scholarly journals On the Frequency Carrier Offset and Symbol Timing Estimation for CCSDS 131.2-B-1 High Data-Rate Telemetry Receivers

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 2915
Author(s):  
Matteo Bertolucci ◽  
Riccardo Cassettari ◽  
Luca Fanucci

In recent years there have been significant developments in satellite transmitter technology to follow the rapid innovation of sensors on-board new satellites. The CCSDS 131.2-B-1 standard for telemetry downlink, released in 2012, is part of the next generation of standards that aims to support the increased data-rate caused by these improvements in resolution. As a result of its relative novelty, this standard currently lacks in-depth analysis by researchers, but it is also strongly supported by the European Space Agency (ESA) for future missions. For these reasons, it seems important to evaluate how major receiver sub-components, such as timing recovery and carrier frequency correction, can be designed and implemented in new receivers that support this standard. The timing error detectors (TED) and frequency error detectors (FED) were therefore studied on the specific peculiarities of CCSDS 131.2-B-1 in its usual environment of Low Earth Orbit (LEO). Estimators have been evaluated highlighting performances, trade-offs and peculiarities of each one with respect to corresponding architectural choices. Finally, a receiver architecture derived from the paper considerations is proposed in the aim of supporting very different mission scenarios. Specifically, the realized architecture employs a parallel feedforward estimator for the timing recovery section and a novel multi-algorithm feedback frequency correction loop to efficiently cover both low symbol rates (5 Mbaud) and high data-rates (up to 500 Mbaud). This solution represents a good trade-off to support these scenarios in a very compact footprint by pushing the clock frequency to the FPGA limit. The FPGA resources occupation on a Zynq Ultrascale+ RFSoC XCZU28DR FPGA is 5202 LUT, 4851 FF, 5 BRAM, and 21 DSP for the timing recovery part, while the frequency recovery section occupies 1723 LUT, 1511 FF, 2.5 BRAM and 32 DSP.

Aerospace ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
pp. 101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gianmarco Dinelli ◽  
Pietro Nannipieri ◽  
Daniele Davalle ◽  
Luca Fanucci

SpaceFibre is an upcoming on-board high-speed communication protocol for space applications. It has been developed in collaboration with the European Space Agency to answer the growing data-rate requirement of satellite payloads such as Synthetic Aperture Radars or hyper-spectral imagers. SpaceFibre offers a complete set of features (i.e., Fault Detection, Isolation and Recovery, and Quality of Service) that guarantees robust communication at the price of higher complexity. This article proposes an innovative modified implementation of the SpaceFibre standard: R-SpaceFibre. It has been designed to reduce hardware resources while keeping high data-rate capability and flow control. Attention is given to the trade-off between Data link layer complexity reduction and protocol features. The proposed protocol is particularly suitable in scenarios where very low bit error rate is foreseen and data integrity is not critical, for example in imaging instruments. The main advantage is a reduction of more than 40% of logical resources required per single interface. R-SpaceFibre may be a suitable solution for several applications, such as low earth orbit CubeSats, which have strict requirements in terms of available logic resources, mass, volume and cost, and more relaxed constraints in terms of upset immunity.


Author(s):  
Hacer K. Sunay ◽  
Neslin smailoglu ◽  
Tunahan Kirilmaz ◽  
Celal Dudak ◽  
Ozlem A. Sen

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pantelis-Daniel Arapoglou ◽  
Giulio Colavolpe ◽  
Tommaso Foggi ◽  
Nicolò Mazzali ◽  
Armando Vannucci

In the frame of ongoing efforts between space agencies to define an on-off-keying-based optical low-Earth-orbit (LEO) direct-to-Earth (DTE) waveform, this paper offers an in-depth analysis of the Variable Data Rate (VDR) technique. VDR, in contrast to the currently adopted Constant Data Rate (CDR) approach, enables the optimization of the average throughput during a LEO pass over the optical ground station (OGS). The analysis addresses both critical link level aspects, such as receiver (time, frame, and amplitude) synchronization, as well as demonstrates the benefits stemming from employing VDR at system level. This was found to be around 100% compared to a CDR transmission approach.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pantelis-Daniel Arapoglou ◽  
Giulio Colavolpe ◽  
Tommaso Foggi ◽  
Nicolò Mazzali ◽  
Armando Vannucci

In the frame of ongoing efforts between space agencies to define an on-off-keying-based optical low-Earth-orbit (LEO) direct-to-Earth (DTE) waveform, this paper offers an in-depth analysis of the Variable Data Rate (VDR) technique. VDR, in contrast to the currently adopted Constant Data Rate (CDR) approach, enables the optimization of the average throughput during a LEO pass over the optical ground station (OGS). The analysis addresses both critical link level aspects, such as receiver (time, frame, and amplitude) synchronization, as well as demonstrates the benefits stemming from employing VDR at system level. This was found to be around 100% compared to a CDR transmission approach.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Kerczewski ◽  
Duc Ngo ◽  
Diepchi Tran ◽  
Quang Tran ◽  
Brian Kachmar

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