1634 lines
78 KiB
Plaintext
1634 lines
78 KiB
Plaintext
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COMMUNICATIONS IN SPACE--EDITION 5.1
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THE DXers GUIDE TO THE GALAXY
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George Wood August, 1991
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This is the text of Radio Sweden's booklet "Communications in
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Space: The Dxers' Guide to the Galaxy" edition 5.1. Printed copies are
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available for free from:
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Radio Sweden
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S-105 10 Stockholm
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Sweden
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Copyright 1991 Radio Sweden. Reproduction of this publication is
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permitted to non-commercial media provided credit is given to
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Radio Sweden and "Communications in Space".
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In the beginnning, the Great Prophet Marconi cast his bread upon
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the waves. Long, medium, even short wave--the ether was filled, and at
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home listeners tuned the bands, and heard far away signals from
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Bonaire, Motala, and Oakland.
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Then, on October 4, 1957, the world changed. The Soviet Union
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launched the Sputnik satellite, and listeners around the world tuned in
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to its signals just above 20 MHz. The Space Age had begun.
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What we find is this. The skies are filled with satellite that can
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be monitored, some with simple equipment, some with more complex and
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expensive gear. Weather pictures, satellite TV, astronauts and
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cosmonauts, computer bulletin boards in the sky, are all there waiting.
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We used to call satellite DXing the shortwave listening of the
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future. Well, the future is now. The signals are there, and more are
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coming. This guide is intended to help you tune in to signals from
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space. Equipment varies from USD 2000 for C-Band TVRO dishes and
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receivers to less than USD 200 for a scanner and discone antenna.
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I. INTRODUCTION-SATELLITES
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Communications satellites were first proposed by science fiction
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writer Arthur C. Clarke in 1945. Clarke pointed out that if a satellite
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was positioned high enough above the equator (36,000 kilometers or
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23,000 miles), its orbit could be matched to the rotation of the Earth.
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The satellite would appear to remain fixed in one particular spot in
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the sky. Such a position would be ideal for relaying telephone, radio
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and television communications. Three such satellites located
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equidistant from each other could cover the entire Earth.
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It took technology a while to catch up with Clarke's idea. In 1957
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the Soviet Union launched Sputnik, the world's first artificial
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satellite. In 1962 the United States launched Telstar, the world's
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first communications satellite. Today there are more than 100
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commercial TV and telecommunications satellites in geostationary orbit,
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and many more are scheduled for launch before the end of the century.
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In addition, there are communications satellites in non-
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geostationary orbits (such as the Soviet Molniya), weather and other
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Earth resources satellites, amateur radio satellites, and Soviet and
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American space vehicles. All are accessible, if you have the right
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equipment.
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II. SATELLITE BROADCASTING-TVRO
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Television Receive Only systems allow home monitors to tune in to
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radio and television from geostationary satellites. There are around
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3.3 million TVRO installations in North America and more than 1 million
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in Europe. These differ because of the different bands used for
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satellite broadcasting. The satellite TV bands are:
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S-Band 1700-3000 MHz
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C-Band 3700-4200 MHz (USA and USSR)
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Ku1-Band 10.9-11.75 GHz
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Ku2-Band 11.75-12.5 GHz (DBS)
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Ku3-Band 12.5-12.75 GHz
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Ka-Band 18.0-20.0 GHz
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North America
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Most North American TVRO uses the C-Band. Dish antennas are at
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least nine feet (3 meters) in diameter. Dishes and receiver prices
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start at around USD 1000 for systems without decoders, and USD 1500 for
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systems with decoders.
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Here are the North American C and Ku-Band downlink frequencies:
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Channel 1 = 3720/11730 MHz Channel 13 = 3960/12096 MHz
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Channel 2 = 3740/11743 Channel 14 = 3980/12109
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Channel 3 = 3760/11791 Channel 15 = 4000/12157
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Channel 4 = 3780/11804 Channel 16 = 4020/12170
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Channel 5 = 3800/11852 Channel 17 = 4040
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Channel 6 = 3820/11865 Channel 18 = 4060
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Channel 7 = 3840/11913 Channel 19 = 4080
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Channel 8 = 3860/11926 Channel 20 = 4100
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Channel 9 = 3880/11974 Channel 21 = 4120
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Channel 10 = 3900/11987 Channel 22 = 4140
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Channel 11 = 3920/12035 Channel 23 = 4160
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Channel 12 = 3940/12048 Channel 24 = 4180
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The Ku-Band frequencies are based on a 16 channel system. For the
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32 channel format, half-spacing is used.
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The 20 plus C-Band satellites above North America stretch from 69
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degrees West longitude to 143 degrees West. They typically carry 24
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transponders (each transponder can carry one TV channel and several
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radio channels or many voice and data channels) each with 5 to 8 watts
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of power.
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At least 6 satellites regularly use the Ku-Band and 15 others use
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the Ku-Band for occasional video. Home installations require extra
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microwave heads and low noise amplifiers for Ku-Band reception.
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American programmers, led by the pay-film channel Home Box Office,
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began scrambling signals in 1986. On April 27, 1986 a "video hacker"
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calling himself Captain Midnight (the hi-tech hero of a 1960's TV
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series) interupted Home Box Office's broadcast of the film "Falcon and
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the Snowman". He transmitted a message over the satellite link,
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overpowering HBO's uplink to the Galaxy 1 satellite. The message was a
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protest against HBO's scrambing. (The choice of the film was apt, as it
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concerns military spy satellites.)
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John McDougal, who called himself Captain Midnight. was traced to
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a Florida uplink station where he worked part-time. He was fined USD
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5000.
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Many popular American satellite channels now scramble their
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signals, using the VC II system. Modern satellite receivers come
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equiped with decoders, and TVRO enthusiasts can subscribe to the coded
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channels, either by monthly payment to the stations directly, or to
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organizations offering special packages. The system is being updated to
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a VC II+ system.
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The company manufacturing VC II decoders, General Instruments, has
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a market monopoly. Separate decoders for receivers lacking them are
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extremely difficult to find, and can cost between USD 600 and 750.
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There is a lively underground of enthusiasts hacking decoders, hardware
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and software, in order to view pay channels for free.
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Some of the more interesting American satellite channels are:
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Spacenet 2 (69 degrees West): Nebraska ETV Nework on transponder
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2, USIA on transponder 21. SCOLA, which carries news broadcasts from
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around the world, on transponder 23.
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Satcom 2R (72 degrees): NASA provides coverage of its missions and
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press conferences, including live video from space shuttle missions, on
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transponder 13. Programming is in four hour blocks, repeated during the
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broadcast day.
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Galaxy 2 (74 degrees): The CNN International feed on transponder
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1, is now scrambled. The coding system used is called Leitch, which is
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not legally available. CNN feeds can be found on transponder 5, sports
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feeds on many others.
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Satcom 4 (82 degrees): Many (coded) sports channels. The
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International Channel is on transponder 12.
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Galaxy 6 (91 degrees) will replace Westar 4 (99 degrees) in
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October, 1991. During the Gulf War, this satellite carried many feeds
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from the Middle East. CNN used transponder 20 and pool reports were
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carried on transponders 2 and 3.
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Galaxy 3 (93.5 degrees): The new Fox cable channel is on
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transponder 2. C-SPAN provides live coverage of the American Congress
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on transponders 14 and 24.
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Telestar 301 (96 degrees) and Telstar 302 (85 degrees): The ABC
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Network will begin scrambling most of its program feeds in September,
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1991 using the Leitch encoding system. Right now ABC is available
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unscrambled on Telstar 301 (East feed) and Telstar 302 (West feed), in
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both cases on transponder 10.
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Westar 4 (99 degrees): The former home of the Public Broadcasting
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Service, which has moved to Spacenet 1. Now, a couple of religious
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channels, and many feeds. The Outlaw Music Channel is on transponder 21
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at night.
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Spacenet 4 (101.5 degrees): Launched on April 12th, 1991. Three of
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the six Ku-band transponders on the new Spacenet 4 satellite have
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reportedly gone bad and are considered unusable.
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Anik D1 (104.5 degrees): Canadian stations using the Anik D1
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satellite at 104.5 degrees West are to moving to the new Anik E2 soon.
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D1 is expected to run out of steering gas by September. D1 currently
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carries relays of the Canadian House of Commons on transponder 24, with
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sound in English and French on separate subcarriers.
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Anik D2 (111 degrees): More Canadian channels and feeds. Weather
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Now is on transponder 11, with separate audio subcarriers for English
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(7.8 MHz) and French (6.8 MHz).
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Morelos 1 (113.5 degrees) and Morelos 2 (116.8 degrees): Mexico's
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Morelos 1 offers a number of local stations and sports feeds. Morales 2
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is less active, but transponder 5 has been reported carrying graphics
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reading "This is TNT Latin America", apparently a reference to Turner
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Network Television. TNT programs, coded and not available for the US
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market, are listed on transponder 16.
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Spacenet 1 (120 degrees): The Public Broadcasting Service now uses
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4 transponders--3 (coded), 5, 9, and 23 (coded). STEP Educational is on
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transponder 21.
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Westar 5 (122.5 degrees): Agrivision is a new channel for rural
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residents on transponder 17.
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Telestar 303 (125 degrees): Carries mainly TVN pay-per-view
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programming. The Fox Eastern feed is on transponder 18 and the Western
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feed on transponder 23.
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Satcom 1R (131 degrees): Court-TV, devoted only to live and taped
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court cases, is on transponder 12.
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Galaxy 1 (now at 133 degrees, after a move from 134): This
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satellite includes many popular coded services, including the Disney
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Channel, Home Box Office, Cinemax, Showtime, CNN, Turner Broadcasting,
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ESPN, the Discovery Channel, Arts and Entertainment, and the USA
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Network.
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CNN transmits the regular Cable News Network on transponder 7, and
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CNN Headline News on transponder 8. Both are usually coded.
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Satcom C5 has moved to 139 degrees West, and all Alaskan
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programming on the C1 satellite will be moved to C5 which will be
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renamed Aurora 2. C1 will then be moved to 137 degrees and the uplinks
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of network affiliates from Denver that were shifted to the Satcom 4
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satellite in early 1991 will be moved back to C1.
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Intelsat VI-F4 (27.5 degrees), generally a European satellite,
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also carries NTSC transmissions to North America from Europe. During
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the lead up to the Gulf War it was used for NTSC feeds from the United
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States, presumeably programs for American soldiers in the Gulf, on
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11.056 and 11.090 GHz.
