Reconfigurable Radio Tracks Flights Worldwide

When Malaysia Air Flight 370 disappeared somewhere over the Indian Ocean in 2014, it had flown far beyond radar range. Under a new space-based air tracking system — starting with a reconfigurable radio developed by NASA — no plane would ever be off the grid that way.

NASA uses powerful radios to communicate with its satellites, rovers, and astronauts. These devices allow us to see everything from pictures of cryovolcanoes on Pluto to tweets from the International Space Station (ISS). In recent years, NASA decided it needed radios that work on higher frequencies with more bandwidth to make sending larger quantities of data back and forth faster, and that can be reprogrammed from a distance.

With real-time flight tracking, planes can safely optimize their flight routes and fly with less space between them. And if a plane disappears, emergency responders will have exact tracking information to start their search.
NASA wanted a higher-frequency space-based radio that can be reprogrammed from a distance. Harris Corporation worked with NASA to design one, and is now selling them commercially as the AppSTAR. In this artist's rendering, the radio is mounted on the satellite under a white cover.

“A reconfigurable radio lets engineers change how the radio works throughout the life of the mission, if requirements change, or when the environment does,” explained Thomas Kacpura, Advanced Communications Program manager at NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, OH. “It can also be upgraded to work better with future missions or to enhance performance just by adding new software to the radio.”

In the past, Kacpura said, engineers were reluctant to build reconfigurable devices for space because of testing requirements. They evaluated devices under every conceivable circumstance to ensure that, no matter what happened in space, the radio would keep doing its job. That's harder to do with a reconfigurable radio — how do you test for functions you don't even know you'll be using? Kacpura said recent missions have been allotting a larger size, power, and weight margin for reconfigurable systems. In addition, the culture has evolved and has become more comfortable with in-flight changes, which led NASA to design and develop a new reconfigurable, higher-bandwidth radio with Harris Corporation of Palm Bay, FL, through a 50/50 cost-share cooperative agreement.

The result of that effort was tested as part of the Space Communication and Navigation (SCaN) Testbed, an experimental communication system on the ISS. The SCaN Testbed project is led by Glenn, and was developed in cooperation with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Goddard Space Flight Center, Johnson Space Center, industry, academia, and international space agencies, all of whom also currently support experiment activities.

“The Harris SDR is the first space-qualified, software-defined radio in Kaband,” Kacpura said. Ka-band frequencies offer data transmission rates that are much faster than the previous standard, and are considered a key part of future NASA space communications.

The radio has been put through its paces in exhaustive testing both on the ground and in space, has been reconfigured and reprogrammed, and has performed well. “With a few tweaks and updates based on the test runs, this radio could now become the high-speed data radio on any spacecraft,” said Kacpura. This will help get data back to Earth even faster than before, expanding the science return of NASA missions.

The company knew the work it was doing with NASA was going to pay off with its other customers, but, said Harris systems engineer Jeff Anderson, “to be honest, I think we were surprised at just how quickly it was embraced both by our own designers and by customers.” The biggest selling point of the new device turned out to be its flexibility. It can be fully reconfigured both in its hardware and its software, according to Harris program manager Kevin Moran, which meant the company could quickly and cheaply redesign it to fit any customer's needs. Basically, “this is a box, and inside there are a bunch of cards that plug in,” Moran explained. “Power supply cards, a processor card, and then there are the cards specific to that mission. So when a customer has a different mission, we only have to change out a subset of the hardware within the box.” Harris has trademarked the radio, which it calls the Harris AppSTAR, and has already sold it to a wide range of clients.

One of the biggest contracts so far is with Aireon LLC, which has engaged Harris to develop a hosted payload for new Iridium Communications satellites. For the past two decades, Iridium has operated a constellation of satellites in low-Earth orbit, which makes it possible to make phone calls or send data to and from the world's most remote regions. Unlike other satellites, each of the crosslinked orbiters can communicate with the others, meaning every point on Earth is always within coverage of the network.

In 2016, the company began launching its Iridium NEXT constellation of satellites, with a higher bandwidth and increased capabilities, including Harris AppSTAR radios. Aireon, a joint venture formed by several companies to take advantage of the constellation, will use the radios to create the first space-based global air traffic control system.

For decades, airplanes have relied on radar surveillance, which needs land-based radar stations to receive and transmit signals. That's left huge gaps — particularly over oceans — where air traffic controllers have no real-time information about a plane's location or heading. To compensate, pilots file detailed flight plans and are required to remain within prescribed lanes at different altitudes so air traffic controllers can estimate where they are and work to ensure there are no mid-air collisions.

But that is all set to change when the 66 Iridium NEXT satellites go into orbit, equipped with Harris AppSTAR radios. The AppSTARs are programmed to receive signals from new airplane transceivers called ADS-B (Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast), which automatically send out the flight number, location, heading, and other flight details.

Currently, similar data is transmitted to other airplanes in the area, and also collected by terrestrial receivers on the ground; however, the receivers require a line of sight to communicate, so as soon as the airplane goes over the horizon, receivers on land can no longer detect the signal. As a result, many planes flying over the ocean and other remote areas can't be tracked at all. Putting the receivers into orbit solves that problem. “Within seconds you can keep track of all the aircraft in the world,” said Anderson. Aireon has already signed contracts with a number of air traffic control agencies to integrate the space-based system into their flight tracking when the system goes live in 2018.

Nav Canada, a founding partner in Aireon, was one of the first. “Think of the size of Canada,” said Moran. “If they were going to take advantage of this ADS-B system, they would have to go through this massive terrestrial build-out in very remote locations. The alternative is a space-based system.” Agencies in many other countries, including the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), have also expressed interest. With realtime global tracking, airlines will be able to optimize their air traffic control patterns, Anderson explained. Planes can fly with less space between them, as well as take more direct routes. “It tremendously improves public safety and potentially saves a lot of fuel costs, because you no longer have to remain in the particular airline traffic lanes.”

And when something does go wrong, like with the Malaysia Air flight that disappeared, search and rescue teams will have detailed information on where to look, because the satellites will receive tracking information from every airborne plane, even those in areas not subscribing to the Aireon tracking system. “Aireon will provide a free service, which they call Aireon ALERT (Aircraft Locating and Emergency Response Tracking), through which, if there is an airline issue, they will provide the last track that they have in their system,” Anderson said.

The AppSTAR radios on the Iridium satellites were designed with extra space, Anderson added, so Harris was able to add yet another function: the same kind of global tracking for ships, which the company markets as exactAIS RealTime, powered by Harris with their partners exactEarth.

“We've taken that reconfigured processor card and changed it a little bit yet again,” said Anderson, and now it can address the maritime VHF frequency range, which broadcasts automated ship tracking. Out on the open ocean, ships can communicate with each other, but not with the terrestrial system. Adding just one more card to the AppSTARs hosted by Iridium, however, suddenly allows any shipping company to know where its vessels are and track the shipping lanes worldwide.

And because the AppSTAR software can be reconfigured remotely, both the Aireon and exactAIS systems can be updated well after launch, “if we need to modify them, or if we need to change them for future changes in the architecture or formats,” Anderson said. “We can make the changes off into the future.” And it all started with the same box, processor, and power supply cards as the NASA radio.

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