the range for an airborne repeater can be very long
Radio path to airborne repeater also has fewer obstacles (buildings, mountains, etc.)
Airborne repeater must either
use a group of frequencies that is not repeated for a very long range (limiting the number of channels for the region – low capacity)
Or
Create cells on the ground using directional antennas or antenna arrays (higher capacity)
8. 7 Frequency Reuse using Beams
9. 8 Antennas
10. 9 Antenna Arrays VHF Frequency Bands (30 to 300 MHz = 1m to 10m wavelength)
Blade antennas mounted over a large area on bottom of aircraft
Antennas combined with amplitude and phase weighting to create directional beams
Needed only if frequency reuse in VHF bands is desired
UHF
Antenna arrays would only be used in the low end of UHF (300 to 500 MHz) only if frequency reuse is desired and if the directional antennas for that band are too large to be mounted on the selected aircraft.
Advanced Electronically Steered Arrays (AESA)
Panel of individual antenna elements that are electronically controlled and weighted with amplitude and phase offsets to create multiple steerable beams from a single array
Very advanced and flexible, but also expensive
11. 10 Some Frequency Management Issues If beams used, need to steer and/or switch antennas to keep each frequency group on the same ground cell location.
Airborne relay can’t reproduce the same cellular pattern of the ground stations
Must coordinate frequency sets with local authorities to avoid interference
Desirable to have well separated blocks of uplink frequencies (mobile to repeater) from blocks of downlink frequencies (repeater to mobile)
Same as commercial cellular does
Allows for an overall smaller, lighter weight equipment package on the aircraft by using wideband technology
Fewer analog filters and power combiners
Allows many more relay channels than individual narrowband transceivers
12. 11 High-Level Architecture Concept
13. 12 Concept Points Recommend using a federated architecture
Integrate multiple vendors’ radio and controller systems rather than try to build a tightly integrated custom system that “does it all”
Keeps development and upgrade costs lower overall
Focus on Project 25 standards for public safety land mobile radio
Support of proprietary systems would be very complicated or cost prohibitive due to the number of types
Rapid add-on proprietary systems could be considered to deal with specific regions
Use Ethernet with Internet Protocol (IP) as the backbone for the system
Bridge all comms gear to Ethernet/IP (Voice using Voice over IP)
On-board controllers should be capable of operating the node without high-rate data links to the ground
For example, the commercial cellular system should be able to operate as a stand-alone network if necessary, and dynamically reconnect to the ground network as data links are available.
Encryption units and trusted gateways/filters were not shown in the high-level block diagram, but can be included
Caution: encryption can cause communications problems if not setup carefully, and it must not jeopardize disaster response
14. 13 Sharing with the Military Only those military radios and comms systems that might be needed for disaster response operations need to be accomodated
However, the military also has needs for airborne communications nodes, but with additional military comms equipment
An experimental comms relay node program is in progress, but with a limited number of simultaneous channels
Sharing with the military could offset the cost of the aircraft(s) and maintenance
15. 14 Aircraft Considerations High flying (> 50,000 feet) (e.g., Global Hawk, Proteus, U2, WB-57, etc.)
Advantages:
Above the weather allows for constant comms coverage during hurricanes and thunderstorms
Above commercial air traffic means no conflict with other aircraft and hence optimal comms relay flight paths
Better angle of incidence to the ground radios reduces radio signal blockage by obstacles and reduces ground signal loss
Disadvantages:
Generally more costly than low flying aircraft
Exposed to more radio interference
Long endurance (24+ hours) recommended
Reduces the number of aircraft needed due to less time spent flying to and from airbase
Reduces how often comms interrupts occurs when aircraft are swapped
Velocity > 250 mph recommended
Can self deploy from long distances if also long endurance
No local airbase required (airbase could be 2000 miles away)
Can combat high velocity headwinds
Weight and Power: A high capacity system will likely weigh 1000 to 3000 pounds, and consume 5,000 to 15,000 Watts.
16. 15 Summary High capacity airborne comms relay nodes are possible
High capacity can be achieved using directional antennas and frequency reuse
Low capacity has the same node architecture and radio interference issues, but simply to a lesser degree
Rapid response and all weather operations are achievable
Communications node should be standards based with a flexible interconnect backbone
Project 25 standard for public safety and public works systems
Commercial cell phone support
CDMA best suited due to long distance relay issues
Standard military radios for National Guard, Coast Guard and other military support
Commercial and military standard wideband data links
Ethernet/IP backbone using Voice over IP and data bridges