| Adjacent
Channel Interference |
Unwanted electrical interference from signals
that are immediately adjacent in frequency to the desired signal.
This can arise due to imperfections in the transmission channel
and/or equipment. |
| Antenna
Alignment |
The process of optimising the orientation
of a satellite antenna's main direction of sensitivitytowards the
satellite to maximise the received signal level and to minimise
the chance of receiving unwanted interference from other satellite
systems. A commonly-used alternative expressions is "antenna pointing". |
| Antenna
Noise Temperature |
A receiving antenna collects noise from radiating
bodies falling within its radiation pattern. For an on-ground receiving
antenna, this includes contributions from the sky and from the surroundings
(the earth). The combined affect of these noise sources is modelled
by an equivalent noise temperature for the antenna, which varies
with elevation angle and antenna size. |
| Attenuation |
The measure of the weakening of a signal
(loss) that occurs as it travels through a device or transmission
medium (e.g. radio waves through the atmosphere, an electrical signal
through a cable). Attenuation is usually measured in decibels. |
| Availability |
The amount of time that the quality of a
telecommunication service or communications link equals or exceeds
a specified minimum value. For satellite communication links the
availability is usually expressed as a percentage of the average
year. See also Outage. |
| Azimuth |
The pointing direction of an antenna measured
in the local horizontal plane in a clockwise direction from north.
It is the horizontal co-ordinate that is used to align a satellite
antenna. See also Elevation. |
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| Band
Switching |
The process of selecting one of two frequency
bands (the "low band" or the "high band") for
reception of satellite signals. Frequency band switching is implemented
in dual-band LNBs by changing the frequency of the local oscillator
reference signal that is used to downconvert the received signals
to IF. |
| Bandwidth |
The range of frequencies used for a particular
radio transmission (e.g. 36 MHz). It is the difference between the
lowest and highest transmission frequencies used by a signal. |
| Beacon |
A highly stable radio frequency signal, which
is used by earth stations equipped with an automatically (satellite)
tracking system. Beacons can be generated on-board the satellite,
or transmitted from the ground and relayed through the satellite.
When generated on-board the satellite, they are also known as satellite
or on-board beacons and sometimes carry telemetry signals (see Telemetry) |
| Beam |
A unidirectional flow of radio waves concentrated
in a particular direction. A term commonly used to refer to an antenna's
radiation pattern by analogy with a light beam. It is most often
used to describe the radiation pattern of satellite antennas. The
intersection of a satellite beam with the earth's surface is referred
to as the (beam's) footprint. |
| Beamwidth |
A measure of the ability of an antenna to
focus signal energy towards a particular direction in space (e.g.
towards the satellite for a ground-based transmitting antenna),
or to collect signal energy from a particular direction in space
(e.g. from the satellite for a ground-based receiving antenna).
The beamwidth is measured in a plane containing the direction of
maximum signal strength. It is usually expressed as the angular
separation between the two directions in which the signal strength
is reduced to one-half of the maximum value (the -3 db half-power
points). |
| Bit
Error Rate (BER) |
An overall measure of the quality of a received
digital bit stream. It is the ratio of the number of information
bits that are received in error to the total number of bits received,
averaged over a period of time. |
| Boresight |
The direction of maximum antenna gain. For
a receiving antenna, the boresight is aligned with the satellite
as accurately as possible for maximum received signal strength. |
| Bouquet |
A collection of digital multimedia services
marketed as a single package, often transmitted in a single data
stream. See also Digital Multiplexing. |
| BSS |
Broadcasting Satellite Service. Typically
used to refer to a range of frequencies intended for direct reception
of satellite television and entertainment services. These frequencies
are subject to internationally-agreed regulations that govern their
use and are designed to ensure that all countries are able to offer
services of this nature. In Europe, the BSS downlink frequency range
is 11.7 - 12.5 GHz. |
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| C/I |
Carrier-to-Interference-Ratio. A measure
of the quality of a signal at the receiver input. It is the ratio
of the power of the carrier to the power of interference arising
from man-made sources, measured within a specified bandwidth (usually
the modulated carrier's bandwidth). It is usually expressed in decibels.