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The transponders there were filled with feeds during the Gulf War.
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Transponder 11 is the NBC Atlantic link, transponder 14 is the ABC
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Atlantic link, which carries sound from London's Capital Radio when not
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being used for feeds. Transponder 15 is the U.S. Information Service,
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which usually airs C-SPAN I, broadcasts from the American Congress,
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while Transponder 16 is the CBS Atlantic link, with BBC World Service
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sound when not being used for feeds.
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Transponder 10 is BrightStar Communications, which carries the BBC
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Six O'Clock news at 18:00 hrs. Mondays through Thursdays, the Six
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O'Clock News is also carried on Westar 4 Transponder 12. This, and many
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other British newscasts are also carried in PAL on Intelsat VA-F13, at
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53 degrees West, on transponder 14.
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Coming Satellites
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Mexico has signed a contract for two new communications
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satellites. They are to be launched in 1992 and 1993, and besides
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Mexico, will cover the southern United States; as well as the Detroit,
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Chicago, and New York areas; the Caribbean, Ecuador, Peru, and
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Columbia. They will also reach Buenos Aires, Montevideo, and Santiago
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de Chile. The new satellites will have three times the capacity of
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Mexico's existing two Morelos satellites.
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Non-Video Signals
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Communications satellites carry much more than TV signals. There
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are also telephone channels, transmissions by international news
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agencies, stock market reports, commodity news, and hundreds of radio
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network relays.
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There are two main kinds of audio signals. Audio subcarriers are
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extra signals transmitted along with the video signal. The video
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information on a satellite transponder typically occupies the space 0-
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4.2 MHz. Subcarriers are added at frequencies higher than the video.
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Usually they will be on 6.2 or 6.8 MHz, but any frequency between 5 and
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8 MHz can be used.
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Modern satellite receivers come equipped with tunable subcarrier
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control. If a satellite receiver lacks tunable subcarrier control, the
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antenna jack of a shortwave communications receiver can be plugged into
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a jack on the back of a satellite receiver marked "video", "baseband
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video", or "6.8". Subcarrier services should be found in the 5-8 MHz
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range, generally in FM.
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There are more than 70 audio only signals available on North
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American satellites. Here are a sample:
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Satellite/Channel Program Frequency(ies)
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Satcom 2R/18 Peoples Network 5.445
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Galaxy 3/24 BBC World Service 5.40 MHz
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International broadcasters 5.22 5.94
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Galaxy 3/11 Classical Collections 6.30 6.48
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Classic Hits 5.22 5.40
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America's Country Favorites 5.04 7.74
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New Age of Jazz 7.38 7.56
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Light and Lively Rock 5.94 6.12
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Soft Sounds 5.58 5.76
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In Touch (for the blind) 7.875
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KOA Denver 8.06
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Galaxy 3/7 Southern Gospel Music 5.50
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ACTS Radio Network 6.30 6.48
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Spacenet 2/20 Radio France International 5.80
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Spacenet 3/5 Pan American Network 6.16
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USA Radio Network 6.48
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Sun Radio Net 6.80
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Spacenet 3/9 C-SAT TVRO 6.18
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Modern Country 5.76 5.94
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National Black Network 6.30 6.48
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Interlink Broadcasting 6.8
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Spacenet 3/15 KKJZ-L.A. (Jazz) 5.58 5.76
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FBN/Financial News 6.12
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Let's Talk Radio is a new program about radio and television on
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the Spacenet 3 satellite (87 degrees West), transponder 21, using the
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6.2 MHz subcarrier (daily at 6:00 PM-1:00 AM Eastern Time). There will
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be programs about amateur radio, shortwave listening, and computers.
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Howard Walker, publisher of a magazine for the satellite-TV hacker
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underground will appear on Saturdays. Other regulars include Havanna
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Moon, the well-known clandestine broadcast expert. Ironically, users of
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the VC II descrambler will have to bypass them to hear the program.
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The second system of sending audio by satellite is SCPC (single
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channel per carrier). This involves dividing up an entire transponder
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into individual non-video channels. There is both FM and single side
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band (SSB) SCPC. Most of the high quality audio (and data) services
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today use FM/SCPC. It is typically used for network relays.
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The American non-commercial radio network National Public Radio
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has 16 audio channels on the Westar 4 satellite, on transponders 2, 3,
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and 4 (which are used for many other SCPC services as well. NPR's
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rival, American Public Radio, also uses these channels. The BBC World
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Service is carried for some 8 hours a day on an APR SCPC channel.
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There are special SCPC receivers, but SCPC can be monitored with a
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satellite-TV receiver and a continuous coverage scanner or VHF-UHF
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communications receiver, although the quality may be less than with a
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dedicated SCPC receiver. TVRO receivers have intermediate or downblock
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frequencies at 70, 134, or 950-1450 MHz. If this signal is available, a
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scanner or VHF-UHF receiver can be used to monitor the frequencies 18
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MHz to either side of these channels on every transponder. Apparently
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Radio Shack's PortaVision miniature black and white portable TV set
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covers the necessary frequencies as well.
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SSB/SCPC includes many digital services offering news or business
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information. Some of these can be monitored by connecting the audio
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output of a scanner connected to the satellite receiver to a
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communications receiver in USB mode and tuned to 8.25 or 12.25 kHz.
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Fine tuning will reveal many radioteletype (RTTY) signals which can be
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monitored with the proper RTTY interface.
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Many satellites carry telephone services, One single transponder
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can hold 9000 telephone channels. These services can be monitored by
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hooking an SSB communications receiver to the 0-4.2 MHz output of a
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TVRO receiver. The telephone services, on satellites such as Satcom 5
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and Galaxy 2, can usually be found by tuning the SSB receiver between
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3720 and 4180 MHz.
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North American DBS
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Most North American satellite television has been in the C-Band,
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which is really intended for professional relays and not for home
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viewing. Many American TVRO enthusiasts have added extra low noise
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|||
|
amplifiers for Ku-Band, however. The NBC network, for example, has
|
|||
|
stopped using C-Band, and can be found only in the Ku-Band, on the K-2
|
|||
|
satellite at 81 degrees (transponders 3, 7, and 11 with feeds on
|
|||
|
transponders 5, 23, 27, and others).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are also several plans for European-style direct satellite
|
|||
|
broadcasting to North America, using the Ku-band. The first proposals
|
|||
|
came in early 1990, when General Electric announced a joint venture
|
|||
|
with 9 major cable operators to deliver 10 channels of programming
|
|||
|
using medium power in the Ku-band. They began offering the service,
|
|||
|
called K Prime (or PrimeStar), to a limited group of consumers in early
|
|||
|
November, 1990, using the Satcom K1 satellite stationed at 85 degrees
|
|||
|
West longitude. Transponders 2, 3, 4 (test channel), 6, 8, 10, 11, 12
|
|||
|
13, and 16.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Three of the channels are pay per view, the others so-called Super
|
|||
|
Stations. K Prime hoped to be in about 120 test markets by the middle
|
|||
|
of 1991.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A direct satellite broadcasting venture called Sky Cable, which
|
|||
|
was to carry more than 100 channels, has been disbanded, Sky had four
|
|||
|
powerful backers: News Corporation, which owns British Sky
|
|||
|
Broadcasting, NBC, satellite makers Hughes Communications, and the
|
|||
|
cable operators Cablevision.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
However, Hughes says it has signed an agreement with United States
|
|||
|
Satellite Broadcasting to build and run a separate DBS system by the
|
|||
|
summer of 1994. The satellite would be able to carry up to 150
|
|||
|
