Title of Invention

SATELLITE COMMUNICATION SYSTEM USING LINEAR CELLTRACKING

Abstract A satellite communication device (10) for use in conjunction with a plurality of satellite communication devices (10) in a non-geostationary satellite communications network, comprising: a first active beam forming uplink antenna (20) employing linear cell tracking for capturing a first uplink signal, the signal comprising data packets; a first downlink antenna (22) capable of generating a first independently steerable downlink beam of data packets; an intersatellite link receiver (28) for receiving first intersatellite data packets from a satellite (10) in the plurality of satellite communication devices (10); an intersatellite link transmitter (28) for transmitting second intersatellite data packets to a satellite (10) in the plurality of satellite communication devices (10); and, a routing switch (30) for routing data packets from the first uplink antenna (20) to the first downlink antenna (22), from the first uplink antenna (20) to the intersatellite link transmitter (28), from the intersatellite link receiver (28) to the first downlink antenna (22), and from the intersatellite link receiver (28) to the intersatellite link transmitter (28).
Full Text FORM 2
THE PATENTS ACT 1970
[39 OF 1970]
COMPLETE SPECIFICATION [See Section 10]











' A SATELLITE COMMUNICATION DEVICE"
HUGHES ELECTRONICS CORPORATION, of 200 North Sepulveda Boulevard, El Segundo, California 90245, United States of America,
The following specification particularly describes the nature of the invention and the manner in which it is to be performed:-
ORIGINAL GRANTED 14 AUG 2000 27-4-2005

The present invention relates to a satellite communication device.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Satellites systems are well suited to cover large geographical areas and provide long distance wireless communication. Geostationary satellites work well to cover one specific area without any handoff overhead associated with satellite movement, however, geostationary orbits may be less convenient for low cost handheld terminals. Instead a series of low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites may be employed.


LEO satellite systems have the disadvantage that the
satellite is in motion relative to the stationary or slowly moving user on
or near the earth's surface. Users are usually grouped into cells
depending on the user's geographic location. In the communications
system, each cell is associated with a satellite antenna beam that
transmits signals to or receives signals from the users located in a particular cell.
In prior art satellite systems, the cell-beam relationship can
be described as either earth-fixed cells or satellite-fixed beams. In
satellite-fixed beam systems, the beams point in fixed directions relative
to the satellite body and thus sweep over the cells as the satellite moves
through its orbit. As a result, the users must be reassigned to different
beams frequently. There must be rapid reassignment calculations and
frequent messages exchanged between the satellite and the user to
coordinate the reassignment, leading to a significant overhead load on
the system.
In earth-fixed cell systems, the satellite must continuously
repoint the antenna beams to follow the motion of the cells as seen from
the moving satellite. Implementing earth-fixed, cells requires a very
complex antenna that can steer many beams in two angular dimensions.
Rapid reassignment calculations and overhead load are reduced at the expense of a vastly more complex antenna.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION Accordingly, there is a need for an improved method and apparatus that eliminates the reassignment overhead and simplifies the antenna to a one-dimensional steering antenna.
Accordingly, there is provided a satellite communication device for use in conjunction with a plurality of satellite communication devices in a non-geostationary satellite communications network, comprising:
a first active beam forming uplink antenna employing linear cell tracking for capturing a first uplink signal, the signal comprising data packets;
a first downlink antenna capable of generating a first independently steerable downlink beam of data packets;
an intersatellite link receiver for receiving first intersatellite data packets from a satellite in the plurality of satellite communication devices;
an intersatellite link transmitter for transmitting second intersatellite data packets to a satellite in the plurality of satellite communication devices; and,
a routing switch for routing data packets from the first uplink antenna to the first downlink antenna, from the first uplink antenna to the intersatellite link transmitter, from the intersatellite link receiver to the first downlink antenna, and from the intersatellite link receiver to the intersatellite link transmitter.
In a preferred embodiment, the device employs yaw or roll-yaw steering to linearize an angular track of cells through the satellite communication device footprint. Also in the preferred embodiment, the