The higher the ratio, the better quality of the received signal. |
| C/N |
Carrier-to-Noise-Ratio. A measure of the
quality of a modulated carrier at the receiver input. It is the
ratio of the power of the carrier to the power of the noise introduced
in the transmission medium, measured within a specified bandwidth
(usually the modulated carrier's bandwidth). It is usually expressed
in decibels. The higher the ratio, the better quality of the received
carrier. |
| C/(N+I) |
Carrier-to-Noise-plus-Interference-Ratio.
A measure of the quality of a signal at the receiver input. It is
the ratio of the power of the carrier to the combined power of noise
and man-made interference, measured within a specified bandwidth
(usually the modulated carrier's bandwidth). It is usually expressed
in decibels. The higher the ratio, the better quality of the received
signal. |
| Capacity |
A proportion of the satellite's bandwidth
and power which is used to establish one or more communication channel. |
| Channel |
A band of radio frequencies assigned for
a particular purpose, usually for the establishment of one complete
communication link, or a path for an electrical signal. This term
is often used interchangeably with Transponder, but in general the
channel bandwidth is less than the transponder bandwidth. |
| Circular
Orbit |
A satellite orbit in which the distance between
the centres of mass of the satellite and of the primary body (the
earth) is constant. |
| Circular
Polarisation |
A circularly-polarised wave, in which the
electric field vector, observed in any fixed plane normal to the
direction of propagation, rotates with time and traces a circle
in the plane of observation. Unlike linear polarisation, circular
polarisation does not require alignment of earth station and satellite
antennas with the polarisation of the radio waves. |
| Clarke
Belt |
The circular orbit at approximately 35,800
km above the equator, where the satellites travel at the same speed
as the earth's rotation (Geostationary Orbit) and thus appear to
be stationary to an observer on Earth. Named after Arthur C. Clarke
who first postulated the idea of geostationary communication satellites. |
| Clear
Sky |
A term describing the weather conditions
encountered at the terrestrial end of an earth-space path of a satellite
communication link. It is used to describe the condition where the
attenuation of radio waves caused by precipitation (rain, snow,
sleet, dew, etc.) is lowest (i.e. cloud-free sky and good visibility). |
| Collective
Reception |
See Community Reception. |
| Collocated |
Two or more satellites occupying approximately
the same geostationary orbital position such that the angular separation
between them is very small when viewed from the ground. The satellites
appear to be exactly collocated to a small receiving antenna. In
reality, the satellites are kept several kilometres apart in space
to avoid collisions. An example of a collocated satellite system
is the EUTELSAT HOT BIRD system located at the 13º East
geostationary orbital position. |
| Community
Reception |
The reception of satellite television and
entertainment services for distribution to a group of the general
public at one location (e.g. in a block of flats), or through a
distribution system covering a limited area (e.g. a local cable
network). The receiving system is usually more complex with a larger
antenna than that used for individual (Direct-To-Home) reception. |
| Conditional
Access (CA) |
A system for restricting access to a particular
service to authorised users only (e.g. subscribers to a particular
digital bouquet, purchasers of individual pay-per-view events),
by means of encryption and authorised decoding. |
| Coverage |
The geographical area in which satellite
signals can be transmitted or received with sufficient quality when
using appropriately sized earth stations. Satellite coverages are
usually communicated in the form of footprints displaying satellite
G/T, EIRP or other quantity, such as the antenna size required for
good quality reception of a particular service. |
| Cross
Modulation |
Interference caused by the modulation of
one carrier affecting another signal. It is usually due to nonlinear
device operation, which can be caused by overloading an amplifier,
and is worsened by signal power level imbalances (e.g. at the receiver
input in the head-end of a cable distribution network). |
| Cross-Polar |
Used to refer to a signal that has the opposite
(orthogonal) polarisation to a given signal. |
| Cross-Polar
Discrimination |
(XPD). The ratio of the signal power received
(or transmitted) by an antenna on one polarisation (the polarisation
of the desired signal) to the signal power received (transmitted)
on the opposite polarisation. This ratio is usually expressed in
decibels. It is a measure of the ability of the antenna to detect
(emit) signals on one polarisation and to reject signals at the
same frequency having the opposite polarisation |
| Cross-Polar
Isolation |
(XPI). The ratio of the signal power received
(or transmitted) by an earth station on one polarisation (the desired
signal) to the signal power received (transmitted) on the same polarisation
but originating from a cross-polar signal. This ratio is usually
expressed in decibels. It is a measure of interference from cross-polar
signals into the desired signal, which occurs in all practical systems
that exploit both orthogonal polarisation. Strictly speaking, the
terms "cross-polar isolation" and "cross-polar discrimination" have
