Sending Text Messages Through Space

A FREE CSES talk for the public by Damian Bevan.

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When we’re out and about, text messages (and also voice calls, mobile data etc.) sent and received through our everyday smartphones are all routed through fixed land-based ‘cell tower’ antennas no more than a few km distant, which form what we might term a ‘Terrestrial Network’ (TN). However, in rural areas, we often lose cellular wireless signal entirely, even within highly technologically advanced economies such as the UK, EU, US etc. We then find that we are unable to send or receive text messages, even emergency messages. In the 1990s, visionary scientists and engineers developed alternative voice and messaging systems, using satellites as their ‘flying’ cell towers. We will discuss an example of such a pioneering network, called Iridium, which has operated successfully from the late 1990s right up to the present day. Today’s scientist and engineer visionaries are now proposing that the same ‘space-based’ capabilities could be added to our everyday smartphones, without needing to purchase a separate satellite-messaging device. This would allow our phone, when necessary, to switch from the land-based TN to the space-based ‘Non-Terrestrial Network’ (NTN). In this presentation we will discuss some of the technical challenges in achieving this ‘Direct-to-Device’ (D2D) satellite messaging feature, and some of the solutions which are being proposed, and even already being tested for real. One of the leading players in this space is Elon Musk’s Starlink, so buckle up for a wild ride!

Damian Bevan earned an MEng degree in Electronic and Electrical Engineering from Loughborough University in 1991. Since that date he has been working in the field of wireless technology. He specialises particularly in the areas of a) antenna array digital signal processing, b) nonlinear signal processing and c) wireless link/ network performance analysis and modelling. He is a co-inventor of digital PIM cancellation algorithms for cellular base stations. He has over 30 granted patents to his name.

Refreshments will be available from 30 minutes before the advertised start time.

CSESARU

To book your FREE place, please click Register Now from the event page on our website. Alternatively, just turn up!

When
19 September 2024 from 19:00 to 21:00
Location
Anglia Ruskin University (Room QUE 101)
Queen's Building
Bishop Hall Lane
Chelmsford
Essex
CM1 1SQ
United Kingdom
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