downlink antenna comprises a phased-array downlink antenna which
compensates for yaw or roll-yaw satellite communication device
steering. Further, the downlink antenna preferably steers downlink
beams in conjunction with time division multiple access downlink
formatting and provides variable rate time division multiple access
service. Still further, the downlink antenna preferably steers downlink beams based on fixed cell earth addresses, wherein downlink data packets are inserted in a queue based on fixed cell earth addresses and queues are assigned to downlink beams steered to the fixed cell earth
addresses in bursts. Additionally, the preferred embodiment includes an
uplink antenna employing one-dimensional linear ratcheting to maintain resource allocation of uplink cells along antenna columns.
In some embodiments, the device further comprises a demodulator capable of recovering the uplink data packets from the
uplink beams and a radio frequency switch matrix interconnecting the
uplink beams to the demodulator. In such an instance, the radio frequency switch matrix is preferably commanded in conjunction with the linear ratcheting. Further, the routing switch may also route data packets from the demodulator to a downlink antenna, and from the
demodulator to the intersatellite link transmitter.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other features and advantages of the present
invention will become more apparent from a detailed consideration of the
following detailed description of certain preferred embodiments when
taken in conjunction with the drawings in which:
FIG. 1 illustrates a non-geostationary satellite
communications system comprising a plurality of satellites in earth orbit;
FIG. 2A is a grid illustrating a satellite footprint on the
surface of the earth in kilometers;
FIG. 2B is a grid illustrating a satellite footprint on the
surface of the earth in satellite angular coordinates;
FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating a satellite, suitable for use as a satellite depicted in FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a geometrical diagram and associated
mathematical equations illustrating a yaw-steering and a roll-yaw
steering program;
FIG. 5 is a grid layout illustrating a footprint scheme and user assignment/handover regions;
FIG. 6A is a timeline illustrating ratcheting of uplink cell
coverage;
FIG. 6B is a timeline illustrating ratcheting of beam scan displacement;

FIG. 7A is a map illustrating earth-fixed downlink cell center
points;
FIG. 7B is a more detailed map illustrating earth-fixed
downlink cell center points, the satellite footprint, and downlink beans
at one instant in time.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Although the following description focuses on satellites, persons of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate that the techniques of the present invention are in no way limited to satellites.
On the contrary, any communication system which might benefit from
reduced resource management overhead and increased system capacity, may employ the techniques herein. Such systems might include terrestrial cellular communication systems, airborne cellular communication systems, or computer communication systems.
A non-geostationary satellite communications system,
comprising a plurality of satellites 10 located in earth orbit is illustrated in FIG. 1. This example constellation is in low-earth orbit at 1400 km altitude, has ten orbit planes 12 spaced at 18.5.degrees separation of ascending nodes, and is inclined 82 degrees from the equator into nearly
polar orbits. There are twenty satellites 10 per plane 12. The
constellation is connected by intersatellite links (ISLs) 14 in a variable configuration between the satellites 10. Preferably, ISL 14


interconnectivity includes four active ISLs 14 per satellite 10. One ISL
14 for communicating with the in-plane satellite 10 ahead, one ISL 14
for communicating with the in-plane satellite 10 behind, and one each for
communicating with the nearest satellite 10 in the adjacent orbit planes.
A satellite footprint 16 on the surface of the earth in
kilometers is illustrated in FIG. 2A and in satellite angular coordinates in FIG. 2B. In the preferred embodiment, the maximum satellite footprint 16 is approximately eighteen by eighteen degrees square in earth-central angle centered at the subsatellite point. The footprint 1 6 is divided into
approximately equal surface area cells 18, which are aligned in columns
in the in-track direction (i.e., the direction the satellite is traveling). The columns are curved in angle space to match the transformation from linear cell columns on the earth. The curvature of columns in angle space is implemented in an uplink antenna 20 (see FIG. 3). Square cells
18 are shown. However, a person of ordinary skill in the art will readily
appreciate that other arrangements, such as hexagonal cells, are well within the scope of the present invention.
A satellite 10, suitable for use as the satellite 10 depicted in FIG. 1, is illustrated in FIG. 3. Preferably each.satellite 10 employs acommunications payload comprising: an active beamforming uplink
antenna system 20 using linear cell tracking; one or more phased-array downlink antennas 22 generating multiple independently steerable downlink beams steered in conjunction with time division multiple-access