channels, including regular cable channels, pay-per-view networks, and
|
|||
|
high definition television services.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another system, called Sky Pix, was unveiled at the Consumer
|
|||
|
Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January, 1991. Sky Pix would offer up
|
|||
|
to 80 channels initially, in the Ku-band, using the SBS-6 satellite at
|
|||
|
99 degrees West. Using a technique called digital signal compression,
|
|||
|
the 80 channels would be squeezed onto 10 satellite transponders. The
|
|||
|
audio quality would rival that of CDs and the video would rival the
|
|||
|
quality of video discs.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Antennas would be 24 inches in diameter for most of the United
|
|||
|
States. Receivers will be about the size of a cigar box, and will
|
|||
|
handle up to 250 channels when more powerful satellites are launched
|
|||
|
later this decade. They would cost around 700 dollars, along with a 10
|
|||
|
dollar a month subscription fee. Viewers would be able to choose
|
|||
|
between 40 and 50 major Hollywood movies at any time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tests are underway now, and the system should use the odd numbered
|
|||
|
transponders between 1 and 19 on SBS-6. Sky Pix is due to be launched
|
|||
|
nationally during the summer of 1991.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Europe
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Soviet Union's Ghorizont was the first TV satellite over
|
|||
|
Europe. The Ghorizont satellites operate in the C-Band. Western
|
|||
|
European satellites use several sections of the Ku-Band for different
|
|||
|
purposes. The Ku1-Band 10.9-11.75 GHz is, like the American C-Band,
|
|||
|
intended for professional relays and not for home viewing. Home
|
|||
|
reception was originally intended for the Ku2 (DBS) Band 11.75-12.5
|
|||
|
GHz. The Ku3-Band 12.5-12.75 GHz, or Telecom Band, is also not intended
|
|||
|
for home viewing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first Western European satellites were from Eutelsat, which is
|
|||
|
made up of the PTTs and Telecom administrations of Western European
|
|||
|
countries. The intention was that individual countries would offer home
|
|||
|
viewing to their own residents over high-powered DBS satellites
|
|||
|
offering only a few channels. Astra, operated by Luxembourg's SES, has
|
|||
|
changed all that.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Astra uses the Ku1-Band for medium-powered signals, with 16
|
|||
|
channels per satellite. Astra 1A and 1B are already in orbit, both at
|
|||
|
19.2 degrees East. The similar 1C is due to be launched in January
|
|||
|
1993. Astra 1D is planned for launch in 1994, and will contain
|
|||
|
transponders for High Definition Television.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Because Astra's medium-powered satellites are at the same spot in
|
|||
|
the sky, viewers with relatively small antennas (60-90 cm) can tune
|
|||
|
into currently 32 and eventually 64 channels without expensive antenna
|
|||
|
rotors.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
British Sky Broadcasting, the company formed by the merger of Sky
|
|||
|
Television and British Satellite Broadcasting in 1990, is a major user
|
|||
|
of the Astra satellites. BSB's channels are Sky News, the entertainment
|
|||
|
channel Sky One, Sky Movies Plus, the Movie Channel and Sky Sports. The
|
|||
|
latter three are coded pay channels, requiring special decoders.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here are the channels on Astra 1A and 1B (as of July 24, 1991):
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Channel Transponder Frequency Language
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Astra 1A
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Screensport 11.214 GHz several
|
|||
|
RTL Plus 11.229 German
|
|||
|
TV3 Sweden (D2-MAC) 11.244 English/Swedish
|
|||
|
?????? (see below) 11.258
|
|||
|
Children's Channel/Lifestyle 11.273 English
|
|||
|
SAT 1 11.288 German
|
|||
|
TV1000 (D2-MAC) 11.303 Swedish/English (pay)
|
|||
|
Sky One 11.317 English
|
|||
|
Teleclub 11.332 German (pay channel)
|
|||
|
3-SAT 11.347 German
|
|||
|
FilmNet (to Scandinavia) 11.362 several (pay channel)
|
|||
|
Sky News 11.377 English
|
|||
|
RTL 4 11.391 Dutch
|
|||
|
Pro 7 11.406 German (partly pay)
|
|||
|
MTV Europe 11.421 English
|
|||
|
Sky Movies Plus 11.435 English (pay channel)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Astra 1B
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Premiere 11.464 German (pay channel)
|
|||
|
The Movie Channel 11.479 English (pay channel)
|
|||
|
ARD 1 Plus 11.493 German
|
|||
|
Sky Sports 11.509 English (free/coded)
|
|||
|
Tele 5 11.523 German
|
|||
|
Eurosport 11.538
|
|||
|
----- 11.553
|
|||
|
JSTV 11.567 Japanese
|
|||
|
----- 11.582
|
|||
|
----- 11.597
|
|||
|
----- 11.611
|
|||
|
----- 11.626
|
|||
|
TV3 Denmark (D2-MAC) 11.641 English/Danish
|
|||
|
----- 11.656
|
|||
|
TV3 Norway (D2-MAC) 11.670 English/Norwegian
|
|||
|
----- 11.685
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All channels are PAL unless D2-MAC is indicated. Pay channels use
|
|||
|
a variety of scrambling systems, although the emerging standards seem
|
|||
|
to be Videocrypt for PAL channels and Eurocrypt for D2-MAC.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The European Commission has adopted a proposal on satellite
|
|||
|
broadcasting, allowing for the gradual introduction of the D2-MAC
|
|||
|
standard, as a step towards using HD-MAC for high definition
|
|||
|
television. Existing satellite broadcasters would be allowed to
|
|||
|
continue using the current PAL and SECAM systems. But new satellite
|
|||
|
services from January 1, 1992 will have to use D2-MAC. All television
|
|||
|
sets sold in the community after January 1, 1993 with screens 22 inches
|
|||
|
or larger will have to include D2-MAC decoders.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Besides increasing the cost of receivers somewhat, there is one
|
|||
|
major drawback to D2-MAC. It restricts the number of sound channels,
|
|||
|
which could be a major obstacle for future satellite radio. It's use as
|
|||
|
a bridge to HD-MAC is questionable, since by the time HD-MAC is
|
|||
|
introduced, it may have already been made obsolete by digital HDTV
|
|||
|
systems.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Eurosport, the satellite sports channel jointly owned by the
|
|||
|
European Broadcasting Union and Rupert Murdoch's Sky Television, went
|
|||
|
off the air on May 6th, for two reasons. First, when Sky bought out
|
|||
|
British Satellite Broadcasting, it also bought a British-only sports
|
|||
|
channel, now called Sky Sports. Secondly, the European Commission ruled
|
|||
|
that the venture violated European Community fair competition
|
|||
|
regulations. Which meant that programming costs were about to go up. So
|
|||
|
Rupert Murdoch kept the British channel and pulled the plug on
|
|||
|
Eurosport. Eurosport returned to the air on May 22nd after France's TF1
|
|||
|
bought in. It now has a rather restricted schedule on Astra 1B on
|
|||
|
11.538 GHz, as well as the Eutelsat II-F1 satellite, on 10.97 GHz,
|
|||
|
which is also different from its previous transponder on that
|
|||
|
satellite. Eurosport can also be seen on DFS 1 Kopernikus at 23.5
|
|||
|
degrees East, on 11.550 GHz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The former Eurosport transponder on Astra 1A (11.258 GHz) has been
|
|||
|
showing test pictures and an announcement that a new service would be
|
|||
|
starting soon. There are are number of rumors about what this could be,
|
|||
|
including a new location for Sky Sports, a planned French RTL 2 service
|
|||
|
or the former East German DFF (Deutscher Fernsehfunk), or its new
|
|||
|
successor, Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Japan Satellite Television, JSTV, has broadcast for two hours each
|
|||
|
night on the Lifestyle transponder on Astra 1A. Since June 3rd it been
|
|||
|
using transponder 24 on Astra 1B, at 11.567 GHz for 11 hours a day.
|
|||
|
Some programs are to be dubbed or subtitled in English, to make them
|
|||
|
more accessible to European viewers. Some news is already subtitled.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Other European Ku1-Band satellites include:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DFS 1 Kopernikus 23.5 degrees East several German transponders
|
|||
|
Eutelsat II-F1 13 degrees many European programs
|
|||
|
Eutelsat II-F2 10 degrees Italian, Spanish, Turkish
|
|||
|
FilmNet to Benelux
|
|||
|
Eutelsat I-F4 7 degrees mostly Spanish
|
|||
|
Intelsat V-F12 1 degree West transponders for Norway
|
|||
|
Intelsat V-F6 18.5 degrees 3 Italian transponders in use
|
|||
|
Intelsat VI-F4 27.5 degrees European programs (BBC, CNN)
|
|||
|
PanAmSat 45 degrees mostly feeds (PAL and NTSC)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Eutelsat II generation satellites are higher-powered than
|
|||
|
their predecessors, and approach Astra in strength.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Relays of the Danish-based One World Channel have been cut back on
|
|||
|
the French-language TV5 transponder on Eutelsat II-F1, to occasional
|
|||
|
half hours, since TV5 has expanded its programming. However, the One
|
|||
|
World Channel has found a new home on Nordic Channel, on the same
|
|||
|
satellite, on the transponder at 11.638 GHz, daily 14:30-16:00 hrs.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nordic Channel is no longer relaying ITN News at 18:00 hrs, which
|
|||
|
may be to avoid competition with BBC World Service news at the same
|
|||
|
time. ITN news continues to be carried by Nordic as the last program of
|
|||
|
the broadcast day weekdays, starting sometime between 21:00 and 21:30
|
|||
|
hrs.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Turkey's TRT International has been broadcasting on Eutelsat
|
|||
|
II-F1, on the transponder at 11.181 GHz. There are daily 10 minute news
|
|||
|
bulletins in English at around 19:30 hrs and in German at around 19:40.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The launch of the Eutelsat II-F3 satellite has been delayed until
|
|||
|
October at the earliest.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are 5 European satellites currently using the 12.5-12.75 GHz
|
|||
|
Telecom band:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DFS Kopernikus 2 28.5 degrees East Germany
|
|||
|
DFS Kopernikus 1 23.5 degrees Germany
|
|||
|
Eutelsat II-F1 13 degrees European
|
|||
|
Telecom 1C 5 degrees West France
|
|||
|
Telecom 1A 8 degrees France
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
European DBS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Direct Broadcast satellites (DBS) are intended to beam a few (2-5)
|
|||
|
high-powered signals directly to homes in a single country. Viewers
|
|||
|
require dish antennas less than 30 cm in diameter. A number of DBS
|
|||
|
satellites have been orbited above Europe:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Italsat 13.0 degrees East Italy
|
|||
|
Tele-X 5.0 degrees Sweden
|
|||
|
Olympus 18.8 degrees West Western Europe
|
|||
|
TDF-1 and TDF-2 19.0 degrees France
|
|||
|
TV-SAT 2 19.2 degrees Germany
|
|||
|
Marco Polo 31.0 degrees Britain
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But the DBS idea seems to have been made obsolete by improving
|
|||
|
technology. Viewers want more than 2-5 channels and they want channels
|
|||
|
from other countries. A 60 cm Astra dish that can deliver 16, 32, or 48
|
|||
|
channels is more desireable than a 30 cm dish with access to only 3
|
|||
|
channels.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1990 saw two events which may turn out to be the beginning of the
|
|||
|
end of the direct broadcast satellites. The first was the merger
|
|||
|
between Sky Television, a major user of Astra, and British Satellite
|
|||
|
Broadcasting, which had relied on the direct broadcast satellite Marco
|
|||
|
Polo. The combined British Sky Broadcasting Network, with five
|
|||
|
channels, has continued on Astra.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The second was the French government's decision not to build a
|
|||
|
third direct broadcast satellite, to follow up the existing TDF-1 and
|
|||
|
TDF-2 satellites. The two have developed faults which have reduced the
|
|||
|
number of usable channels. Instead, French Minister for Post,
|
|||
|
Communications, and Space Paul Quiles says the satellites will be
|
|||
|
replaced in due course by a new generation of spacecraft.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In early 1991 the Olympus satellite, nominally at 18.8 degrees
|
|||
|
West, began drifting out of control, around 5 degrees a day. The
|
|||
|
Mission Recovery Team reestablished contact on June 19th. By early July
|
|||
|
Olympus had gone as far as 140 degrees East and was being controlled
|
|||
|
from Perth, Australia. The plan is to let it continue to drift until it
|
|||
|
can be controlled by the American space agency NASA from California.
