Loading...
News Article

Sony establishes Space Comms business

News

New company will focus on connecting micro satellites in low earth orbit via laser links

Sony has formed a new company, Sony Space Communications Corporation, to conduct space optical communications.

"Currently there are approximately 12,000 satellites in space, and the number is expected to increase in the future. The amount of data used in orbit is also increasing year by year, but the amount of available radio waves is limited," said Kyohei Iwamoto, president, Sony Space Communications Corporation.

"Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites need to communicate with the ground, so a large number of communications facilities are required for real-time communications, which is problematic because these satellites must pass directly over a ground station to communicate with it. Additionally, the need for frequency licenses for radio waves and the requirement for lower power consumption of communication equipment needed by smaller satellites, like micro satellites, are also issues to be addressed."

To solve these problems, SSC plans to develop small optical communications devices to provide related services to connect micro satellites in LEO via laser beams. It says it will apply the optical disc technology it has developed for CD players and other products.

Sony has already worked with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) on space comms projects. In 2020, the SOLISS (Small Optical Link for International Space Station) was installed in the Japanese Experiment Module Kibo of the International Space Station (ISS). It established a bidirectional laser communications link with a space optical communication ground station of the Japanese National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT), and successfully transmitted high-definition image data via Ethernet protocols. This experiment used Sony Computer Science Lab's Forward Error Correction (FEC) – a laser-reading technique derived from Sony's Blu-ray optical disk technology. (Blu-ray technology uses a GaInN-based blue-violet laser emitting at a wavelength of 405nm).

In 2021, the SOLISS experimental device successfully established optical downlinks from space to a commercial optical ground station of Kongsberg Satellite Services in Greece. In 2022, in collaboration with JAXA, an experiment on complete data file transfer in a simulated error-prone communications environment, which will be the technological basis for Internet services through stratospheric and low-Earth orbit optical communications, was successfully conducted.

By using optical communications, SSC aims to realise high-speed communications with small devices, which are physically difficult to achieve with conventional radio communications because conventional communications require large antenna and high power output.

In addition, by constructing an optical communications network not only between satellites and the ground, but also between satellites in orbit, SSC aims to enable real-time communications from anywhere on the ground to any satellite in space.

By providing easy-to-use inter-satellite communications capabilities, SSC aims to increase the amount of communications in space and realise an Internet communications network covering the earth, space, and applications such as real-time services.

Lightwave Logic receives ECOC Innovation Award for Hybrid PIC/Optical Integration Platform
Coherent wins ECOC award for datacentre innovation
HyperLight announces $37 million funding round
Jabil expands silicon photonics capabilities
Ephos raises $8.5 million for glass-based photonic chips
Designing for manufacture: PAM-4 transmitters using segmented-electrode Mach-Zehnder modulators
OpenLight and Epiphany partner on PIC ecosystem
NewPhotonics and SoftBank team up on advanced photonics
POET and Mitsubishi collaborate on 3.2T optical engines
Integrated photonic platforms: The case for SiC
Integrating high-speed germanium modulators with silicon photonics and fast electronics
Lightium Secures $7 Million Seed Funding
Revolutionising optoelectronics with high-precision bonding
Fraunhofer IMS invites participation in PIC engineering runs
Advances in active alignment engines for efficient photonics device test and assembly
Aeva announces participation at IAA Transportation 2024
Sumitomo Electric announces participation in ECOC 2024
Quside receives NIST certification for quantum entropy source
DustPhotonics launches industry-first merchant 1.6T silicon photonics engine
Arelion and Ciena announce live 1.6T wave data transmission
DGIST leads joint original semiconductor research with the EU
POET Technologies reorganises engineering team
A silicon chip for 6G communications
South Dakota Mines wins $5 million from NSF for Quantum Materials Institute
HieFo indium phosphide fab resumes production
Coherent launches new lasers for silicon photonics transceivers
AlixLabs wins funding from PhotonHub Europe
Sandia National Labs and Arizona State University join forces
Perovskite waveguides for nonlinear photonics
A graphene-based infrared emitter
Atom interferometry performed with silicon photonics
A step towards combining the conventional and quantum internet

×
Search the news archive

To close this popup you can press escape or click the close icon.
Logo
x
Logo
×
Register - Step 1

You may choose to subscribe to the PIC Magazine, the PIC Newsletter, or both. You may also request additional information if required, before submitting your application.


Please subscribe me to:

 

You chose the industry type of "Other"

Please enter the industry that you work in:
Please enter the industry that you work in: