How Google's Loon Balloon Internet Service Is Heading Into Space
© Courtesy of Loon. Google's loon balloon internet software system |
By Aaron Pressman, Fortune
Google
parent Alphabet’s Loon unit, which offers wireless connectivity via
high-altitude balloons, is going into space—or least some of its
pioneering network software is going aloft.
On Thursday, Loon announced a partnership to develop a version of the
programming it uses to coordinate communications among its balloons for
Canadian satellite operator Telesat. Financial terms of the partnership
were not disclosed.
While Telesat’s current space-based internet
services come via traditional large satellites in geostationary orbit,
the company is developing a new service that will rely on hundreds of
smaller craft orbiting at a much lower altitude. Telesat’s vastly more
complicated low-Earth satellite internet service requires the same kind
communications among the craft that Loon developed to send data among
its balloons and ground stations, the two companies said.
“Since
our balloons move with the winds, their physical coordinates are
constantly changing in relation to the ground, each other, and you,”
Loon’s Head of Engineering Sal Candido explained in a blog post.
“The synergy between balloons and non-geostationary orbit (NGSO)
satellites comes from a shared characteristic — both are in constant
motion relative to the Earth and one another. Because of that motion,
the network challenges present in Loon’s internet balloon system will
also be present for future NGSO communications satellites.”
The
Telesat network aims to launch 292 satellites to get started and could
go as high as 512 spacecraft, says vice president Erwin Hudson, who
oversees the project. Without getting too specific, the entire project
will be a “multi-billion dollar investment” with the goal of starting
commercial service in 2022, he said.
While Telesat’s network could take years to build, it faces competition from a host of other players
with similar plans. Elon Musk’s SpaceX is planing a service called
Starlink with thousands of low orbiting satellites, which is similar to
OneWeb backed by Japanese billionaire Masayoshi Son’s SoftBank Group.
They’re pitted against dozens of small satellite upstarts like Swarm
Technologies, Astrocast, and Sky and Space Global. Plus the major
established space Internet services from Viasat vsat
and EchoStar’s Hughes Network Systems plan to
launch even more capable large communications satellites of their own.
The aim of all of the new services is to help connect people in
developing countries, provide speedier online access to mainly rural
users who depend on today’s slower and more expensive satellite Internet
services, and cater to business customers that want real-time data from
their equipment, like oil rigs and ocean buoys.
The new partnership comes about six months after Alphabet googl
shifted Loon from being part of the more experimental R&D
unit X, where its first tests date back to 2011, to being a standalone company seeking to grow on its own.
Loon
CEO Alastair Westgarth has said he plans mainly to partner with mobile
carriers around the world, instead of launching services under Loon’s
own brand. For example, Loon is partnering with Telekom Kenya to help
the African carrier extend its reach to central sections of the country
that lack reliable communications connections. Loon also assisted AT&T in Puerto Rico to reconnect customers after Hurricane Maria.
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