(TDMA) downlink formatting; a radio frequency (RF) switch matrix 24
interconnecting uplink beams to demodulators 26; one or more
intersatellite links 28 preferably interconnecting adjacent satellites 10;
and an on-board routing switch 30 for routing data packets between the
uplink antennas 20, downlink antennas 22, and intersatellite links 28.
Preferably, the system operates within a fixed frequency band allocation on uplink and downlink. The satellites 10 provide a regenerative repeater and autonomous routing function which demodulates and routes data packets based on destination addressing within the packet format.
Each adaptive beamforming uplink antenna 20 is an antenna
using commandable amplitude/phase weights to form the beam shapes and scanning positions over time. Each phased-array downlink antenna 22 is an antenna implemented as a planar array with per-element steering controls. Of course, any antenna providing a plurality of beams,
each of which is independently steerable, can be utilized.
The RF switch matrix 24 is an interconnect matrix of RF inputsignals to RF output signals, wherein an input signal can be attached to one or more output ports. The RF switch matrix 24 allows variable numbers of uplink resources (channels/timeslots) to beconnected to the uplink antenna 20 beam ports. The RF switch matrix
24 can be commanded in response to both traffic demand changes and satellite 10 motion ("ratcheting"). The downlink phased-arrays 22, data queuing, TDMA burst accesses and pointing of the downlink beams

implements variable data rates to downlink cells 32 (See FIGS. 7A and 7B). Hence, the system can accommodate variable bandwidth to earth-fixed regions rather than fixed bandwidth per cell.
The on-board routing switch 30 is a packet-switch which
reads header information inserted by a source terminal to determine the
destination of the packets. As a packet is received at a satellite 10, either from an uplink 20 or an intersatellite link 28, an on-board address translation is performed to determine whether the packet is to be routed to a downlink 22 beam or to another outbound inter-satellite link 28.
Multiple intersatellite links 28 are maintained between satellites 10 in the
constellation to provide data routing for calls spanning more than a single satellite footprint 16. The routing tables which determine this address translation are updated as users register with a network management center.
Each satellite 10 in the constellation employs a yaw-steering
program (or, optionally, a roll-yaw combined steering program) to compensate for earth rotation and linearize the track of the ground cells 18 as viewed in satellite 10 angular space (i.e., compensate for the cross-track angular motion of earth users - see FIG. 4). Yaw and/or roll-
yaw steering consists of adjusting the attitude (or orientation) of the
satellite 10 body along its yaw and/or roll axes. Yaw steering compensates the relative motion of points on the earth in the cross-track angufar direction by rotating the satellite 10 to a predefined angle (6).


The angle is a function of the satellite 10 location in its orbit. When the
satellite 10 is steered in this manner, the angular track of a ground point
will follow a fixed trajectory through angle space. All ground points
which enter the satellite's footprint 16 at the same relative location from
the subsatellite point will follow this trajectory. This is not true if the
satellite's yaw orientation is fixed relative to the orbit velocity vector or if the yaw orientation follows any other steering program.
The footprint scheme and user assignment/handoveconcepts are illustrated in FIG. 5. Preferably, the region affected byhandovers is restricted to the top row and the east/west extremecolumns of the footprint. The communications system divides the visible footprint 16 of the satellite 10 into discrete cells 18. An uplink cell 18 is contiguous geographic area on the surface of the earth which exists for the duration of a satellite 10 pass. The duration of a satellite 10 pass
is a fixed period of time defined by the orbit altitude and the footprintextent or elevation angle mask. For example, using a low earth orbit of 1400 km altitude and elevation angles > 38 degrees this time period is approximately 5 minutes. The uplink cells 18 are defined at handover time at the "top" of the footprint 16. All user terminals within the cell
region may share uplink resources (channels, timeslots, etc.) for the
duration of the existence of the cell 18. At the time the cell 18 is defined, the resources (channels/timeslots, etc.) which the users may utilize for their existing connections are also defined.