different meanings but are often used interchangeably. |
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| Earth-Space
Link |
Any communications link between an earth
station and a satellite (uplink or downlink). |
| Elevation |
The angle measured in the local vertical
plane between the satelliteand the local horizon. It is the vertical
co-ordinate that is used to align a satellite antenna. See also
Azimuth. |
| Earth
Station |
An installation (antenna and associated equipment)
located on the earth's surface and intended for communication with
one or more satellites. The term is usually understood to refer
to the ensemble of equipment that is needed to effect communications
via satellite. |
| Eclipse |
The total or partial obscuring of one celestial
body by another. The events that most affect satellites are eclipses
of the Sun by the Earth or the Moon, which deprive the satellite
of its usual source of power (solar energy) and cause it to cool
down rapidly because it is no longer heated by the Sun. The satellite
is designed to cope with such extreme events. Normally, there is
no effect on the communications services provided by the satellite
during eclipse. |
| EIRP |
Effective Isotropic Radiated Power. A measure
of the signal strength that a satellite transmits towards the earth,
or an earth station towards a satellite, expressed in dBW. |
| EPG |
Electronic Programme Guide. A graphical user
interface generated by a digital satellite receiver and displayed
on the user's television screen. It provides information on the
timing and content of television programmes, which is conveyed in
the digital signals received from the satellite. Its primary purpose
is to help the user to rapidly identify and select programmes of
interest, but it may also support other interactive services. |
| EBU |
European Broadcasting Union. An organisation
that brings together the main European broadcasters and, amongst
other things, works on new standards which then require ETSI (European
Telecommunications Standards Institute) approval. |
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| Figure
of Merit |
The ratio of the maximum gain of a receiving
antenna to the receiving system's equivalent noise temperature.
This value is usually expressed in dB/K. It is a measure of the
ability of an earth station to receive a satellite signal with good
quality (high carrier-to-noise ratio). In general, the G/T increases
with increasing antenna diameter. See also G/T. |
| Fixed
Assignment |
The assignment of a fixed amounts of satellite
capacity to particular earth stations regardless of their traffic
requirements, which may fluctuate over a period of time. See also
On-Demand Assignment. |
| Footprint |
The geographic area over which a satellite
antenna receives or directs its signals. There is often a collection
of concentric footprints, each representing a particular satellite
EIRP or G/T. These quantities can be related to the size of the
antenna that is needed on the ground to receive or transmit a particular
service respectively. |
| FSS |
Fixed Satellite Service. In general, this
refers to any satellite communication service between earth stations
located at fixed geographic positions. However, this term is often
used to refer to the "unplanned" frequency bands that
are not subject to the internationally-agreed regulations that govern
the use of the BSS frequencies. The downlink FSS frequencies in
Europe are 10.7 - 11.7 GHz and 12.5 - 12.75 GHz. |
| Frequency
Reuse |
A technique for utilising a specified range
of frequencies more than once within the same satellite system so
that the total capacity of the system is increased without increasing
its allocated bandwidth. Frequency reuse schemes require sufficient
isolation between the signals that use the same frequencies so that
mutual interference between them is controlled to an acceptable
level. Frequency reuse is achieved by using orthogonal polarisation
states (horizontal/vertical for linear, or LHC/RHC for circular)
for transmission and/or by using satellite antenna (spot) beams
that serve separate, non-overlapping geographic regions. |
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| Gain
(Antenna) |
A measure of the amplifying or focussing
power of an antenna when transmitting to, or receiving from, a particular
direction in space. The gain of an antenna is the ratio of the power
radiated (or received) per unit solid angle by the antenna in a
given direction to the power radiated (or received) per unit solid
angle by an isotropic antenna fed with the same power. The gain
is usually expressed in dBi. |
| Geostationary |
An object orbiting the earth at such speed
that it appears to remain stationary with respect to the earth's
surface. See also Clarke Belt. |
| Geostationary
Satellite |
A satellite that appears to be located at
a fixed point in space when viewed from the earth's surface. |
| Geostationary
Orbit |
The orbit of a geosynchronous satellite whose
orbit lies in the plane of the earth's equator. |
| Geosynchronous |
An object orbiting the earth at the earth's
rotational speed and with the same direction of rotation. The object
will appear at the same position in the sky at a particular time
each day, but will not appear stationary if not orbiting in the
equatorial plane. |
| Ground
Segment |
The ground segment consists of all the earth
stations that are operating within a particular satellite system
or network. These can be connected to the end-user's equipment directly
or via a terrestrial network. |
| Ground
