Temporary Laser Inter-Satellite Links in Free-Space Optical Satellite Networks
Aizaz U. Chaudhry, Halim Yanikomeroglu

TL;DR
This study evaluates how temporary laser inter-satellite links (TLs) can reduce network latency in future satellite networks, showing significant improvements over permanent links in various intercontinental scenarios.
Contribution
It demonstrates the feasibility and benefits of incorporating TLs in next-next-generation free-space optical satellite networks for improved latency and connectivity.
Findings
TLs increase satellite and network connectivity.
TLs significantly reduce network latency in NNG-FSOSNs.
Latency improvements are notable at specific LISL ranges.
Abstract
Laser inter-satellite links (LISLs) between satellites in a free-space optical satellite network (FSOSN) can be divided into two classes: permanent LISLs (PLs) and temporary LISLs (TLs). TLs are not desirable in next-generation FSOSNs (NG-FSOSNs) due to high LISL setup time, but they may become feasible in next-next-generation FSOSNs (NNG-FSOSNs). Using the satellite constellation for Phase I of Starlink, we study the impact of TLs on network latency in an NG-FSOSN (which has only PLs) versus an NNG-FSOSN (which has PLs and TLs) under different long-distance inter-continental data communications scenarios, including Sydney-Sao Paulo, Toronto-Istanbul, Madrid-Tokyo, and New York-Jakarta, and different LISL ranges for satellites, including 659.5 km, 1,319 km, 1,500 km, 1,700 km, 2,500 km, 3,500 km, and 5,016 km. It is observed from the results that TLs provide higher satellite…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Wireless Communication Technologies · Advanced Optical Network Technologies · Satellite Communication Systems