|
|||
|
The problem has stopped relays of programs from the BBC, Italy's RAI,
|
|||
|
and the European educational broadcasting channel Eurostep.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
With Germany considering dropping use of TV-SAT, it seems the
|
|||
|
future is bleak for direct broadcast satellites in Europe.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Eutelsat's answer to Astra is Europesat, a series of high-powered
|
|||
|
satellites being called "second generation DBS". Six of the 8 countries
|
|||
|
with DBS allocations at 19 degrees West (France, Germany, Austria, the
|
|||
|
Netherlands, Italy, and Switzerland), along with three others
|
|||
|
(Portugal, Sweden, and Yugoslavia) have signed a memorandum of
|
|||
|
understanding. Europesat will consist of three satellites, plus one in-
|
|||
|
orbit back-up, all located at 19 degrees West. Together they will carry
|
|||
|
36 channels, in either PAL, Secam, MAC, or HD-MAC.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Medium quality reception should be possible with 25 to 30 cm dish
|
|||
|
antennas. The first Europesat satellite is expected to be launched in
|
|||
|
1996, with new launches every six months. Since the 9 countries between
|
|||
|
them are seeking between 39 and 54 channels, it is possible that more
|
|||
|
satellites will be placed in another slot at 29 degrees East.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Radio
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are nearly 50 radio channels on European satellites, using
|
|||
|
audio subcarriers, slowly approaching the number in North America.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Astra is a radio pioneer, with many interesting stations, both new
|
|||
|
channels and established international broadcasters. There are music
|
|||
|
stations, such as Sky Radio, Radio Luxembourg, and Holland's Radio
|
|||
|
Tien. Sunrise Radio is a commercial medium wave station in London for
|
|||
|
the Indian community there, now on satellite as well.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The famous offshore pirate Radio Caroline has been testing on the
|
|||
|
Lifestyle transponder on Astra 1A. Radio Caroline's management is now
|
|||
|
negotiating for the subcarrier slot, 7.38 MHz. The Caroline
|
|||
|
organization plans to keep the flavor of the offshore pirate Radio
|
|||
|
Caroline alive by prerecording programs on board their ship, the MV
|
|||
|
Ross Revenge, still anchored in the North Sea.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
List of Radio stations broadcasting from the ASTRA satelites
|
|||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Channel Station Sub-carrier TV station Frequency
|
|||
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2 Deutsche Welle 7.38 MHz RTL-Plus 11.229 GHz
|
|||
|
2 " " " 7.56 MHz " " " 11.229 GHz
|
|||
|
5 Chiltern Network 7.74 MHz Lifestyle 11.273 GHz
|
|||
|
6 Deutschlandfunk 7.38/7.56 Mhz SAT 1 11.288 GHz
|
|||
|
6 " " " 7.74 MHz " 11.288 GHz
|
|||
|
6 " " " 7.92 MHz " 11.288 GHz
|
|||
|
8 SKY Radio 7.38/7.56 MHz SKY ONE 11.318 GHz
|
|||
|
8 HIT Radio 7.74/7.92 MHz " " " 11.318 GHz
|
|||
|
9 Opus Radio 7.38/7.56 MHz Teleclub 11.332 GHz
|
|||
|
13 RTL-International 7.38/7.56 MHz RTL-4 11.391 GHz
|
|||
|
13 RTL-4 (Dutch) 7.74/7.92 MHz " 11.391 GHz
|
|||
|
14 Star*Sat Radio 7.38/7.56 MHz PRO7 11.406 GHz
|
|||
|
14 Radioropa 7.74/7.92 MHz " 11.406 GHz
|
|||
|
15 Power FM 7.38/7.56 MHz MTV Europe 11.421 GHz
|
|||
|
16 Sky Radio 7.92 MHz Sky Movies Plus 11.436 GHz
|
|||
|
18 Holland FM 7.38 MHz The Movie Channel 11.479 GHz
|
|||
|
18 Sunrise Radio 7.56 MHz " " " 11.479 GHz
|
|||
|
21 RTL Radio (German) 7.38/7.56 MHz Tele
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The above list was originally compiled by G0DFP and has been
|
|||
|
updated to July 20th 1991.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Radio Sweden plans to begin broadcasts over the Astra 1A
|
|||
|
satellite, starting by April, 1992. Broadcasts would include relays of
|
|||
|
Swedish Radio's domestic programs, as well as Radio Sweden programs in
|
|||
|
English, German, French, and Spanish.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Besides reaching European satellite dish owners, broadcasts would
|
|||
|
be aimed at radio stations in Europe currently receiving Radio Sweden
|
|||
|
transcription programs. Swedish programs would be intended as well for
|
|||
|
embassies, Swedish companies, and hotels with many Swedish guests in
|
|||
|
the Mediterranean region.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A British-based pan-European satellite radio station is to be
|
|||
|
launched in August, 1991. Quality Europe FM will be carried on one of
|
|||
|
the BSB transponders on Astra. It will concentrate on an audience of 35
|
|||
|
years and up, and will offer an information format, with news from CNN
|
|||
|
and Reuters.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Other audio subcarriers can be found on:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DFS Kopernikus 1 (German channels)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Eutelsat II-F1 (BBC World Service, VOA, Deutsche Welle, Sky Radio, etc)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Eutelsat II-F2 (Eurojazz, Spanish channels)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Eutelsat I-F4 (Spanish channels)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Intelsat VA-F12 (Norwegian channels)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Telecom 1C, TDF-1 (French channels)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Intelsat VI-F4 (BBC and CNN)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Coming Channels
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On October 23, 1991, the new Baltic University will begin
|
|||
|
broadcasts via Tele-X to 50 universities in Leningrad, the Soviet
|
|||
|
Baltic Republics, and Poland. The programs will be courses about
|
|||
|
environmental problems in the Baltic Sea region, and universities in
|
|||
|
Copenhagen; Uppsala, Sweden; and the Finnish city of Turku are
|
|||
|
involved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A proposed British "adult" channel called After 12 has shown
|
|||
|
interest in leasing a transponder on Astra 1B.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Middle East Broadcasting is scheduled to start programming to
|
|||
|
Arabic speakers in Europe by the end of 1991. It is already sending
|
|||
|
test pictures on Eutelsat II-F1 at 13 degrees East, on 11.554 GHz. It
|
|||
|
will transmit news on a 24 hour basis along the lines of CNN. A second
|
|||
|
channel on Arabsat will broadcast to North Africa and Arab countries.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The European Broadcasting Union has announced plans to start a
|
|||
|
news channel called EuroNews, to challenge Sky News and CNN. It would
|
|||
|
begin with nine hours a day of programming by late 1991 or early 1992,
|
|||
|
and expand to 24 hour a day coverage in 1993. Visual images will have
|
|||
|
priority, with off-screen commentaries in different languages: English,
|
|||
|
French, German, Italian, and Spanish. Extensive use will be made of
|
|||
|
graphics and subtitling.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EuroNews will be supplied by 12 satellite signals and four
|
|||
|
terrestrial signals. The final signal will be transmitted on Eutelsat
|
|||
|
2-F1 at 13 degrees West. There will be 5 mono sound subcarriers
|
|||
|
offering the various language channels.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Twelve European broadcasters would be involved, but not Britain or
|
|||
|
the Scandinavian countries.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
France's Canal Plus is involved in a project with the over-the-air
|
|||
|
broadcaster TF1 to launch an all-news channel in French. That service
|
|||
|
would be launched in mid-1992 at the earliest.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
German broadcasting authorities hope to turn the television
|
|||
|
section of an American-founded radio station in Berlin into an
|
|||
|
international satellite TV channel. Germany's 16 states have proposed
|
|||
|
merging RIAS-TV with the official German international broadcaster
|
|||
|
Deutsche Welle. RIAS stands for "Radio in the American Sector" and it
|
|||
|
was founded after World War II by US occupation officials in Berlin.
|
|||
|
RIAS-TV was launched in 1988.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Britain may start a satellite-TV channel with broadcasts from the
|
|||
|
British parliament. The leader of the House, John MacGregor, has told
|
|||
|
the Commons that 4 million people could receive the broadcasts by the
|
|||
|
end of the decade. He added that the service may be broadcast on one of
|
|||
|
the BSB transponders on the Marco Polo satellite. The new service,
|
|||
|
however, initially would be relayed by a lower-powered Intelsat
|
|||
|
satellite, for relay over cable-TV systems. MacGregor indicated that
|
|||
|
the parliament channel could be in operation before October, 1991 to
|
|||
|
coincide with the opening of parliament.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Meanwhile, there may be more customers for Marco Polo, which is
|
|||
|
still transmitting BSB programs in parallel with Astra 1A and 1B. The
|
|||
|
Indian channel Indra Dnush, currently on some British cable systems, is
|
|||
|
considering using a Marco Polo transponder.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Italian fianancier who engineered the controversial take over
|
|||
|
of the MGM film in 1990 is planning to launch a European channel based
|
|||
|
in Italy to be called MGM-TV. Programming would be provided by the
|
|||
|
famous MGM film library.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first all-Spanish communications satellite, Hispasat, is to go
|
|||
|
into orbit in August, 1992. A second satellite is to follow in 1993.
|
|||
|
Main users will be Spanish National Television and the state
|
|||
|
telecommunications company.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Soviet Union plans to open its skies and offer satellite time
|
|||
|
in a DBS system which would use satellites 5 times bigger than any
|
|||
|
others in geostationary orbit. Called Marathon Energy, the first
|
|||
|
satellite would be launched by the Soviet space shuttle by 1994. It
|
|||
|
would provide 5 TV channels, as well as transponders for telephone and
|
|||
|
mobile telephone communications. Three satellites would cover the
|
|||
|
Soviet Union, while a fourth could cover other parts of the world.
