Space

Britain rolls out first reprogrammable "chameleon" satellite

Britain rolls out first reprogrammable "chameleon" satellite
Eutelsat Quantum is a pioneering mission that will influence how telecom satellites are procured and manufactured in Europe
Eutelsat Quantum is a pioneering mission that will influence how telecom satellites are procured and manufactured in Europe
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Eutelsat Quantum is a pioneering mission that will influence how telecom satellites are procured and manufactured in Europe
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Eutelsat Quantum is a pioneering mission that will influence how telecom satellites are procured and manufactured in Europe
Eutelsat Quantum and its development partners
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Eutelsat Quantum and its development partners
The SSTL-built Eutelsat Quantum platform is pictured in SSTL's cleanroom in Guildford, UK
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The SSTL-built Eutelsat Quantum platform is pictured in SSTL's cleanroom in Guildford, UK
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The final component of a British-built "chameleon" satellite is shipping out for final assembly. After a public showing to invited guest on Wednesday, the chassis for the one-tonne Eutelsat Quantum communication satellite is set to be moved from the Surrey Satellite Technology (SSTL) facility in Guildford, England for final assembly by Airbus in France, where it will become the first satellite that can be completely reprogrammed in orbit.

Ever since Telstar 1 was launched in 1962, communication satellites have been altering our world in ways that our grandparents couldn't imagine. Distances have been short circuited, calling someone on the other side of the world is as simple as a local call, and events from the other side of the planet are beamed into our lounge rooms in near real time.

However, the satellites that make much of this possible tend to be stuck in the design philosophies of the 1960s. As sophisticated as such orbital birds have become, they are still pretty much a collection of one-offs with even seemingly identical members of the same constellation needing to be hardwired to carry out their missions. If communications coverage is needed in a new area or using a different frequency set, that means sending up another expensive satellite.

The SSTL-built Eutelsat Quantum platform is pictured in SSTL's cleanroom in Guildford, UK
The SSTL-built Eutelsat Quantum platform is pictured in SSTL's cleanroom in Guildford, UK

According to the UK Space Agency, which, along with ESA is a development partner, Eutelsat Quantum is a new approach. Instead of a specialized platform the Quantum is software driven and is designed to be reprogrammed and reconfigured even after its been placed in its geostationary orbit 22,236 mi (35,786 km) above the Earth.

This means that the chameleon satellite can adjust its coverage, frequency, power, and orbital position as needed. It can even split a coverage area into smaller ones, generate dynamic and varied frequencies, and even cover the entire visible area of the Earth rather than a small, preset region.

"Eutelsat Quantum is a world-first and reflects the culmination of many years of research and evaluation driven by Eutelsat, and supported by major partners such as the ESA, the UK Space Agency, and Airbus," says Yohann Leroy, Eutelsat Deputy CEO and Chief Technical Officer. "It will bring unprecedented agility and flexibility to our customers in the government, mobility and data markets: innovation will not only come from the ability to adjust coverages in real time in order to allocate resources between beams and regions but also from the fact that customers will be able to take command and optimize capacity use autonomously."

The animation below highlights the features of the Eutelsat Quantum.

Sources: UK Space Agency, ESA

EUTELSAT QUANTUM - Revolutionising telecoms market

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1 comment
1 comment
MerlinGuy
Just to let the writer know, one of the primary objectives of most (and all geosynchronous) satellites is to stay in the same place. Satellites have also had the ability to maintain or adjust their orbits for decades. That's why you have been reading about many being decommissioned after their thrusters run out of fuel.
But hey, if you want to believe this new tech, you go right ahead.