Station |
An alternative expression for Earth Station. |
| G/T |
See Figure of Merit. |
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| Inclination |
The angle between the plane of the orbit
of a satellite and the Equatorial plane. A orbit of a perfectly-geostationary
satellite has an inclination of |
| Inclined
Orbit |
An orbit that approximates the geostationary
orbit but whose plane is tilted slightly with respect to the Equatorial
plane, with the consequence that the satellite appears to move about
its nominal position in a daily "figure-of-eight" motion
when viewed from the ground. Satellites are often allowed to drift
into an inclined orbit near the end of their nominal lifetime in
order to conserve fuel on-board the satellite, which would otherwise
be used to correct this natural drift caused by the gravitational
pull of the Sun and the Moon. |
| Individual
Reception |
The direct reception of satellite signals
by simple domestic installations, in particular those equipped with
a small antenna. See also Direct-to-Home and Community Reception. |
| IBO |
Input Back-Off. The ratio of the signal power
measured at the input to a high power amplifier to the input signal
power that produces the maximum signal power at the amplifier's
output. The input backoff is expressed in decibels as either a positive
or negative quantity. It can be applied to a single carrier at the
input to the HPA ("carrier IBO"), or to the ensemble of input signals
("total IBO"). |
| Interference |
Any undesired signal that tends to interfere
with the reception of radio waves. It can be caused by transmissions
within the same satellite system, by transmissions within other
satellite systems that use the same frequencies, or from ground-based
sources (e.g. point-to-point radio links, car ignition noise, etc.). |
| Intermodulation |
Mutual interference between signals spaced
apart in frequency after non-linear amplification by a common amplifier.
In satellite communication systems the phenomenon of intermodulation
is usually only significant after the high power amplifier in an
earth station or a satellite transponder. It is controlled by means
of the IBO/OBO of the amplifier. |
| IRD |
Integrated Receiver-Decoder. A indoor device
accepting signals from at least one LNB, which recovers the original
signal from the signal delivered by the LNB. It includes a built-in
decoder for reception of services that are protected by a Conditional
Access system, subject to authorisation from the service provider.
A plug-in "smart card" is often used for authorisation purposes. |
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Used to refer to a range of frequencies that
are available for use by satellite communication systems at around
30 GHz for the uplink and 20 GHz for the downlink |
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| Margin |
The difference in decibels between the C/(N+I)
achieved at the receiver input under clear sky conditions to the
minimum C/(N+I) required for just acceptable transmission quality.
Also referred to as the "Rain Margin". |
| MCPC |
Multiple Channel Per Carrier. Refers to the
multiplexing a number of digital channels (video programmes, audio
programmes and data services) into a common digital bit stream,
which is then used to modulate a single carrier that conveys all
of the services to the end user. The single carrier supports multiple
communication channels, hence the phase "multiple channel per carrier".
The term MCPC is frequency used in the context of DVB systems, where
the composite digital signal is referred to as a Transport Stream. |
| Multibeam |
Generally refers to the use of multiple antenna
beams on board the satellite to cover a contiguous geographical
area, instead of a single wide-area beam. Multibeam architectures
are often considered for satellites operating in the Ka-band, which
is characterised by narrower beamwidths with respect to the Ku-band.
Single, wide-area beams predominate in the latter. |
| Multicrypt |
DVB conditional access option based a detachable
Conditional Access (CA) module, which is supplied by the service
provider to each subscriber. The CA module is connected to the subscriber's
IRD via a standardised interface (the DVB Common Interface). Multicrypt
has the advantage that the same IRD can be used to receive services
from providers using different and incompatible conditional access
systems. |
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| OBO |
Output Back-Off. The ratio of the signal
power measured at the output of a high power amplifier to the maximum
output signal power. The output backoff is expressed in decibels
as either a positive or negative quantity. It can be applied to
a single carrier at the output to the HPA ("carrier OBO"), or to
the ensemble of output signals ("total OBO"). |
| OBP |
On-board Processing. A general term that
refers to signal processing functions implemented on-board the satellite
that go beyond the amplification and frequency conversion performed
in conventional, transparent satellite systems. On-board processing
is usually but not necessarily implemented digitally, and may or
may not include signal regeneration. Skyplex is a practical example
of OBP. |
| Off-Axis |
Any direction in space that does not correspond
to an antenna's boresight direction. |
| On-Demand
Assignment |
The assignment of variable amounts of satellite
capacity to particular earth stations according to their fluctuating
traffic requirements (according to demand). See also Fixed Assignment.