|
|||
|
Receiver dishes would be about 50 cm in diameter.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Asia, the Pacific, and the Third World
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are 27 geostationary satellites in orbit above Asia and the
|
|||
|
Pacific. Four are Soviet satellites, 7 are from Intelsat. The Intelsat
|
|||
|
satellites provide a variety of C-Band services. Intelsat V-F8 at 180
|
|||
|
degrees East relays Australia's ABC, as well as Japan's JISO, and the
|
|||
|
American CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, and AFRTS in NTSC. There's an RFO-France
|
|||
|
relay in SECAM and ITN/BBC news feeds to New Zealand in PAL.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Intelsat V-F5 (66 degrees East) carries USIA/Worldnet, three
|
|||
|
Chinese channels, as well as television from Malaysia, Zaire, Ethiopia
|
|||
|
and Bophuthatswana. (There are also Ku-Band transponders for Iran,
|
|||
|
Turkey, and the American AFRTS, directed to Turkey). VA-F11 (63
|
|||
|
degrees) carries transponders for South Africa, Algeria, Sudan,
|
|||
|
Ethiopia, and Thailand, as well as an Italian Ku-Band channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are Ghorizonts at 40, 53, and 90 degrees East. Each has 6 C-
|
|||
|
Band transponders, and the latter two have experimental Ku-Band
|
|||
|
transponders as well. CNN Headline News can be found on Ghorizont 12 at
|
|||
|
40 degrees, on 3825 MHz, in PAL.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Soviet satellite Ekran at 99 degrees East carries a powerful
|
|||
|
relay of the Orbita III program, on 714 MHz. This is between Japanese
|
|||
|
channels 53 and 54 and European channels 51 and 52, and is reported to
|
|||
|
be available all over Asia.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Japan has been a pioneer in direct satellite broadcasting, as
|
|||
|
might be expected from its consumer electronics industry. The world's
|
|||
|
first direct broadcast satellite was Japan's BS-2. It's successor, BS-
|
|||
|
3A, is positioned at 110 degrees East. It carries three 12 GHz
|
|||
|
transponders, and one wide-band data channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On April 18, 1991 the American rocket carrying a new satellite was
|
|||
|
lost. There were fears this would mean the loss of one of the country's
|
|||
|
direct satellite television channels. But the gap will be filled by
|
|||
|
juggling channels on the two existing satellites, 2-B and 3-A. BS-3B is
|
|||
|
due to be launched on August 16, 1991. Another satellite, called BS-
|
|||
|
3H, is to be launched in fiscal 1992.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Meanwhile, the November, 1991 launch of Japan's Superbird B
|
|||
|
satellite has been rescheduled to January, 1992. This satellite was
|
|||
|
supposed to replace Superbird A, which was knocked out of service in
|
|||
|
December, 1990. Eight TV broadcasters have moved to other satellites.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Other Japanese satellites are JCSat 1 and 2 (at 150 and 154
|
|||
|
degrees respectively) each with 32 Ku-Band transponders. CS-3a and CS-
|
|||
|
3b Sakura (132 and 136 degrees) each carry 2 C-Band and 10 Ka-Band
|
|||
|
(17.7-19.45 GHz) transponders.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Australia's 3 Aussats are located at 156, 160, and 164 degrees
|
|||
|
East. They provide television to the Australian Outback, New Zealand,
|
|||
|
and the Pacific, using B-MAC. Each satellites has 15 Ku-Band
|
|||
|
transponders in the 12.25-12.75 GHz range.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In many ways, Third World countries have more to gain from
|
|||
|
satellite communications than do the developed nations. Arthur C.
|
|||
|
Clarke, who first proposed artificial satellites, is today a citizen of
|
|||
|
Sri Lanka, and a dedicated advocate of satellites for Third World
|
|||
|
development. As one of Sri Lanka's representatives at a UNESCO
|
|||
|
conference in 1981, Clarke said:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"To many developing countries, satellites are ESSENTIAL; they will
|
|||
|
make it unnecessary to build the elaborate and expensive ground systems
|
|||
|
required in the past. Indeed, to many countries, satellites could be a
|
|||
|
matter of life and death."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Many Third World countries use the Intelsat system for their
|
|||
|
communications and television relays. Many countries also contribute to
|
|||
|
CNN's "International Hour". At a gathering of participating countries
|
|||
|
in Atlanta in 1990, CCN founder Ted Turner said he wished he could
|
|||
|
afford to give satellite equipment to every Third World country. He did
|
|||
|
give equipment to Vietnam, he said, because he felt bad about the way
|
|||
|
the United States had treated Vietnam.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
India began using an American satellite for rural education. The
|
|||
|
first Insat satellite was launched in 1983. Insat 1D at 74 degrees East
|
|||
|
has 12 transponders for telecommunications and 2 high-power national
|
|||
|
coverage TV broadcast transponders. India's Doordarshan and All India
|
|||
|
Radio also lease 4 transponders on Arabsat 1B (26 degrees East).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Indonesia has been active in acquiring its Palapa C-Band
|
|||
|
satellites. Palapa B2P is at 113 degrees East, Palapa B1 at 108
|
|||
|
degrees. Both have 24 transponders. B2P provides television for
|
|||
|
Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines as well as Indonesia.
|
|||
|
Transmissions to the Philippines are in NTSC, others are in PAL. Some
|
|||
|
transponders carry SCPC audio.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
China's DFH2-A1 at 87.5 degrees East carries 4 C-Band
|
|||
|
transponders. DFH2-A2 at 110.5 degrees was launched in late 1988. It
|
|||
|
also carries 4 transponders. SCPC traffic used by the Chinese military
|
|||
|
has been transfered from DFH2-A1. Other transponders are to come into
|
|||
|
use when Chinese television moves from Intelsat V-F7 at 66 degrees.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Asia No. 1, the first commercial satellite designed for Asian
|
|||
|
countries, was launched in April, 1990 by a Chinese Long March rocket.
|
|||
|
The satellite was originally called Westar 6, and was launched by the
|
|||
|
American space shuttle in 1984. It failed to lift into geostationary
|
|||
|
orbit, and was retrieved by a special shuttle mission in 1985, when it
|
|||
|
was sold to the AsiaSat consortium. Now located at 105.5 degrees East,
|
|||
|
it carries 24 C-Band transponders, of which 15 have been leased by Hong
|
|||
|
Kong, Burma, Pakistan, and Mongolia.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Star-TV, operated by Hong Kong's HutchVision, is broadcasting 24
|
|||
|
hours a day on Asia No. 1. By the end of 1991, the system is to be
|
|||
|
operating three channels.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HutchVision has announced it is buying Mandarin language
|
|||
|
programming from Asian Television, ATV. The primary audience will be in
|
|||
|
Hong Kong, Thailand, and Taiwan. HutchVision has also signed agreements
|
|||
|
for its planned sports and music video channels. The music channel will
|
|||
|
be an Asian version of MTV, due to begin broadcasting in September,
|
|||
|
1991.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Two more channels are to be added next year. HutchVision says more
|
|||
|
than 40 countries from Egypt to Japan will be able to receive the
|
|||
|
broadcasts. Plans are going ahead for an Asia No. 2, which may be
|
|||
|
launched in 1994.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Cable News Network is facing problems with its feed to the Far
|
|||
|
East. The Intelsat used by CNN in Asia is entering the final stage of
|
|||
|
its lifetime, and signals are growing weaker. Analysts say that hotel
|
|||
|
guests, who account for about one-third of the network's viewers in
|
|||
|
Asia, could notice a decline in the quality of signals in the coming
|
|||
|
months.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The launch of a replacement Intelsat failed last year. CNN is
|
|||
|
faced with the alternative of waiting until a new series of Intelsat
|
|||
|
satellites become available in 1994, or switching to another satellite.
|
|||
|
The two possibilities are Asia No. 1 or the Indonesian government's
|
|||
|
Palapa. CNN says its talked with both organizations. HutchVision, which
|
|||
|
holds exclusive broadcasting rights on Asia No. 1, says it would be
|
|||
|
willing to let CNN use the satellite, in exchange for rights to
|
|||
|
integrate CNN programming into its planned satellite TV news channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But Hutchvision's reliance on advertising would also mean a change
|
|||
|
in CNN's subscription-based strategy as a primary revenue source.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The drawback to using Palapa, is that it only broadcasts to the
|
|||
|
southern portions of the Asian-Pacific region. Most of CNN's Asian
|
|||
|
audience is in Japan.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arabsat 1B at 26 degrees East is a reserve for 1A (19 degrees).
|
|||
|
Both have 25 C-Band transponders, as well as one strong S-Band
|
|||
|
transponder around 2600 MHz. 1A is used to relay programs from Morocco,
|
|||
|
Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Mauretania. One transponder is used for Inter-
|
|||
|
Arab news, co-ordinated via Tunis. The Gulf War brought relays of
|
|||
|
Egyptian television to the Gulf.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A third Arab communications satellite is scheduled to be lanuched
|
|||
|
from French Guiana in December, 1991.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Israel's Amos, carrying 6 or 7 Ku-Band transponders, is due to be
|
|||
|
launched, probably from French Guyana, in 1994. Turkey's first 12
|
|||
|
channel Turksat is due to be launched as well in 1994, with a second
|
|||
|
satellite 6 to 12 months later.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Asian Satellite Radio
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Japan is launching the world's first nationwide digital radio
|
|||
|
system, using BS-3A. The broadcasts will use pulse code modulation, or
|
|||
|
PCM, matching the quality of compact disks, and free from the usual
|
|||
|
radio hissing noises.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tests have already been carried out via satellite, and full
|
|||
|
services were scheduled to begin in April, 1991. There are to be around
|
|||
|
18 stations.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nippon Television Network and Mitsubishi have joined to launch a
|
|||
|
satellite broadcast music service using digital pulse code modulation.
|
|||
|
PCM Japan hopes to start providing the service in April, 1992. Three
|
|||
|
channels will be available for subscription, to listeners with
|
|||
|
satellite dishes and receivers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Global Satellite Channels
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The war in Vietnam was called the first television war, with the
|
|||
|
pictures of violence and horror on American TV screens night after
|
|||
|
night contributing to the feelings that fed the growing peace movement.
|
|||
|
The conflict in the Gulf was the first live TV war, broadcast around
|
|||
|
the world by satellite, and underlining the arrival of the first global
|
|||
|
TV broadcaster, the Cable News Network, CNN.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arthur C. Clarke, the English visionary who first proposed
|
|||
|
communications satellites in 1945, watched what he called "the first's
|
|||
|
first satellite war" from his home in Sri Lanka.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In an interview with Reuters, Clarke said communications is power,
|
|||
|
and the forces unleased by satellites in the Gulf War have the
|
|||
|
potential for making the world a safer place. The further development
|
|||
|
of a satellite communications network with the wider availability of
|
|||
|
telephone, fax, and television, Clarke says, will make us one global
|
|||
|
family, whether we like it or not.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The conflict in the Gulf was also a boost for the BBC's long
|
|||
|
discussed plans for World Service Television, which became a reality on
|
|||
|
March 11th, 1991, taking over the existing BBC-TV Europe service on
|
|||
|
Intelsat VI-F4. A half hour bulletin of global news is being broadcast
|
|||
|
daily at 19:00 hrs UTC. Where CNN claims to be around the world in 30
|
|||
|
minutes, and is usually around the USA in 30 minutes, BBC World Service
|
|||
|
TV news really is around the world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The service is to expand. There will probably be more newscasts,
|
|||
|
and editions in other languages to be marketed to broadcasters, cable
|
|||
|
channels, and other users. The service will also be expanded to other
|
|||
|
parts of the world on other satellites.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are other alternatives to the Cable News Network in the
|
|||
|
pipeline. Claiming that CNN is forcing US news on the rest of the
|
|||
|
world, the head of Japan's NHK says he wants to create the Global News
|
|||
|
Network with other broadcasters from around the world. Under the plan,
|
|||
|
broadcasters from Asia, Europe, and North America would be responsible
|
|||
|
for three 8 hour daily segments each focusing on their own region.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
European relays are to begin on Astra 1B before the end of 1991.
