2 PRCUNAR2 FCC Mission statement

0891-EX-CN-2019 Pre Coordination Document

Aerospace Corporation, The

2019-10-16ELS_239687

FCC Mission Statement

The Aerospace Corporation is a PRCUNAR-2 mission partner with the Inter American University of Puerto
Rico. The University is filing an application for their satellite. The Aerospace Corporation is filing this
application for the ground network that will communicate with them.

The Inter American University of Puerto Rico has been provided an AdvRadio to install in their satellite
and it will communicate with The Aerospace Corporation ground network. The AdvRadio is built by The
Aerospace Corporation around a Texas Instruments CC1151 transceiver chip. It operates at a fixed 914.7
MHz frequency (see “AdvRadio bandwidth” Exhibit) and outputs 1.3 W. The AdvRadio attaches to an
omnidirectional patch antenna on the satellite body with a 0 dBi gain.

When the Inter American University of Puerto Rico satellite is ejected, it will power on. However, the
radio will be in receive mode only. As the satellite flies over a ground station, the station will continuously
beacon towards the satellite. When the satellite radio hears the beacon, along with the proper serial number
code, it will respond, and a link will be established. At that point, the ground station will ask the satellite
for information, typically payload data or onboard telemetry. The satellite will respond by downlinking the
requested information. When the link is lost due to the satellite passing out of view and the satellite was
transmitting, the satellite will try up to 3 seconds to complete the last packet transmitted. The satellite will
then revert to a passive receive mode and wait for the next beacon from a ground station.

We would like to use two types of ground stations to communicate with the satellites. The first is a 5-meter
diameter dish antenna at The Aerospace Corporation in El Segundo, CA. At 914.7 MHz, it has 30 dB gain,
5 deg beamwidth and uses a complementary radio with a 9W amplifier. The second ground station is a
portable 2-meter diameter dish. This has 22 dB gain, a 15 deg beamwidth and uses a complementary radio
with a 9W amplifier. This portable station would be located in an RF quiet area that improves the ground
footprint of the ground station network. A typical satellite pass is 8 minutes long, twice per day - so the
system spends a lot of time not in use. The antenna parameters and ground station locations are shown in
the exhibit “FAA sketch and antenna figures.”

This license is being requested under 47 CFR Part 5.3 (c) for "experiments under contractual agreement
with the United States Government." The experimental radio service as requested is defined under 47 CFR
Part 5.5 as "for purposes of providing essential communications for research projects that could not be
conducted without the benefit of such communications." Aerospace will operate the ground network,
passing through commands provided by the Inter American University of Puerto Rico up to the satellite
and downloading data and telemetry from the satellite, as requested by the Inter American University of
Puerto Rico.



Document Created: 2019-10-16 10:28:38
Document Modified: 2019-10-16 10:28:38

© 2024 FCC.report
This site is not affiliated with or endorsed by the FCC