Users on the earth are grouped into uplink cells 18
(contiguous regions on the earth) at the time of handover to an
oncoming satellite 10. This assignment stays fixed for the duration of
an entire satellite 10 pass (i.e., until the next satellite handover). The
uplink antenna 20 is preferably implemented using a specific
arrangement of the active controls to provide linear "ratcheting" of the uplink cell18 within the footprint 16. An uplink cell 18 progresses through the footprint 16 and stays within a single column of antenna beams. Active control is provided such that the column beams are
steerable over at least •+/- 0.5 cells 18 worth of displacement from
nominal position, to compensate for a fixed period of satellite 10 motion corresponding to one cell 18 width. The RF switch matrix 24 is reconfigured to keep the uplink channel resources assigned to an uplink cell 18 attached to the correct beam port of the uplink antenna 20 as the
antenna beam is both fine-steered and "ratcheted" (see FIG. 6A and 6B)
from cell 18 to cell 18. If the uplink antenna 20 is implemented as a phased-array with fixed Rotman lens or Butler matrix beamforming networks following the array, the roll steering function, and optionally the linear "ratcheting" function of the uplink antenna 20, may be
implemented using active control of phase shifters (or time-delay units)
applied to each element of the phased array, eliminating the column "ratcheting" controls. A Rotman lens is an antenna device which performs a specific transformation from the array feeds and produces a


set of fixed beams in angle space. A single planar Rotman lens is most
often implemented in a stripline structure with two stacks of planar
lenses required to create a full two-dimensional field of output fixed
beams. The Butler matrix transformation is similar to the Rotman lens.
A single planar Butler matrix is most often implemented as a tree of hybrid dividers with fixed phase shifts, and two stacks of planar matrices are required to create a full two-dimensional field of output fixed beams. The system operates by assigning earth-fixed users into the appropriate uplink cell 18 at the top row of the footprint 16 during
satellite 10 handover. The footprints 16 of the satellites 10 areoverlapped by at least one cell 18 in the in-track direction to allow for handover of users from satellite 10 to satellite 10. As the satellites 10 move the equivalent of one cell 18 in-track, assignment of users into the top row of cells 18 is completed and the set of users assigned to this
row remains fixed throughout the satellite 10 pass. Throughout the
pass, all the rows of cells 18 in the footprint are "ratcheted" downward at fixed time intervals (see FIG. 6A and 6B). A beamforming antenna 20 is implemented on the uplink which has beam ports arranged in curved columns (see FIG. 2B). Each beam port is steerable in the in-track
direction by at least +/- 0.5 cells 18 of displacement to allow for the
one row's worth of cell 18 motion. The fine steering of the uplink column-beamforming antenna 20 compensates for motion between ratcheting intervals. The RF switch matrix 24 interconnecting the uplink

antenna 20 ports to the demodulators 26 is commanded at the ratcheting intervals to preserve the resource assignment to the fixed uplink cells 18.
Preferably, the uplink antenna 20 scans in one dimensiononly. Ratcheting refers to the fact that the beams are steered through
a single scan range, say from +0.5 to -0.5 relative to the nominal beam centers, and are then commanded to point backwards from -0.5 to +0.5 in a single instant. The beams essentially retrace the same steering path repeatedly (see FIG. 6A and 6B). This accomplishes tracking of a fixed
cell 18 on the earth for a small period of time (such as 15 seconds). At
the "ratcheting" point, the uplink cell 18 on the earth is tracked by a new antenna beam for another 15 seconds. All resources associated with this uplink cell 18 are then interconnected to the new uplink antenna 20 beam port by commanding the RF switch matrix 24 simultaneously with
the uplink antenna 20 "ratcheting". This repeats until the cell is outside
the field of view of the satellite footprint 16.
The system maintains resource allocation (e.g.,frequency,polarization, timeslot) by creating uplink cell 18 assignments which are fixed and do not change due to the relative position of the satellite 10
and the earth terminal. If the satellite 10 implemented fixed uplink
beams, the beam patterns would "move over" the user terminals. Cellular systemswhich operate in this fashion often need to re-assign the user resources (frequencies, timeslots, etc.) to limit interference and