On-demand assignment office more efficient satellite capacity utilisation
at the expense of system complexity. |
| Orbit |
The path described by the centre of mass
of a satellite in space, subjected to natural forces, principally
gravitational attraction, and occasional low-energy corrective forces
exerted by a propulsive device in order to achieve and maintain
the desired path. |
| Orbital
Plane |
The plane containing the centre of mass of
the earth and the velocity vector (direction of motion) of a satellite. |
| Outage |
An outage is said to occur when the quality
of a telecommunication service or communications link falls below
a specified minimum value for acceptable communications performance.
See also Availability. |
| Out-of-Band
Emission |
Any emission on a frequency or frequencies
outside the bandwidth of a signal which results from the modulation
process. Out-of-band emissions are a potential source of interference
to other services and need to be carefully controlled. |
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| Payload
(Satellite) |
Refers to all equipment on-board a satellite
that is dedicated to the reception, frequency conversion, processing
and retransmission of communication signals, including the satellite
antennas, but excluding support equipment such as the platform (physical
structure), power supplies and thermal control equipment. |
| Pay-Per-View |
The purchasing of programmes and services
by a television viewer or service user on an individual basis (e.g.
televised coverage of a sports event). Access to purchased material
is controlled by means of a Conditional Access system. |
| Pointing
Angles |
The elevation and azimuth angles which specify
the direction of a satellite from a point on the earth's surface. |
| Pointing
Error (Antenna) |
A value which quantifies the amount by which
an antenna is misaligned with the satellite's position in space
(see Alignment). This is either expressed as an angular error, or
as a loss in signal strength with respect to the maximum that would
be achieved with a perfectly aligned antenna. |
| Polarisation |
The phenomenon in which radio waves are restricted
to certain directions of electrical and magnetic field variations,
where these directions are perpendicular to the direction of wave
travel. By convention, the polarisation of a radio wave is defined
by the direction of the electric field vector. Four senses of polarisation
are used in satellite transmissions: horizontal (X) linear polarisation,
vertical (Y) linear polarisation, right-hand circular polarisation
and left-hand circular polarisation. |
| Polarisation
Alignment |
The process of aligning the reference polarisation
plane of an linearly-polarised antenna with a particular reference
direction. For individual and collective systems receiving linearly-polarised
signals, this consists of rotating the LNB about the feed axis so
that its radio wave detector is aligned with the electric field
vector of the incoming signal (to achieve detected signal strength). |
| Polarisation
Switching |
The process of selecting one of two orthogonal
polarisations (e.g. linear horizontal or linear vertical) for reception
of satellite signals. Polarisation switching is implemented in the
LNB or, more rarely, in a separate device inserted between the feedhorn
and the LNA/LNB or integrated with the feedhorn. |
| Polar
Mount |
A mechanical support structure for an earth
station antenna that permits all satellites in the geosynchronous
arc to be scanned with movement of only one axis. |
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| Radiation
Pattern |
A three-dimensional representation of the
gain of a transmit or receive antenna as a function of the direction
or radiation or reception. |
| Rain
Margin |
See Margin. |
| Receiver
Noise Temperature |
The equivalent noise temperature of a complete
receiving system, excluding contributions from the antenna and the
physical connection to the antenna, referred to the receiver input. |
| Regenerative |
A term used to describe satellite systems/transponders
that recover the original signals from the modulated signals received
from the ground, process them in some way, then use them to modulate
carriers for retransmission at the downlink frequencies, possibly
with a different format. Regenerative repeaters are complex are
often feature in the designs of future, advanced satellite systems. |
| Repeater |
A device that amplifies or augments incoming
electrical signals and re?transmits them towards the earth station(s)
at a different frequency. In the satellite context, the term "repeater"
usually refers to all Payload equipment, with the exception of the
satellite antennas. |
| RHC(P) |
Right-hand polarised wave. An elliptically-
or circularly-polarised wave, in which the electric field vector,
observed in any fixed plane normal to the direction of propagation,
whilst looking in the direction of propagation, rotates with time
in a right-hand or clockwise direction. |
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| S/N |
Signal-to-Noise Ratio. A measure of the quality
of an electrical signal, usually at the receiver output. It is the
ratio of the signal level to the noise level, measured within a
specified bandwidth (typically the bandwidth of the signal). It
is usually expressed in decibels. The higher the ratio, the better
quality of the signal. See also C/N. |
| Satellite
Link |
A radio link between a transmitting earth
station and a receiving earth station through a communications satellite.
