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Kepler's Law Kepler’s First Law – the orbit of any planet is an ellipse with the sun at one focus.

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Presentation on theme: "Kepler's Law Kepler’s First Law – the orbit of any planet is an ellipse with the sun at one focus."— Presentation transcript:

1 Kepler's Law Kepler’s First Law – the orbit of any planet is an ellipse with the sun at one focus

2 Kepler's Law Kepler’s Second Law; Law of Areas – every planet moves so that its radius sector sweeps over equal areas in equal intervals of time.

3 Kepler's Law Kepler’s Third Law; Law of Periods – the square of the periods of revolution of any two planets is to each other as the cubes of their respective mean distances from the sun.

4 Launching the Satellite
Space shuttles carry some satellites into space Many satellites require minor adjustments of their orbit before they begin to perform their function. Built-in rockets called thrusters, some as small as a propelling pencil, make these adjustments. Once a satellite is placed into a stable orbit, it can remain there for a long time without further adjustment.

5 Launching the Satellite
Rocket Motors - Communications satellites are lifted into orbit by space vehicles, which are launched vertically for structural and aerodynamic reasons. Rocket motors provide the power for these vehicles. Rocket motors do not depend on the atmosphere for oxidizing or burning fuel. They may classify as solid or liquid propellant motors

6 Launching the Satellite
Solid Propellant Rockets - Works on the principle similar to small gunpowder rockets used for fireworks displays. It contains grain fuel, a combination of combustible material and oxidizer. Fuel is burned in a restricted combustion space with nozzles to direct and accelerate the outgoing gas flow. Directional control is achieved by placing restructures or deflectors to change the direction of thrust. They are usually used for upper stages of multiple stage vehicles such as the Polaris.

7 Launching the Satellite
Liquid Propellant Rockets - Carries two tanks outside the combustion chamber, one for fuel and the other for the oxidizer.

8 Components of Satellite Systems
Earth Station and Uplink Components - Earth Station is that portion of satellite link which receive, processes and transmits communications between the earth and a satellite

9 Components of Satellite Systems
Functions Receiving IF signals from one or more modulators Transition of IF signals to RF signals Transmission of signals to satellites Receiving signals from the satellite Translating RF signals into IF signals

10 Components of Satellite Systems
Major Subsystems The power subsystem Terrestrial interface Transmit and receive chain Antenna Control sub-systems

11 Components of Satellite Systems
Components of Earth Station IF Modulator – converts input baseband signal to FM, QAM IF IF-RF Microwave Up Converter – converts IF to RF carrier frequencies High Power Amplifier (HPA) – provides adequate input sensitivity and output power to propagate signal transponder using a TWT or Klystron. Output Band Pass Filter – limits bandwidth

12 Components of Satellite Systems
Up Converter Modulator BPF IF Mixer RF BPF HPA Base Band in FDM or PCM/TDM Microwave Generator

13 Components of Satellite Systems
Components of Satellite Assembly Command and control antenna Global coverage antenna Orbit – maneuvering engine for orbit and altitude adjustment stabilization. Power supply or generator – solar cell array and batteries Inertial guidance systems Heat control Telemetry equipment

14 Components of Satellite Systems
Transponder Components - microwave repeaters carried by communication satellites. Transponders have the following function: receiving, amplification, frequency conversion and retransmission.

15 Components of Satellite Systems
Input Band Limiting Device – limits total noise applied to LNA input. Input Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) – amplifies signals, usually a tunnel diode Frequency Translator – shift oscillator, which converts highband uplink frequency to lowband downlink frequency Low-Level Power Amplifier – amplifies (TWT) RF signal for transmission through the downlink to station receiver. Output Bandpass Filter – limits output bandwidth

16 Components of Satellite Systems
Frequency Translator BPF LNA Mixer BPF LNA Microwave Shift Oscillator 2 GHz

17 Components of Satellite Systems
Downlink Components Bandpass Filter (BPF) – limits input noise power to LNA Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) – highly sensitive, low noise device usually a tunnel diode or parametric amplifier RF-to-IF Down Converter – mixer / bandpass filter combination which converts the received RF signal to an IF frequency

18 Components of Satellite Systems
Down Converter BPF LNA Mixer BPF Demodulator Microwave Generator

19 Frequency Allocations
Choice of Frequency - primarily dictated by the external and internal noise sources that contribute to the noise system temperature and by the existence of spectral window for which signal attenuation is small. - The following factors must be considered sources of noise and attenuation such as cosmic noise, sunspot activity, Faraday rotation, ionosphere scintillations, rain and snow.

