Folie 1 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination with Satellites (Cloudsat, LEOs, etc.)

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Presentation transcript:

Folie 1 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination with Satellites (Cloudsat, LEOs, etc.)

Folie 2 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Outline I. Regulatory Requirements - RR Article 11 - RR Article 9 (- RR Appendices 30, 30A, 30B) II. Coordination in Practice - subject / not subject to coordination - RR RR Appendix 4 - examples of inter-agency coordination III. Spirit of Coordination - spectrum as generally available resource - coordination: cooperation rather than confrontation - good examples, bad examples

Folie 3 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Regulatory Requirements Radio Regulations, ARTICLE 11 Notification and recording of frequency assignments Any frequency assignment.... shall be notified to the Bureau: if the use of that assignment is capable of causing harmful interference to any service of another administration; or if that assignment is to be used for international radiocommunication; or if that assignment is subject to a world or regional frequency allotment or assignment plan which does not have its own notification procedure; or if that assignment is subject to the coordination procedure of Article 9 or is involved in such a case; or if it is desired to obtain international recognition for that assignment; or if it is a non-conforming assignment under No. 8.4 and if the administration wishes to have it recorded for information.

Folie 4 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Regulatory Requirement Radio Regulations, ARTICLE 9 Procedure for effecting coordination with or obtaining agreement of other administrations Article 9 contains - lists of cases, in which coordination is mandatory, - the advance publication and coordination procedures, - the due dates for the different kind of information or actions. Article 9 describes the processes of - advance publication - coordination - notification

Folie 5 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Regulatory Requirement Radio Regulations, ARTICLE 9 Coordination is mandatory ("subject to coordination"): 3-stage process for all satellites on geostationary orbit and for NGSOs in cases, when the requirement to coordinate is included in a footnote - fairly simple advance publication information - extensive coordination request - request for notification after successful coordination Coordination is not mandatory ("not subject to coordination"): 2-stage process for most satellites in non-geostationary orbit - extensive advance publication information - request for notification

Folie 6 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Regulatory Requirement Radio Regulations, ARTICLE 9 Earth observation or space research satellites are "not subject to coordination" (unless they are in GSO, e.g. relay satellites) such satellites will be notified and entered into the master register without completing a formal coordination procedure "coordination light" takes place based on the advance publication information.

Folie 7 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Regulatory Requirement Radio Regulations, Appendicees 30, 30 A, and 30 B ITU has two coordination approaches: - first come - first served - planned bands some frequency bands in the FSS, BSS and associated feeder links are treated as "planned bands" and procedures different from Article 9 apply not relevant for science services

Folie 8 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice subject / not subject to coordination

Folie 9 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice subject / not subject to coordination

Folie 10 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice subject / not subject to coordination For satellites not subject to coordination the process of "coordination light" starts with the advance publication, which contains the necessary technical information. For satellites subject to coordination the advance publication only contains the orbital position and the frequency bands (allocations) and is for information only. Coordination starts after the next step, the "Coordination Request", which is very detailed.

Folie 11 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice RR 4.4

Folie 12 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice RR 4.4 Radio Regulations, Article 4 The case of assignements not in conformity with the frequency allocation tables is explicitely forseen. Administrations are free to deviate from the Radio Regulations as long as no harmful interference is caused.

Folie 13 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice RR Appendix 4 The parameters to be provided for publication and coordination are detailed in:

Folie 14 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice RR Appendix 4

Folie 15 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice RR Appendix 4

Folie 16 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice RR Appendix 4

Folie 17 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice RR Appendix 4

Folie 18 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice RR Appendix 4 The Coordination process looks at systems operating in the same frequency band with overlapping frequencies. Interference due to unwanted emissions are not generally considered. Exemption: footnotes containing flux density limits against services in neigbouring bands. Administrations may always comment and ask for coordination, even in cases, which are not detailled in Article 9, e.g. filings under RR 4.4

Folie 19 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice RR Appendix 4 Coordination based on Article 9 RR is a matter of the administrations of ITU- member states. The ITU-R is involved and keeps track of the coordination processes. Practical work is done by the operators of a satellite system, administrations may assist if required. Operators of conflicting satellite assignments negotiate until they come to an agreement. The details of the agreement are normally kept secret. Non-disclosure agreement!!!

Folie 20 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice examples of inter-agency coordination Satellite systems of space agencies normally not subject to coordination To avoid harmful interference, space agencies discuss their planned missions in advance of the ITU filing process SFCG has database with all agency missions and responsible contact person SFCG has adopted resolution for inter-agency coordination In some cases operational coordination is necessary (and done!)

