Should We Worry About Interference in Emerging Dense NGSO Satellite Constellations?
Christophe Braun, Andra M. Voicu, Ljiljana Simi\'c, Petri, M\"ah\"onen

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the interference challenges in dense NGSO satellite constellations, revealing that current regulations and mitigation techniques may be insufficient, necessitating more advanced solutions for coexistence.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive analysis of inter-satellite interference in the Ku-band, highlighting limitations of existing mitigation and regulatory approaches for dense NGSO systems.
Findings
Existing spectrum regulation may be insufficient for GSO protection.
Traditional mitigation techniques like look-aside can be ineffective or harmful depending on constellation size.
Band-splitting significantly degrades throughput in Ku-band NGSO systems.
Abstract
Many satellite operators are planning to deploy NGSO systems for broadband communication services in the Ku-, Ka-, and V-band, where some of them have already launched. Consequently, new challenges are expected for inter-system satellite coexistence due to the increased interference level and the complexity of the interactions resulting from the heterogeneity of the constellations. This is especially relevant for the Ku-band, where the NGSO systems are most diverse and existing GSO systems, which often support critical services, must be protected from interference. It is thus imperative to evaluate the impact of mutual inter-system interference, the efficiency of the basic interference mitigation techniques, and whether regulatory intervention is needed for the new systems. We conduct an extensive study of inter-satellite coexistence in the Ku-band, where we consider all recently…
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