20 Frequency Allocations
- C band is the most commonly used band. - Ku band is immune to terrestrial jamming but sensitive to atmospheric conditions such as transient noise - The Ka-band has the strongest signal and higher data rate capability. It is highly directional and has a spot coverage - X band – military - L band Frequency Spacing - Geosynchronous satellites share a limited space and frequency spectrum within a given area of geostationary orbit. Each is assigned a longitude spaced between 3 to 6 degrees in the arc approximately 22,300 miles above the equator

21 Frequency Allocations
Uplink and downlink frequency bands - The uplink frequency is always higher than the downlink by 2225 MHz because higher frequency offers greater spreading or Free Space Loss than lower frequencies. Frequency Reuse Methods - Frequency reuse is a technique employed in order to conserve electromagnetic frequencies resources, they can be implemented by the following methods:

22 Frequency Allocations
Multiple Coverage Areas - the use of the same frequency beamed towards different geographic areas on earth multiple spot beam antennas. Dual polarization – sending different information signals using vertical or horizontal electromagnetic polarization. This is similar to Polarization Diversity in order to improve system stability

23 Satellite Footprint - a geographic representation of a satellite’s radiation pattern, with contour lines representing limits of equal receive power density. Spot Coverage – beams concentrate the radiated power in a very small geographic area Zonal Coverage – covers less than one-third of earth’s surface Earth Coverage – covers approximately one-third of earth's surface (42 %) using a 17-degree beamwidth

24 Satellite Types as to Territorial Coverage
Global – covers the whole world Regional – covers selected regions such as Pacific, Atlantic, etc. National / Domestic – covers domestic or national territory

25 Satellite Types as to Services Offered
Fixed Mobile Broadcasting Maritime Aeronautical Point-to-point Military Amateur Experimental

26 Satellite Tracking Look Angle – the angle measure from the horizontal to the point on the center of the main beam of the antenna when the antenna is pointed directly at the satellite Angle of Elevation – angle formed between the plane of a wave from an earth station antenna and the horizon, or the angle subtended at the earth station antenna between the satellite and the earth’s horizon Azimuth – the horizontal pointing angle of an antenna measured in degrees in a clockwise direction from true North

27 where: g = acceleration due to gravity; 9.81 m/s2
Satellite Height ( 1 3 ) gr2T2 4π2 h = where: g = acceleration due to gravity; 9.81 m/s2 r = earth radius; 6400 km T = time in second to make a complete orbit Satellite Velocity 4 x 1011 ν s = ; m/s hkm

28 Satellite System Design Parameters
Factors in Satellite Design Transmit Power or Effective Radiated Power – the product of the total antenna radiated power and its gain. Equivalent Noise Temperature – the ratio between the Noise Power and the product of the Bandwidth and Boltzmann constant. Noise Density – total noise power normalized to 1 hertz bandwidth.

29 Satellite System Design Parameters
Satellite Control – involves actions necessary to position, tract, monitor, and command the satellite during the course of its operational life. It involves supervising and monitoring the establishment, configuration and control of each required of link through satellite transponder in accordance with desired parameters. The two main aspects of satellite control are orientation and position control.

30 Satellite System Design Parameters
Orientation – is required in a communications satellite for initial orientation and for all subsequent adjustment so the antenna will constantly view the earth and the solar cells will view the sun Position Control – is required for initial satellite emplacement and to compensate for forces which tends to divert the satellite from its orbit. Such forces include lunar and solar gravitational action. Orientation Control - attitude control of a vehicle about any or all of its axes (roll, pitch and yaw) projects for axial, radial axis and corrections.