maintain capacity. This also requires schemes which communicate the new assignments to the users. All of these considerations reduce the capacity of the system.
If the users are grouped into a fixed cell region on the earth,
the cell being defined in the present invention at the time the users are
handed over from one satellite to another, then the uplink antenna 20 is designed to provide a series of steerable antenna beams along "columns" in angle space. Within a column, each beam's scan region overlaps the other by at least V2 a scan range. Thus, as the satellite 10 moves, all
the beams track in unison along the column direction until the scan
range limit has been reached. At this point, the "ratcheting" event occurs. The beam's scanning is reset toward the top of the footprint 16 and the beam fine-steering (tracking) continues. At the ratcheting point, the users in a cell 18 are conceptually shifted down one row (a new cell
18 added at the top of the footprint 16, and users in an old cell 18
handed over to other satellites 10 at the bottom of the footprint 16). "Shifted down" one row means that a different uplink antenna 20 beam is covering the same set of users, and their signals are appearing at a different physical port at the uplink antenna 20 output. This change is
made invisible to the users, however, because the resources assigned to
the cell 18 are re-connected to the new uplink antenna 20 port by commanding the RF switch matrix 24 to a different connectivity.


Cross-track motion may carry a user outside the footprint
16 during the in-track pass. Uplink ceils 18 in the footprint 16 columns
at the extreme left side of the footprint 1 6 (e.g., the west side during an
ascending pass) may accept new users throughout the pass. Similarly,
uplink 18 cells in the footprint 16 columns at the extreme right side ofthe footprint 16 (e.g., the east side during an ascending pass) may
handoff current users. Persons of ordinary skill in the art will readilyappreciate that similar concepts apply for a descending pass and for
cross-seam (i.e., ascending vs. descending plane) footprint management
of cross-plane handovers.
Downlink cells 32 are earth-fixed contiguous geographical
areas on the surface of the earth which do not change with time (See
FIGS. 7 A and 7B). The earth is tiled using a pre-determined earth-fixed
grid. Users in a single downlink cell 32 may be assigned to multiple
uplink cells 18 (i.e., split across two columns of an uplink antenna 20)
at handover time. Downlink coverage is maintained by using multiple-beam phased-array downlink antennas 22 with independently steerable beams.
Part of the destination address for user data packets can be
a cell identifier or cell address. The steering of each beam is data-driven
by the addressing of packets. Data to be transmitted from a satellite 10
to a downlink cell 32 is grouped together in a common queue and then
bursted to the downlink cell 32 in a contiguous burst. The downlink


antenna 22 beam must be pointed to the downlink cell 32 center for the
duration of the burst. A single downlink beam can serve numerous
downlink cell 32 locations by steering consecutive bursts to different
cells in a TDMA fashion. The downlink array beams are re-steered inconjunction with the downlink cell address for each burst. The multiple
beams are driven by a downlink scheduler which monitors the data in queues for downlink cells 32 and selects which downlink cells 32 are to be serviced. Since the schedule is not fixed but driven by the actual data in the queues, the number of bursts sent to a given downlink cell
32 may vary according to the traffic demand. There is no fixed rate
assigned to any downlink cell 32 in the footprint 16. The phased-array antenna 22 enables the TDMA service by having multiple independently steerable beams. However, persons of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate that other steerable antenna systems could be
employed.
The satellite 10 maintains its own position and orientatioinformation. The fixed (latitude, longitude) centers of the downlink cells 32 which the satellite 10 is responsible for (i.e., those within its footprint 1 6 or field-of-view) are communicated on a schedule from a network
management center. When a downlink cell 32 is required to change
ownership from one satellite 10 to another, all users within the downlink cell 32 are handed over to the new satellite 10 simultaneously. The (latitude, longitude) centers are periodically translated to angular pointing