|
|||
|
The network would be based in New York.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
International Radio Broadcasting By Satellite
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
While the BBC, Radio France, and Deutsche Welle can put out 24
|
|||
|
hour services in their native languages by satellite, services which
|
|||
|
can be relayed over cable networks, it's much harder for small
|
|||
|
broadcasters. When Radio Sweden starts its satellite channel, what
|
|||
|
cable system would relay it, with a series of programs in varying
|
|||
|
languages?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What's needed is for many international broadcasters to book a
|
|||
|
series of satellite radio channels, one for English, one for French,
|
|||
|
one for German, etc. Then they would take turns, and cable operators in
|
|||
|
Britain, for example, could offer one channel with alternating
|
|||
|
programs, say from Sweden, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany,
|
|||
|
Austria, and so on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Uwe Schoop, head of the Swedish Service at Deutschlandfunk, has
|
|||
|
been working on such a plan. He calls it time-sharing, and it may be
|
|||
|
the only viable future for many international broadcasters.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are some other options farther into the future. An American
|
|||
|
company called the International Radio Satellite Corporation, or
|
|||
|
RadioSat, has announced plans to create a worldwide direct broadcast
|
|||
|
satellite service for international broadcasters. Called DBS-Audio (or
|
|||
|
DBS-A), the aim of the enterprise is to ultimately replace shortwave
|
|||
|
broadcasting.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
RadioSat plans to launch three high-powered satellites, each with
|
|||
|
more than 200 channels to be leased to international broadcasting
|
|||
|
organizations. RadioSat says the Voice of America, BBC World Service,
|
|||
|
Radio Moscow and 5 other broadcasters have expressed interest and
|
|||
|
support.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The planned downlink frequencies would be in the L-Band, between
|
|||
|
1429 and 1525 MHz. The upcoming 1992 World Administrative Radio
|
|||
|
Conference (WARC 92) will discuss the reallocation of frequencies,
|
|||
|
including DBS-A. Some countries would like to see DBS-A to use the S-
|
|||
|
Band, which is around 2.5 GHz. RadioSat prefers the L-Band because of
|
|||
|
cheaper technology and better propagation. RadioSat's Dick Marsten says
|
|||
|
he believes small portable receivers the size and cost of current short
|
|||
|
wave receivers would be possible for L-Band reception.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
RadioSat hopes to launch the first of its three spacecraft in
|
|||
|
1995.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Worldspace, based in Washingtion, DC, has similar aims. Their
|
|||
|
first project would be a service called Afrispace, which would
|
|||
|
broadcast 9 digital radio channels to Africa. They want to use the band
|
|||
|
between 1470 and 1530 MHz to reach portable receivers in Africa and the
|
|||
|
Middle East. Afristar 1 would be located at 12 degrees West.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another company called Satellite CD Radio hopes to broadcast
|
|||
|
directly to motor vehicles through-out North America, with CD quality
|
|||
|
digital transmissions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All of these plans depend on WARC 92. Nor do receivers exist yet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
III. WEATHER, NAVIGATION, EARTH RESOURCES AND RESEARCH SATELLITES
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If TVRO is the satellite version of shortwave broadcast DXing,
|
|||
|
these satellites provide the equivalent of utility monitoring and
|
|||
|
scanning. The equipment required can be much less elaborate and much
|
|||
|
less expensive than for TVRO.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WEFAX or Weather Facsimile, is the method used to transmit
|
|||
|
photographs and weather satellite maps via radio and telephone lines.
|
|||
|
The satellite version is known as APT. There are many low orbit weather
|
|||
|
satellites using this system in the 136-138 MHz band.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some of the active satellites that can be monitored are the
|
|||
|
American NOAA, along the Soviet Meteor and Okean, and Chinese Feng Yu:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NOAA 9 and 11.................137.620 MHz
|
|||
|
NOAA 10 and 12...........137.500 MHz
|
|||
|
Okean 2..................137.400 MHz
|
|||
|
Feng Yun 1B..............137.795 MHz
|
|||
|
Meteor 2-19..............137.850 MHz
|
|||
|
Meteor 3-3 and 3-4.......137.300 MHz
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The geostationary GOES satellites downlink on 1691 MHz, while the
|
|||
|
Soviet Meteosat uses 1694 MHz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Earth Resources Satellites
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The American Transit and Soviet CosNav satellites provide
|
|||
|
navigational data to ships and submarines. They transmit simultaneously
|
|||
|
on two frequencies:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Channel 1--149.910 and 399.762 MHz
|
|||
|
Channel 2--149.940 and 399.842 MHz
|
|||
|
Channel 3--149.970 and 399.922 MHz
|
|||
|
Channel 4--150.000 and 400.200 MHz
|
|||
|
Channel 5--150.030 and 400.082 MHz
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On 149 MHz the signals consist of a continuous carrier plus RTTY
|
|||
|
with the orbital data. Each satellite has an orbital period close to
|
|||
|
104 minutes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Other "Utility" Satellites
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The National Bureau of Standards in the United States has been
|
|||
|
using two GOES satellites to relay time signals. The western satellite
|
|||
|
operates on 468.825 MHz and is located at 135 degrees West longitude.
|
|||
|
The eastern satellite can be received on 468.8375 MHz and is positioned
|
|||
|
at 105 degrees West. These frequencies are shared with the Land Mobile
|
|||
|
Services, so there may be some interference.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Other interesting satellites include the American research
|
|||
|
spacecraft Hilat (149.988 MHz narrow band FM) and Geosat (150.015 and
|
|||
|
400 MHz CW). India's Bhaskara 1 (137.230 MHz) and 2 (137.380 MHz) also
|
|||
|
use narrow band FM. MOS-1B is a Japanese Marine Observation satellite,
|
|||
|
which transmits on 136.11 MHz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Equipment
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
An ordinary VHF-UHF scanner and a small non-directional discone or
|
|||
|
active antenna are usually are that are required for satellites in low
|
|||
|
orbit. Larger dish antennas and converters or special receivers are
|
|||
|
needed to tune in to GOES and other satellites in geostationary orbit.
|
|||
|
Computers and special interfaces or decoders are necessary to make
|
|||
|
sense of weather maps or telemetry.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For more details about such equipment and satellite tracking
|
|||
|
programs, see our book "THe DXers Guide to Computing" (available from
|
|||
|
Radio Sweden for USD 5, GBP 3, FF or SEK 30, DM 8, or 8 IRCs). Also
|
|||
|
check out articles and especially advertisements in such magazines as
|
|||
|
"Monitoring Times" in the US and "Shortwave Magazine" in Britain.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IV. AMATEUR RADIO IN SPACE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Besides governments and corporations, radio amateurs have also
|
|||
|
launched many satellites. The first communications satellite was in
|
|||
|
fact the Moon, which radio amateurs bounced have bounced signals off
|
|||
|
for years. In 1960 a group of radio amateurs in the United States
|
|||
|
formed the Project Oscar Association to design and build satellites for
|
|||
|
use in the amateur radio bands. Oscar ("Orbiting Satellite Carrying
|
|||
|
Amateur Radio") was succeeded by the Amateur Satellite Corporation
|
|||
|
(AMSAT) in 1969. There are national AMSAT societies in many countries,
|
|||
|
and international headquarters is in Washington, DC.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Amateur Radio Satellites:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Satellite Orbit Beacon or Downlink Modes/Comments
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Oscar 10 elliptical 145.810/145.987 MHz
|
|||
|
Oscar 11 circular 145.826/435.025
|
|||
|
RS 10/11 circular 29.357/.408 RS-10 CW
|
|||
|
145.857/.903 "
|
|||
|
29.407/.453 RS-11 CW
|
|||
|
145.907/.953 "
|
|||
|
Oscar 13 elliptical 145.812/435.651
|
|||
|
UO-14 circular 435.070
|
|||
|
PO-16 circular 437.02625/437.0513
|
|||
|
DO-17 circular 145.825 voice synth.
|
|||
|
WO-18 circular 437.0751/437.102 slowscan TV
|
|||
|
LO-19 circular 437.1258/437.15355 packet BBS
|
|||
|
FO-20 circular 435.795/435.910 packet BBS
|
|||
|
AO-21 145.822/.948 CW beacon
|
|||
|
145.952/.983/.838/.80 FM/packet beacon
|
|||
|
UO-22 circular 435.120 (see below) packet BBS
|
|||
|
RS-12/13 circular 29.408/.454 RS-12 CW
|
|||
|
145.912/.959 "
|
|||
|
29.458/.504 RS-13 CW
|
|||
|
145.862/.908 "
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Oscar 10 and 13 have elliptical orbits, which mean that they tend
|
|||
|
to "hover" over the Northern Hemisphere, making for long periods for
|
|||
|
contacts with little adjustment needed in tracking antennas. However,
|
|||
|
their require antennas with higher gain than those used for the
|
|||
|
circular orbit satellites.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Soviet RS-10/11 and RS-12/13 are each two separate packages on
|
|||
|
the same satellite.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
UO-14 (UoSat-3), PO-16 (PacSat), DO-17 (Dove), WO-18 (WeberSat),
|
|||
|
LO-19 (LuSat) are known as "microsats" because of their small size.