31 Satellite System Design Parameters

32 Satellite System Design Parameters
Spin Stabilization – operates on the principle that the direction of the spin axis of a rotating body tends to remain fixed inertial space. It requires no additional energy or expenditure of mass once the system is in motion Gravity Gradient Stabilization – requires no power or expendable mass once deployed and allows more of satellite electrical power and weight for communications purposes. Station Keeping – is the control routing necessary to keep the satellite in position. Circuit Control – involves actions necessary to assure that the required circuits between all authorized users are established, maintained and restored satisfactorily, a function performed by technical control facilities personnel

33 Satellite Accessing Technique
Access Techniques - refers to the way a communications system uses a satellite transponder. Multiple Access - in communications satellites, those satellites so equipped that they may function as a portion of a communications link between more than one pair of ground stations simultaneously. Multiple Access Back-Off – refers to the satellite output power that is lost due to the necessity for backing off on earth station radiated power to avoid generating excessively high intermodulation products in the satellite. It ranges from 1 to 2 dB

34 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA) – a satellite transponder is divided into smaller frequencies hand segments where each segment is assigned to use for his uplink or downlink frequency.

35 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
Pre-assigned – a given number of available voice hand channels from each earth station are assigned dedicated destinations. This method is only economically feasible in situations where sources / destination locations have very low traffic density during the busy hour. Demand Assigned (DAMA) – voice band channels are assigned on “as-needed” basis. It provides more versatility and more efficient use of the frequency spectrum.

36 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
Three Methods of Controlling DAMA Systems Polling – a master station “polls” other stations sequentially. When a positive reply is received, a channel is assigned accordingly. As the polling interval becomes longer and the system tends to become unwieldy because of excessive post dial delay as a call attempt waits for the pulling interval to run its course

37 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
Random Access Central Control – a central computer located at the master station coordinates the status of the channels. Call requests are passed to the central computer and a channel is assigned if available. Once the call is completed and the subscriber goes on the hook, the speech path is taken down and the channel used is returned to the demand access pull of ideal channels.

38 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
Random Access Distributed Control – uses a processor controller at each earth station accessing the system. All earth stations in the network monitor the status information by means of the digital order wire circuit. When an idle channel is seized, all users are informed to the fact and the circuit is removed from the poll

39 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
SPADE – Single Channel Per Carrier PCM Multiple Access Demand Assignment Equipment – an 800-PCM encoded voice band channels separately QPSK modulate an IF carrier frequency. Each 4 kHz voice band channel is sampled at an 8 kHz rate and converted into bit PCM CODE. This produces a 64 kbps PCM code for each band channel

40 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) - works in the time domain and is applicable to digital systems because information storage is required. In this method, stations are restricted to precise time slot. It has no restrictions on frequency or bandwidth. Presently, it is the most dominant method used of providing the most efficient method of transmitting digitally modulated carries (PSK).

41 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
- each earth station transmits a short burst of a digitally modulated carrier during a precise time slot which TDMA frame. Each burst is synchronized so that it arrives at the satellite transponder at a different time avoid collision with another station's carrier. It is a “store-and-forward” system whereby earth stations, can consult only during their specified time slot, although the incoming voice had signals is continuous.

42 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
- in TDMA, only one user appears on the transponder at any given time. Each user is assigned a time slot to the satellite; transponder power and bandwidth are shared by several earth stations.

43 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
Store and Forward – a technique in which a message received from earth termed is held in storage until the satellite is in view of a second earth terminal, at which time the message is transmitted.

44 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) or Spread Spectrum Multiple Access (SSMA) - each station may transmit whenever it wishes and can use any or all of the bandwidth allocated. Transmissions are separated through envelope, encryption, and decryption techniques. It uses unique binary words called CHIP CODES to receive a particular earth station’s transmission.

45 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
- a correlator checks or compares orthogonal codes with original chip codes to allow access to users - the transmitted signal is spread over part or all of the available transponder hand width in a time-frequency relationship by a code transformation. Typically, the modulated carrier is ten to hundreds of times greater than the information bandwidth.

46 Satellite Multiple Access Technique
Frequency Hopping – is a form of CDMA where a digital code is used to continually change the frequency of the carrier. The total available bandwidth is partitioned to smaller frequency bands and total transmission time is subdivided into smaller time slots. Each station uses the entire RF spectrum but never occupies more than a small portion of that spectrum at any one time.

47 Satellite Organizations
INMARSAT (International Maritime Satellite Organization) - recommended by the panel of experts commissioned by the Intergovernmental Maritime Consultative Organization (IMCO). They consider the introduction of satellite communications to the maritime sphere with the aim of improving communications with ships, particularly for safety and distress purposes.

48 Satellite Organizations
- born in July 1979, very much along the INTELSAT lines, with COMSAT as the largest shareholder.

49 Satellite Organizations
INTELSAT (International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium) - Founded in 1964 at Washington D.C. by COMSAT (Communication Satellite Corporation) of the United States, Overseas Telecommunications Commission of the Australia and nine other world communications agencies

50 Satellite Organizations

51 Satellite Organizations
MARISAT - a ship-to-shore and shore-to-ship communications via a dedicated geostationary satellite system, providing high-quality telephony, data and telex/telegraphy circuits

52 Questions 1. The first passive satellite a. Telstar b. Early Bird c. Sputnik I d. Moon

53 Questions 2. The first active satellite a. Sputnik I b. Telstar
c. INTELSAT I d. Explorer I

54 Questions 3.The first geostationary satellite launched in 1965 is a. Syncom I b. Sputnik I c. Explorer I d. Early Bird

55 Questions 4. The average lifetime of geosynchronous satellites is about __________ years. a. 5 b. 10 c. 15 d. 20

56 Questions 5. A communication satellite is a repeater between
a. A transmitting station and receiving station b. Many transmitting stations and many receiving stations c. A transmitting station and many receiving stations d. Many transmitting stations and a receiving station

57 Questions 6. One of the main applications of satellite communications is monitoring the ecological situation of the earth. This is known as a. Navigation b. Surveillance c. Remote control d. Remote sensing

58 Questions 7. What vacuum tube used to amplify RF signal for transmission through the downlink to station receiver? a. Magnetron b. Klystron c. Twystron d. TWT

59 Questions 8. A high power tube used in transmission of RF signal uplink a. Magnetron b. Klystron c. BWO d. TWT

60 Questions 9. A stage in transponder and downlink system which amplifies the signal and ensuring that noise is suppressed as possible a. Mixer b. Demodulator c. LNA d. IF amplifier

61 Questions 10. A transponder is a satellite equipment which a. Receives a signal from earth station and amplifies it b. Changes the frequency of the received signal c. Retransmit the received signal d. All of the above

62 Questions 11. Multiple repeaters in communications satellites are known as a. Transponders b. Detectors c. Modulators d. Transceivers

63 Questions 12. Satellite-to-satellite link is also called a. Uplink
b. Downlink c. Crosslink d. Weakest link

64 Questions 13. The expression for satellite link frequencies such as 14/12 GHz denotes that a. 12 GHz is the uplink frequency and 14 GHz is the downlink frequency b. the system is operating at a mean frequency of 13 GHz c. 14 GHz is the uplink frequency and 12 GHz is the downlink frequency d. the 14 GHz frequency is backup for 12 GHz frequency or vice versa

65 Questions 14. The most widely used microwave bands for commercial applications are a. C band and X band b. X band and S band c. C band and Ku band d. S band and Ku band

66 Questions 15. At present, the RF band mainly used by most satellites is a. EHF b. UHF c. SHF d. VHF

67 Questions 16. The required antenna size __________ as the operating frequency of a system increases, assuming that antenna gain remains unchanged. a. Remains the same b. Increases c. Decreases d. All of the above

68 Questions 17. A 20-m antenna gives a certain up-link gain at frequencies of 4/6 GHz. For getting the same gain in 20/30 GHz band, antenna size requires __________ meters. a. 100 b. 4 c. 1 d. 10

69 Questions 18. Orbital disturbances of a geosynchronous satellite are caused by a. Moon b. Sun c. Earth d. All of the above

70 Questions 19. Geosynchronous satellites
a. Has the same period as that of the earth b. Has a circular obit c. Rotates in the equatorial plane d. All of the above

71 Questions 20. To cover all inhabited regions of the earth, the number of geosynchronous satellites required is a. 5 b. 10 c. 2 d. 3

72 Questions 21. A geostationary satellite is one which a. Hangs motionless in space about 36,000 km above the earth b. Travels around the earth about 24 hrs. c. Remains stationary above the earth d. Appears stationary above the earth

73 Questions 22. Geosynchronous Communication satellites travel around the earth in circular orbits with forward speed of about __________km/hr. a. 100,000 b. 36,000 c. 11,200 d. 22,800

74 Questions 23. The period of the satellite is a. The amount of time it takes for a satellite to complete one orbit b. The point on an orbit where satellite to complete one orbit c. The time it takes the satellite to travel from perigee to apogee d. An orbital arc that extends from 60 degrees west longitude to 145 degrees west longitude

75 Questions 24. What is the satellite's period orbiting in a circular pattern with elevation of 1000 km? a. 1 hr 45 mins b. 2 hrs 45 mins c. 2 hrs 30 mins d. 3 hrs

76 Questions 25. A satellite, orbiting in a circular orbit,
a. Has constant velocity b. Has varying velocity c. Is not moving at all d. Both a and b

77 Questions 26. What is a descending pass for a satellite?
a. A pass from west to east b. A pass from east to west c. A pass from south to north d. A pass from north to south

78 Questions 27. Satellite rotating in an orbit takes it over the north and south poles is in a. Inclined orbit b. Polar orbit c. Equatorial orbit d. Declined orbit

79 Questions 28. The farthest point a satellite can reach is a. Apogee
b. Perigee c. Altitude d. Attitude

80 Questions 29. Include all earth stations within line-of-sight path of a satellite a. Satellite shadow b. Earth shadow c. Zonal d. Global

81 Questions 30. The different multiple accesses which permit many satellite users to operate in parallel through a. A Single Transponder Without Interfering With Each other are b. FDMA c. TDMA d. CDMA e. All of the above

82 Questions 31. A digital technology that uses a low power signal spread across a wide bandwidth. With this technology, a phone call is assigned a code instead of a certain frequency. Using identifying code and a low power signal, a large number of channels can used the entire bandwidth a. TDMA b. PCDMA c. PMA d. CDMA

83 Questions 32. The use of the same frequency on the same geographical area a. Frequency reuse b. Roaming c. Homing d. Cellular

84 Questions 33. In selecting a satellite system, the first determining factor is a. Coverage area b. EIRP c. Antenna size d. Antenna gain

85 Questions 34. The earth's area or region that the satellite can receive from or transmit to a. Footprint b. Skip zone c. Primary area d. Finger print

86 Questions 35. Satellite radiation pattern that covers 1/3 of the earth's surface a. Earth b. Zonal c. Spot d. Global

87 Questions 36. A satellite position is measured by its _________ angle with respect to the horizon. a. Elevation b. Depression c. Azimuth d. Incidence

88 Questions 37. The _________ angle measures the satellite position clockwise from the direction of true North a. Elevation b. Depression c. Azimuth d. Incidence

89 Questions 38. GPS has a total number satellites equal to a. 12 b. 24 c. 36 d. 48

90 Questions 39. How many elliptical orbits does Navstar GPS have? a. 5 b. 6 c. 7 d. 8

91 Questions 40. What is the free space attenuation of a satellite system operating at 36,000 km above the earth operating at 5 GHz? a. 180 dB b. 190 dB c. 198 dB d. 189 dB

92 Questions 41. The FDMA technique wherein voice band channels are assigned on “as needed" basis. a. PAMA b. DAMA c. SSMA d. CDMA

93 Questions 42. A satellite equipped with electronic devices to receive, amplify, convert, and retransmit signals. a. Passive b. Active c. Uplink d. Downlink

94 Questions 43. An earth station transmits signal to a satellite 38,500 km, directly overhead it. What is the propagation delay when the signal is received back at the same earth station, in milliseconds? a. 257 b. 200 c. 285 d. 185

95 Questions 44. A satellite communication link between Pinugay Earth Station, Philippines and Mt. Fucino Earth Station, Italy is to be established. If the assigned uplink frequency at Pinugay Earth Station is 6175 MHz, what is the downlink frequency at Mt. Fucino Earth Station, in MHz? a b c d. 4200

96 Questions 45. "The orbit of any planet is an ellipse with the sun at one focus". This is a. Kepler's First Law b. Kepler's Second Law c. Kepler's Third Law d. Law of universal Gravitation

97 Questions 46. When a satellite orbits in the opposite direction as the earth's rotation with an angular velocity less than that of the earth a. Orbital b. Prograde c. Retrograde d. Geostationary

98 Questions 47. The actual user information conveyed through the satellite system a. Bus transmission b. Payload c. Prograde d. Retrograde

99 Questions 48. The spatial separation between geosynchronous satellites a. 1-3 degrees b. 3-6 degrees c. 6-8 degrees d degrees

100 Questions 49. The footprint which covers a very small geographical area. a. Spot coverage b. Zonal coverage c. Earth coverage d. Regional coverage

101 Questions 50. The satellite frequency reuse method which sends different information signals using vertical or horizontal electromagnetic polarization a. Multiple coverage areas b. Dual polarization c. Spatial separation d. Spread spectrum

102 Questions 51. __________ detects the satellite signal relayed from the feed and converts it to an electric current, amplifies and lower its frequency. a. Feedhorn b. Satellite dish c. Satellite receiver d. LNA

103 Questions 52. Satellites used for intercontinental communications are known as a. Comsat b. Domsat c. Marisat d. Intelsat

104 Questions 53. What is the basic function of a communications satellite? a. To act as a receiving antenna for broadcast FM b. To compensate for the antenna limitations c. To eliminate aerodynamic drag d. To act as a receiving antenna for broadcast AM

105 Questions 54. What do you call of a satellite used to provide satellite services within a single country? a. Orbital satellite b. Geostationary satellite c. Non-synchronous satellite d. Domestic satellite

106 Questions 55. A satellite beam that covers almost 42.5% of the earth's surface. a. Zone beam b. Hemispheric beam c. Spot beam d. Global beam

107 Questions 56. The first Philippine satellite has how many channels? a. 30 b. 24 c. 48 d. 50

108 Questions 57. Aguila I has how many transponders? a. 36 b. 48 c. 24 d. 12

109 Questions 58. How many satellite orbital slots were requested by the Philippine Government from ITU? a. 2 b. 4 c. 6 d. 8

110 Questions 59. The most common device used as an LNA is a. Zener diode b. Tunnel diode c. IMPATT diode d. Shockley diode

111 Questions 60. The radiation patterns of earth coverage antennas have a beamwidth of approximately a. 21degrees b. 5 degrees c. 17 degrees d. 35 degrees

112 Questions 61. The main power sources for satellites are a. Batteries b. Solar cells c. Fuel cells d. Thermoelectric generators

113 Questions 62. What is the common up-converter and down-converter IF? a. 36 MHz b. 40 MHz c. 70 MHz d. 500 MHz

114 Questions 63. When the satellites are spaced 4 degrees of the 360 degrees complete circle, how many parking spaces or orbit slots are available? a. 90 b. 85 c. 95 d. 80

115 Questions 64. The first satellite launched for a geosynchronous orbit but unfortunately lost during orbit injection. a. Syncom I b. Telstar I c. Sputnik I d. Early Bird

116 Questions 65. Geostationary satellites are located _______ with respect to the equator. a. 0 deg longitude b. 0 deg latitude c. 90 deg latitude d. 45 deg latitude

117 Questions 66. Incidentally proposed the geostationary scheme or orbit of satellites in 1940's. a. Clarke b. Gauss c. Morse d. Gray

118 Questions 67. The control routine necessary to keep the satellite in position is referred to as a. Station keeping b. Station tracking c. Station monitoring d. Station maintenance

119 Questions 68. A satellite which simply reflects the signal without further amplification. a. Passive b. Active c. Geostationary d. Posigrade

120 Questions 69. What is the line joining the ascending and descending nodes through the center of the earth? a. Line of apsides b. Line of nodes c. Line of shoot d. Line of sight

121 Questions 70. The line joining the perigee and apogee through the center of the earth. a. Line of sight b. Line of nodes c. Equatorial belt d. Line of apsides


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