commands at a rate commensurate with the desired pointing accuracy
and the motion of the satellite 10. The angular pointing command for a
given downlink cell 32 is sent to a downlink antenna 22 phased-array
controller at the same time a data burst for that downlink cell 32 is being
prepared for transmission. The downlink antenna 22 array is steered to
the new downlink cell 32 position and the burst is transmitted to the ground terminal receivers. Terminals are responsible for demodulating, decoding, and identifying packets within the burst destined for their users.
Optionally, the downlink cells 32 are essentially contiguous
with the uplink cells 18. In this alternate embodiment, one or more downlink cells 32 are defined as subcells within an uplink cell 18. Accordingly, downlink cells 32 may be defined along with the uplink cells 18 at handover time. Data within the system would be addressed
to terminal destinations via (latitude, longitude) of the receiving terminal
(or an equivalent earth-fixed grid with fine resolution of approximately 1 km2). Satellites 10 would route data based on their geometry relative to the destination (latitude, longitude) coordinate or grid address. At the final destination satellite 10, a table lookup or. geometry calculation
would define which destination addresses belong within a given
downlink cell 32, and these packets would be sent to a common queue for that cell 32. The downlink antenna 22 would then operate with multiple TDMA bursted downlink beams as previously described.

In summary, persons of ordinary skill in the art will readily
appreciate that an improved satellite communication device and system
has been provided. By using yaw and roll-yaw steering to linearize
angular track of uplink cells 16; one-dimensional linear "ratcheting" in the
uplink antenna 20 to maintain resource allocation of uplink cells 1 6 along
the antenna columns; phased-array downlink antennas 22 which can track earth-fixed downlink cells 32 while compensating for the yaw (or roll-yaw) satellite 10 steering; and variable rate TDMA service among downlink cells 32 in the footprint 16, system overhead for performing
new resource allocations between satellite 10 handovers is minimized.
Systems employing the present invention will enjoy reduced resource management overhead and increased system capacity by holding uplink cell 16 resource assignments constant over an entire satellite 10 pass. This invention greatly simplifies the uplink antenna 20 implementation as
compared to a system operating with earth-fixed uplink cells and
provides flexible bandwidth/capacity assignment of both uplink and downlink resources to earth locations via the linear cell "ratcheting", uplink RF peaking switch, and data-driven variable-TDMA downlink phased-arrays.The foregoing description has been presented for thepurposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings.
It is intended that the scope of the invention be limited not by this detailed description, but rather by the claims appended hereto.

WE CLAIM:





1. A satellite communication device (10) for use in conjunction with a plurality of satellite communication devices (10) in a non-geostationary satellite communications network, comprising:
a first active beam forming uplink antenna (20) employing linear cell tracking for capturing a first uplink signal, the signal comprising data packets;
a first downlink antenna (22) capable of generating a first independently steerable downlink beam of data packets;
an intersatellite link receiver (28) for receiving first intersatellite data packets from a satellite (10) in the plurality of satellite communication devices (10);
an intersatellite link transmitter (28) for transmitting second intersatellite data packets to a satellite (10) in the plurality of satellite communication devices (10); and,
a routing switch (30) for routing data packets from the first uplink antenna (20) to the first downlink antenna (22), from the first uplink antenna (20) to the intersatellite link transmitter (28), from the intersatellite link receiver (28) to the first downlink antenna (22), and from the intersatellite link receiver (28) to the intersatellite link transmitter (28).


A satellite communication device (.10) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the satellite communication device (10) employs yaw steering to linearize an angular track of cells through the satellite communication device footprint 16.
A satellite communication device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the satellite communication device employs roll-yaw steering to linearize an angular track of cells (18) through the satellite communication device footprint (16).
A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the downlink antenna (22) comprises a phased-array downlink antenna.
A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the downlink antenna (22) compensates for yaw satellite communication device steering.
A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the downlink antenna (22) compensates for roll-yaw satellite communication device steering.