Folie 21 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice examples of inter-agency coordination Examples for operational coordination: TerraSAR must not transmit telemetry data in S-band in certain sections of a few orbits in oder not to cause harmful interference to some Russian and Japanese geostationary satellites. One experimental transmitter onboard the ISS has the potential to cause harmful interference to one ESA satellite on polar orbit: Before any run of the experiment the orbital positions are checked relative to the ESA ground station.

Folie 22 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice examples of inter-agency coordination Agencies may also consider unwanted emissions for coordination cases. Example: CloudSat CloudSat is "not subject to coordination" and no fixed pfd limit given in a footnote, therefore coordination between agencies, only. No administration involved. Cloudsat is example of operational coordination.

Folie 23 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice examples of inter-agency coordination

Folie 24 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice examples of inter-agency coordination 5.562The use of the band GHz by the Earth exploration- satellite (active) and space research (active) services is limited to spaceborne cloud radars. (WRC-97) 5.562AIn the bands GHz and GHz, transmissions from space stations of the Earth exploration-satellite service (active) that are directed into the main beam of a radio astronomy antenna have the potential to damage some radio astronomy receivers. Space agencies operating the transmitters and the radio astronomy stations concerned should mutually plan their operations so as to avoid such occurrences to the maximum extent possible. (WRC ‑ 2000)

Folie 25 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice examples of inter-agency coordination...

Folie 26 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Coordination in Practice examples of inter-agency coordination

Folie 27 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of Coordination Spectrum as generally available resource Director of ITU Radio Bureau to WP7D: "I want the spectrum to be used!" Radioastronomers were shocked! What he probably meant was: The radio spectrum is a natural resource available to all mankind. Nobody should block spectrum. The same director later accused satellite operators of "massive overfiling". The spectrum is divided into allocations, but no administration, no service, and no operator has property rights of any part of the spectrum. By overfiling satellite operators try to gain excluve rights over part of the spectrum, without actual need.

Folie 28 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of Coordination Spectrum as generally available resource Filing under RR 4.4: It is not forbidden to assign frequencies in a non- complient way. One purpose of the Radio Regulations is to avoid harmful interference, and the allocation table of Article 5 is the most recommended means. If harmful interference can be avoided by other means, administrations are free to use these other means. Stricly applying the Radio Regulations incl. Article 5 does not guarantee interference-free operation, as radioastronomers are very well aware. Particular problem: Unwanted emissions.

Folie 29 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of Coordination Coordination: cooperation rather than confrontation 94 GHz EESS (active) vs. Radioastronomy is basically an unwanted emission problem. Other bands for high-power transmissions from EESS (active) exist, where distance to RA allocation is much larger. On request by IUCAF, the space agencies consider similar resolution to protect radioastronomy also in other bands.

Folie 30 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of Coordination Coordination: cooperation rather than confrontation

Folie 31 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of Coordination Coordination: cooperation rather than confrontation The European space agencies work together in ECSS on a set of norms and regulations on: - Space Project Management - Space Product Assurance - Space Engineering They commit themselves to obbey to these rules.

Folie 32 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples

Folie 33 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples

Folie 34 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples

Folie 35 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples

Folie 36 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples

Folie 37 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples European Space Agencies shall oblige there manufacturers to meet these limits. Some European satellite manufacturers have taken over the ECSS requirements. AfriSat was built by such a European manufacturer, however: When AfriSat was switched on, the sky became apparently radio-bright also over Europe.

Folie 38 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples The orbital position of AfriSat, observed in a passive frequency band. Intermodulation products were excluded, because the receiver was checked to be linear.

Folie 39 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples The orbital position of AfriSat, observed in a passive frequency band, after filtering. Also in this case, the receiver was, of course, linear!

Folie 40 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples Same band, same telescope: Observers complained about intermittend interference in the passive 21 cm band after DAB-T was put into operation in the band MHz. A test campaign was run one night, in close cooperation with the operator of the broadcast stations. Stations were switched off and on again and the interference situation was checked with an simulated observational run. There was no obvious improvement while any of the 3 nearest stations was switched off. The operator could be persuaded to switch off all 3 stations at the same time, with no clear improvement in the observational data. While all 3 broadcast stations were switched off, the radio telescope was moved to point as closely as possible towards the observatory building. The source of interference in the passive band was immediately identified!

Folie 41 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Spirit of coordination good examples, bad examples And now the bad example part: The internet site of the radio observatory in question maintained a page with technical news and information, visible from the outside world. On this page the notice was found that 21 cm observations were severely hampered by interference due to digital audio broadcasting. This notice was not removed for a very long time, even though the frequency manager, who had organised the test campaign, asked for it by telefone, s and even in writing.

Folie 42 Coordination with Satellites > Klaus Ruf > IUCAF Summer School>3 June 2010 Conclusion All radio services have the right to use the spectrum. All services should respect each other and try to understand each other, and this is not just a matter of "lingo". Problems will occur, and can be solved or mitigated only through cooperation.