|
|||
|
They were launched together with an Ariane rocket in January, 1990.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
UO-14 was made by the University of Surrey in Britain, following
|
|||
|
on UO-9, which was launched in 1981, and UO-11 in 1984. UO-15, launched
|
|||
|
with UO-14, stopped transmitting the day after launch.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PO-16 was built by AMSAT-North America, and LO-19 by AMSAT
|
|||
|
Argentina. They contain packet radio bulletin boards (BBS), with uplink
|
|||
|
frequencies in the 2 meter band using FM and downlinks in the 70 cm
|
|||
|
band in SSB. Dove is a Brazilian-made "peace satellite". It has a voice
|
|||
|
synthesizer and also transmits standard packet AFSK-FM on 145.825 MHz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WO-18 was built by Weber State University in Utah. It contains an
|
|||
|
onboard camera that downlinks its pictures by packet radio. The
|
|||
|
Japanese JO-20 (Fuji-2) also carries a packet BBS, with similar up and
|
|||
|
downlink frequencies to PO-16 and UO-19.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Conventional packet radio uses a system known as AFSK (Audio
|
|||
|
Frequency Phase Shift Keyed) modulation. This was used by some earlier
|
|||
|
amateur radio satellites, such as UO-11, and is used by Dove. Because
|
|||
|
of the Doppler Effect (frequency shift from high speed), satellite
|
|||
|
packet uses a different system called PSK (Phase Shift Keyed)
|
|||
|
modulation. Circuit boards and kits for PSK modems can be ordered from
|
|||
|
AMSAT-UK and the Tucson Amateur Packet Radio Corporation (TAPR). A
|
|||
|
commercial model called the PSK-1 is sold by PacComm (3652 West Cypress
|
|||
|
Street, Tampa, FL 33607, USA)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
UO-22 was launched on July 16th, 1991. It carries a packet radio
|
|||
|
bulletin board, which besides use by radio amateurs, will be used to
|
|||
|
transmit free medical information to universities in East Africa. The
|
|||
|
service, known as HealthNet, is operated by an organization called
|
|||
|
Satel-Life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The information will be uplinked from a ground station in
|
|||
|
Newfoundland. Ground stations have been shipped to universities in
|
|||
|
Kenya, Zimbabwe, and Zambia. The researchers who build the satellite at
|
|||
|
the University of Surrey are also developing portable ground stations
|
|||
|
that will fit into a briefcase, so that field workers can take them to
|
|||
|
isolated villages.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Health-Net ransmissions will be using packet radio at 9600 baud,
|
|||
|
with downlinks on 428.01 and 429.985 MHz. Amateur radio operations will
|
|||
|
also be at 9600 baud, with a downlink on 435.120 MHz. OU-22 also
|
|||
|
carries a charge-coupled device camera, which will provide pictures of
|
|||
|
the Earth only slightly larger than the satellite's coverage area
|
|||
|
footprint.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
V. MONITORING THE SPACE SHUTTLE AND MIR
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Space shuttle communications have been relayed on shortwave from a
|
|||
|
number of amateur radio clubs at NASA bases. These are in single side
|
|||
|
band (SSB), and the frequencies to look for are 3860, 7185, 14295,
|
|||
|
21395, and 28650 kHz from the Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland;
|
|||
|
3840, 14280, 21350, and 28495 kHz from the Johnson Space Center in
|
|||
|
Texas; and 3840 and 21280 kHz from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
|
|||
|
California.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here are some reported frequencies connected with the shuttle
|
|||
|
missions:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Shortwave (SSB):
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Western Test Range.............................. 5700 kHz
|
|||
|
13218
|
|||
|
Eastern Test Range.............................. 5190
|
|||
|
NASA Tracking Ships............................. 5180
|
|||
|
5187
|
|||
|
Launch Support Ships............................11104
|
|||
|
19303
|
|||
|
NASA Kennedy Operations......................... 7675
|
|||
|
USAF Cape Radio................................. 6837
|
|||
|
6896
|
|||
|
11414
|
|||
|
11548
|
|||
|
19640
|
|||
|
23413
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Shuttle-Mission Control.........................11201
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NASA Ascension Island tracking..................20186
|
|||
|
NASA CB Radios..................................27065
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
UHF (AM):
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Military aircraft emergency frequency........... 243.0 MHz
|
|||
|
Primary shuttle communications.................. 259.7
|
|||
|
Shuttle space suits............................. 279.0
|
|||
|
Primary UHF downlink............................ 296.0
|
|||
|
Air-to-ground or orbiter-to-suit................ 296.8
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
S-Band (Wideband FM):
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NASA downlink................................... 2205.0 MHz
|
|||
|
2217.5
|
|||
|
2250.0
|
|||
|
2287.5
|
|||
|
Primary digital downlink........................ 2287.5
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
North American satellite TV monitors can watch the missions. NASA
|
|||
|
Select transmits live video from shuttle missions on the Satcom 2R
|
|||
|
satellite (72 degrees West) on transponder 13. A voice TV schedule
|
|||
|
update can be heard by calling American telephone number 1-202-755-
|
|||
|
1788.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Amateur Radio on the Shuttle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There have been a number of amateur radio operations from the
|
|||
|
shuttles. The first was Dr. Owen Garriott, W5LFL, from "Columbia" in
|
|||
|
1985. He was heard by tens of thousands of listeners and made two way
|
|||
|
contact with some 350 stations using FM with a downlink on 145.55 MHz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tony England, W0ORE, operated primarily in slowscan television
|
|||
|
from "Challenger" in July, 1985. In October that year, Dr. Ernst
|
|||
|
Medderschmid and Dr. Reinhard Furrer operated as DP0SL from "Columbia".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
With the resumption of shuttle missions after the "Challenger"
|
|||
|
crash, amateur radio operations have resumed as well. Ron Parise,
|
|||
|
WA4SIR, operated from "Columbia" on a long-delayed mission in early
|
|||
|
1991, with both voice and packet radio. Unfortunately, the signals
|
|||
|
could only be heard over the lower latitudes. The frequencies used were
|
|||
|
145.51, 145.55, and 145.59 MHz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
STS-37, on "Atlantis" in April, 1991, was particularly noteworthy,
|
|||
|
as all five crew members were licensed radio amateurs. There were
|
|||
|
hundreds of contacts with amateur radio operators on Earth. While a
|
|||
|
problem curtailed packet radio and slowscan television operation, the
|
|||
|
first television picture ever received on board a spacecraft was
|
|||
|
carried out using fast scan television. The Atlantis crew was also able
|
|||
|
to hear the Soviet cosmonauts on MIR, but were unable to complete two
|
|||
|
way communications.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MIR
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Soviet MIR space station can easily be heard with powerful FM
|
|||
|
signals on 143.625 MHz. Voice communications is also reported on 143.42
|
|||
|
and 142.42 MHz, as well as a beacon on 121.75 MHz. Data communications
|
|||
|
from MIR can be heard on 166.130 (or possibly 165.875) MHz. Other
|
|||
|
frequencies reported from the Soviet space program are:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Salyut space station (now crashed).... 19995 kHz
|
|||
|
Soyuz T-11 space vehicle telemetry.... 20008
|
|||
|
Soyuz T-11 voice communications.......142.423 MHz
|
|||
|
Soyuz TM-3 and TM-4...................121.750
|
|||
|
Progress 7 supply ship................166.000
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Amateur Radio on MIR
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Several MIR cosmonauts have been radio amateurs. In 1988 amateur
|
|||
|
radio stations U1MIR, U2MIR, and U3MIR operated on 145.550 and 145.400
|
|||
|
MHz FM. Musa, U2MIR, has been on the air in 1990 and 1991.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On March 2nd, 1991 radio amateurs in Hawaii enjoyed a record 16
|
|||
|
two way voice contacts with U2MIR, on 145.55 MHz, in both FM voice and
|
|||
|
packet radio. There are also reports of U5MIR heard in SSB in the 21
|
|||
|
MHz amateur radio band.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Britain's first astronaut, Helen Sharman, spent 8 days on MIR in
|
|||
|
May, 1991. She operated the amateur radio station there, under the call
|
|||
|
sign GB1MIR.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VI. MILITARY COMMUNICATIONS IN SPACE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
During the Gulf War, monitors reported that American military
|
|||
|
communications in the Gulf could be heard from the FLEETSATCOM
|
|||
|
satellite network between 240 and 270 MHz. Most of the voice traffic is
|
|||
|
in the 260 MHz range, and most is coded. One monitor has reported to
|
|||
|
"Popular Communications" American AWACS planes on 263.825 MHz and Saudi
|
|||
|
forces on 249.325 MHz. Other active frequencies reported were 261.825,
|
|||
|
262.200, 262.150, 262.425, and 263.525 MHz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Soviet military and navigation satellites use the 149 MHz band,
|
|||
|
for example: 149.91, 149.94, and 149.97 MHz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VII. HORIZONS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Space exploration can be expected to continue. The American space
|
|||
|
station Freedom is scheduled for launch in the late 1990's. AMSAT and
|
|||
|
the ARRL have submitted a formal proposal to NASA for a permanent
|
|||
|
amateur radio station on Freedom. The proposal includes downlinks in
|
|||
|
the 145, 435, and 2401 MHz bands. Three geostationary satellites would
|
|||
|
be used to relay continuous communications from Freedom. AMSAT hopes to
|
|||
|
have its own goestationary satellites in orbit in the near future.
|
|||
|
Until then, the system would use the TDRS satellites used for shuttle
|
|||
|
communications.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Farther into the future, it may be possible to monitor
|
|||
|
communications from proposed Moon bases, expeditions to Mars, or future
|
|||
|
space colonies in Earth orbit.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Moving deeper into space, radio astronomy probes the limits of the
|
|||
|
universe on wavelengths other than those of light used by conventional
|
|||
|
astronomy. To this belongs SETI, the Search for Extra Terrestrial Life.
|
|||
|
The United States is planning to launch a 10 year SETI project, using a
|
|||
|
super computer to pick up possible signals from any distant
|
|||
|
civilization. NASA scientists also plan to transmit radio signals to
|
|||
|
every star which can be detected in the universe, in the hope of
|
|||
|
getting a reply.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Project META, a SETI project at Harvard University, funded by the
|
|||
|
Planetary Society and film firector Steven Spielberg (the maker of
|
|||
|
"E.T." and "Close Encounters of the Third Kind") has searched the
|
|||
|
entire sky at 1420 MHz and is beginning a full search at 2840 MHz.
|
|||
|
These are both "water hole" frequencies where scientists think
|
|||
|
intelligent civilizations may try to communicate.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There may be a role in the SETI quest for amateurs. Speaking to
|
|||
|
"Monitoring Times", astronomer Kent Cullers of the NASA Ames Research
|
|||
|
Center in California says that amateurs could try searching the 1-1.4
|
|||
|
GHz range, because "interstellar noise is relatively low there."
|
|||
|
"Monitoring Times" points out that antennas are critically important,
|
|||
|
and suggests dishes, quads, and helical antennas. A computer can be
|
|||
|
programmed to scan frequencies. If signals are passed through a
|
|||
|
digitizer, the computer can break the information into small slices and
|
|||
|
can reject certain kinds of local interference.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VIII. FOR MORE INFORMATION
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One way to keep up with the amateur radio satellites is to listen
|
|||
|
to one of the AMSAT nets on shortwave. Here are some:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
International Net--Sundays 18:00 hrs UTC on 21280 kHz
|
|||
|
Sundays 19:00 hrs on 14282 kHz
|
|||
|
European Net-------Saturdays 10:00 hrs on 14280 kHz
|
|||
|
Asian-Pacific Net--Sundays 11:00 hrs on 14305 kHz
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AMSAT and its national societies publish newsletters and sell
|
|||
|
computer hardware and software for use in monitoring amateur radio
|
|||
|
satellites. The main AMSAT address is: Box 27, Washington, DX, 20044,
|
|||
|
USA. AMSAT-UK is at 94 Herongate Road, Wanstead Park, London E12 5EQ,
|
|||
|
England. AMSAT-Sweden is at Box 1311, S-600 43 Norrkoeping, Sweden.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are a number of computer bulletin boards for space
|
|||
|
enthusiasts in the United States:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1-205-895-0028 NASA BBS
|
|||
|
1-512-852-8194 AMSAT Software Exchange BBS
|
|||
|
1-214-394-7438 Downlink BBS (AMSAT)
|
|||
|
1-214-340-5850 N5ITU BBS
|
|||
|
1-513-427-0674 Celestial RCP/M BBS
|
|||
|
1-904-786-8142 Starship Enterprise BBS
|
|||
|
1-804-743-0559 Astro BBS (amateur astronomy)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The CompuServe HamNet Forum has a section devoted to amateur radio
|
|||
|
satellites. The Consumer Electronics Forum has a TVRO section. There
|
|||
|
are a number of other space (and science fiction) forums on CompuServe,
|
|||
|
including a NASA section with news from the American space agency. For
|
|||
|
more information contact: CompuServe, 5000 Arlington Centre Blvd,. Box
|
|||
|
20212, Columbus, OH 43220, USA.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Dial-a-Shuttle" is a telephone number available during shuttle
|
|||
|
missions, with news updates and live relays from the astronauts. The
|
|||
|
number is 1-900-909-6272.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The 1991 World Radio TV Handbook contains a new section on World
|
|||
|
Satellite Broadcasts, underlining that satellites now play an important
|
|||
|
role in international broadcasting. This section lists current and some
|
|||
|
planned geostationary broadcast satelliteslites, with some detailed
|
|||
|
lists of transponder useage. We made extensive use of the WRTH in
|
|||
|
compiling the section on Asian satellites.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The 1991 World Satelllite Annual, compiled by Mark Long, has just
|
|||
|
about everything you could possibly want to know about communications
|
|||
|
satellites. It lists all the current and many planned satellites in
|
|||
|
geosynchronous orbit, with footprint maps and channel tables. There are
|
|||
|
chapters on satellite launch vehicles for the 1990s, the status of DBS
|
|||
|
in America, updates on Intelsat and Eutelsat, European Scrambling
|
|||
|
Systems, and the Satellite News Gathering Revolution. The book is
|
|||
|
expensive, at USD 50 plus postage. But for the serious satellite DXer,
|
|||
|
it's well worth it. For more information contact MLE Inc., Box 159,
|
|||
|
Winter Beach, Florida, 32971, USA.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Together with Jeffrey Keating, Mark Long as also written The World
|
|||
|
of Satellite Television, a basic guide to installing, operating, and
|
|||
|
maintaining a backyard satellite dish antenna. Available for USD 13
|
|||
|
from Quantam Publications, Box 310, Mendocino, CA 95460, USA.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Communications Satellites, by Larry Van Horn, covers U.S. and
|
|||
|
Soviet manned space missions, military, weather, navigational, and
|
|||
|
communications satellites. It's available for USD 13. (*)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Hidden Signals on Satellite Television, by Thomas Harrington
|
|||
|
and Bob Cooper Jr., goes into detail about SCPC, audio subcarriers,
|
|||
|
teletext, and other non-video signals on North American satellites. It
|
|||
|
also covers the equipment needed. Available for USD 20. (*)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The three books above are the best guides for satellite radio and
|
|||
|
TV DXing. Those interested in weather satellites should look into:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The New Weather Satellite Handbook by Dr. Ralph Taggart. The new
|
|||
|
4th edition is available for USD 20 from the American Radio Relay
|
|||
|
League, Newington, CT, USA, or from Metsat Products, Box 142, Mason, MI
|
|||
|
48854, USA. (*)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AMSAT and the American Radio Relay League have published an
|
|||
|
excellent guide to amateur radio satellites called The Satellite
|
|||
|
Experimenter's Handbook. (*) The 2nd edition is available for USD 20,
|
|||
|
from: AMSAT, Box 27, Washington, DC 20044, USA. AMSAT also publishes
|
|||
|
"Satellite Journal" magazine and "Amateur Satellite Report".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Most of these books are available from a number of sources. Many
|
|||
|
of the ones marked (*) should be available from the following: "73
|
|||
|
Magazine", Forest Road, Hancock, NH 03449, USA; Grove Enterprises, 140
|
|||
|
Dog Branch Road, Brasstown, NC 28902, USA; Universal Electronics, 4555
|
|||
|
Groves Road, Suite 3, Columbus, Ohio 43232, USA); and EEB, 323 Mill St.
|
|||
|
NE, Vienna, VA 22180, USA.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some books of interest to Europeans may be ordered from PW
|
|||
|
Publishing, Enefco House, The Quay, Poole, Dorset BH15 1PP, Britain.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The best program listing for North American TVRO monitors is
|
|||
|
"Satellite TV Week", available for USD 48 a year from Satellive TV
|
|||
|
Week, Box 308, Fortuna, CA 95540, USA.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are a couple of British monthlies with channel listings and
|
|||
|
satellite news, "What Satellite" (57-59 Rochester Place, London NW1
|
|||
|
9JU) and "Satellite TV Europe" (5 Riverpark Estate, Berkhamsted HP4
|
|||
|
1HD).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Transponder" is a British newsletter, filled with information
|
|||
|
about satellite broadcasting. Published 24 times a year, it's available
|
|||
|
in the UK for GBP 37, in Europe for GBP 60, and outside Europe for GBP
|
|||
|
75, from: Transponder, Box 112, Crewe Cheshire, CW2 7DS, England.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Satellite Watch Newsletter" is the magazine of the video pirate
|
|||
|
satellite underground, people who regard any kind of coding as a
|
|||
|
violation of American Constitutional rights. Lots of details on
|
|||
|
descrambler hardware and software. But 12 issues are available for USD
|
|||
|
35, from: Walker Media Group, 6599 Commerce Ct. No. 103, Gainsville, VA
|
|||
|
22065, USA.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Radio Netherlands publishes an interesting leaflet called "Weather
|
|||
|
Satellite Fact Sheet", as well as "Satellites for the Shortwave
|
|||
|
Listener". Both are available for free from: Radio Netherlands, Box
|
|||
|
222, NL-1200 JG Hilversum, the Netherlands.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Fall, 1990 edition of "Whole Earth Review" has an excellent
|
|||
|
article by Robert Horvitz called "Tabletop Earth-Watch Stations" about
|
|||
|
monitoring WEFAX, with the WER's usual good guide to sources. Available
|
|||
|
for USD 7 (more for postage abroad) from: Whole Earth Review, Box 38,
|
|||
|
Sausalito, CA 94966, USA.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The American magazines "Monitoring Times" and "Popular
|
|||
|
Communications" have columns with the latest on North American
|
|||
|
satellite TVRO. "73 Magazine" has a column on amateur radio satellites.
|
|||
|
The British sister magazines "Short Wave Magazine" and "Practical
|
|||
|
Wireless" cover satellites very well from the European perspective. The
|
|||
|
emphasis in the former is on TVRO, in the latter on amateur radio
|
|||
|
satellites.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For information about amateur radio astronomy, you can contact the
|
|||
|
British Amateur Radio Astronomy Society, c/o Steven Newberry, 19
|
|||
|
Oakway, Kingsley Park, Birkenshaw, Bradford, West Yorkshire BD11 2PG,
|
|||
|
Britain.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Reason not-withstanding, the universe continues unabated, terribly
|
|||
|
huge and terribly complicated. "The DXers Guide to the Galaxy", while
|
|||
|
relatively short, and undoubtedly filled with much that is wildly
|
|||
|
wrong, out-of-date, or at least of marginal interest, is nevertheless
|
|||
|
greatly inspired by (some might say plagerized from) Douglas Adams and
|
|||
|
"The Hitch-Hikers Guide to the Galaxy".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We hope he doesn't mind too much.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For more information on this engrossing subject, consult the books
|
|||
|
and magazines mentioned above. We did to write this. Please note that
|
|||
|
things change rapidly in this field, numbers to computer bulletin
|
|||
|
boards even faster. This is as accurate as we could get it on the day
|
|||
|
it went to the printers, in August, 1991. There were undoubtedly
|
|||
|
mistakes then, and many changes since.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Should you have any information you would like to pass along, in
|
|||
|
order to rectify or update any of these unavoidable errors, you can
|
|||
|
contact Radio Sweden's DX Editor George Wood through any of the
|
|||
|
following electronic means:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CompuServe Mail 70247,3516
|
|||
|
MCI Mail or Internet (to the above CompuServe number)
|
|||
|
Fidonet to George Wood at 2:201/697
|
|||
|
Packet Radio to SM0IIN on the SM0ETV mailbox
|
|||
|
Telefax +468-667-6283
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In case of electrical failure the mail will also work:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Radio Sweden
|
|||
|
S-105 10 Stockholm
|
|||
|
Sweden
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
===========================================================================
|
|||
|
Distributed as a public service by The Pinelands RBBS * 609-859-1910 *
|
|||
|
HST DS V.32 V.42 * 64 MB * FidoNet 1:266/32 * RBBS-Net 8:950/2 * Shortwave
|
|||
|
Listening * Ham & Packet Radio * Home of PC Software by W2XQ * Japan Radio
|
|||
|
Company NRD-535 and NRD-525 & Kenwood R-5000 Receiver Control Programs *
|
|||
|
English Language SW Broadcast Schedules (1988 WRTH Industry Award Winner) *
|
|||
|
Software Catalog upon request or download catalog from Pinelands RBBS *
|
|||
|
SYSOP Tom Sundstrom * W2XQ * MCI Mail 244-6376 * GEnie T.SUNDSTROM *
|
|||
|
InterNet 2446376@mcimail.com * Telex 6552446376MCI UW * Fax 609-859-3226 *
|
|||
|
TRS Consultants * PO Box 2275, Vincentown, NJ 08088-2275 * 609-859-2447
|
|||
|
===========================================================================
|
|||
|
|