A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the downlink antenna (22) steers downlink beams in conjunction with time division multiple access downlink formatting.
A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 5, wherein the downlink antenna (22) provides variable rate time division multiple access service.
A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the downlink antenna (22) steers downlink beams based on fixed cell earth addresses.
A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 7, wherein the downlink data packets are inserted in a queue based on fixed cell earth addresses and queues are assigned to downlink beams steered to the fixed cell earth addresses in bursts.
A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the uplink antenna (20) employs one-dimensional linear ratcheting to maintain resource allocation of uplink cells (18) along antenna columns.


12. A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 8,
having:
a second active beam forming uplink antenna (20) employing linear cell tracking for capturing a second uplink beam;
. a demodulator (26) capable of recovering the uplink data packets from the first and second uplink beams; and,
a radio frequency switch matrix (24) interconnecting the first and second uplink beams to the demodulator (26).
13. A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 9, wherein the radio frequency switch matrix (24) is commanded in conjunction with the linear ratcheting.
14. A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 9, having a second downlink antenna (22) capable of generating a second independently steerable downlink beam of data packets.
15. A satellite communication device (10) as claimed in claim 11, wherein the routing switch (30) routes data packets from the demodulator (26) to the first downlink antenna (22), from the demodulator (26) to the second downlink antenna (22), from the demodulator (26) to the intersatellite link transmitter (28), and from the intersatellite link receiver (28) to the second downlink antenna (22).


16. A satellite communication device substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings. Dated this 14th day of August, 2000.




(RITUSHKA NEGI)
OF REMFRY & SAGAR
AGENT FOR THE APPLICANTS



Documents:

753-mum-2000-cancelled page(27-4-2005).pdf

753-mum-2000-claim (granted)-(27-4-2005).pdf

753-mum-2000-claim(granted)-(27-4-2005).doc

753-mum-2000-correspndence(22-3-2006).pdf

753-mum-2000-correspndence(ipo)-(11-5-20005).pdf

753-mum-2000-drawing(27-4-2005).pdf

753-mum-2000-form 1(13-9-2000).pdf

753-mum-2000-form 1(14-8-2000).pdf

753-mum-2000-form 19(16-3-2004).pdf

753-mum-2000-form 2 granted-(27-4-2005).pdf

753-mum-2000-form 2(granted-(27-4-2005).doc

753-mum-2000-form 3(14-8-2000).pdf

753-mum-2000-form 3(19-1-2001).pdf

753-mum-2000-form 3(27-4-2005).pdf

753-mum-2000-form 5(14-8-2000).pdf

753-mum-2000-petition under rule137(27-4-2005).pdf

753-mum-2000-petition under rule138(27-4-2005).pdf

753-mum-2000-power of aouthority(27-4-2005).pdf

753-mum-2000-power of aouthority(31-10-2000).pdf

abstract1.jpg


Patent Number 204210
Indian Patent Application Number 753/MUM/2000
PG Journal Number 43/2008
Publication Date 24-Oct-2008
Grant Date 23-Jan-2007
Date of Filing 14-Aug-2000
Name of Patentee HUGHES ELECTRONICS CORPORATION
Applicant Address 200 NORTH SEPULVEDA BOULEVARD, E1 SEGUNDO, CALIFORNIA 90245, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 HAROLD ROSEN 14629 HILLTREE ROAD, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA 90402, U.S.A.,
2 STEVEN LANE 20 SANTA BELLA ROAD, ROLLING HILLS ESTATE, CALIFORNIA 90274, U.S.A.
3 ROBERT VAUGHAN 812 KNOB HILL AVENUE, REDONDO BEACH, CALIFORNIA 90277, U.S.A,
PCT International Classification Number H 04 B 7/185
PCT International Application Number N/A
PCT International Filing date
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 379,173 1999-08-23 U.S.A.