A satellite link comprises one uplink and one downlink. |
| Satellite
Network |
One or more communications satellites and
the cooperating earth stations. |
| Satellite
System |
A space system using one or more artificial
satellites orbiting the earth. |
| Saturation |
The operation of a power amplifier, most
often a satellite TWTA, at its maximum output power level ("saturated"
power level). |
| SCPC |
Single Channel Per Carrier. In SCPC systems,
each communication signal is individually modulated onto its own
carrier which is used to convey that signal to the end user. A number
of similar carriers share a common satellite transponder and use
a unique portion of its bandwidth. Each carrier supports a single
communication channel only (e.g. one-half of a voice circuit), hence
the phrase "single channel per carrier". |
| Shaped
Beam |
The radiation pattern of a satellite antenna
that has been designed so that its footprint follows the boundary
of a specified geographical area (the area of service provision)
as closely as possible. Shaped beams maximise the antenna gain over
the service area and reduce the likelihood of interference into
systems serving other geographical areas. |
| Sidelobe |
Part of an antenna's radiation pattern which
can detect or radiate signals in an unwanted direction (i.e. off-axis),
which can produce interference into other systems or susceptibility
to interference from other systems. The larger the side lobes, the
more noise and interference an antenna can detect. Sidelobe levels
are determined by the design of the antenna. |
| Simulcast |
Simultaneous transmission of an identical
programme or service using two or more standards or transmission
media. Used to refer to a technique pioneered by EUTELSAT for transmitting
one broadcast analogue FM television carrier and one digital television
carrier in a single satellite transponder that would normally only
support the FM TV carrier. |
| Simulcrypt |
DVB conditional access option based on a
commercial agreement between service providers, which allows access
to a common population of proprietary IRDs. The IRD hardware is
usually specific to the conditional access system and cannot be
used to receive services delivered by service providers that are
not party to the agreement. |
| Skyplex |
A system which multiplexes several digital
television and entertainment services on-board the satellite, instead
of on the ground, and retransmits them via a single, DVB-compliant
carrier. This permits services to be delivered directly from different
geographical locations to end-users located within a broadcast beam
and equipped with standard DVB-compliant IRDs. The Skyplex system
requires advanced on-board processing equipment for signal reception,
multiplexing and retransmission. |
| SMATV |
Satellite Master Antenna TV. Collective television
reception and distribution system serving a local population of
users collocated in a block of flats, a hotel or other group-housing
complex. SMATV systems use one or more high quality, centrally located
antenna to receive the satellite signals, plus UHF and/or VHF antennas
to receive local terrestrial broadcast services. The satellite and
terrestrial signals are distributed to the end-users via a dedicated
cable distribution network. Several different cable distribution
architectures are possible. |
| Space
Segment |
Commonly used to refer to the satellites
of a particular satellite communication system. |
| Spot
Beam |
An antenna radiation pattern designed to
serve a relatively small or isolated geographic area, usually with
high gain. The radio frequency equivalent of a spotlight. |
| Spurious
Emission |
Any emission on a frequency or frequencies
outside the bandwidth of a signal including harmonic emissions,
parasitic emissions, intermodulation products and frequency conversion
products. Spurious emissions are a potential source of interference
to other services and need to be carefully controlled. |
| Steerable
Beam |
An antenna beam that can be repointed by
mechanical and/or electrical means. Usually used to refer to relatively
narrow satellite beams that can be steered over a part or the whole
of the portion of the earth's surface that is visible from the satellite's
orbital position. |
| Sun
Outage |
Sun-Satellite Conjunction can cause a large
increase in the noise received by an earth station that is pointed
towards the satellite, which degrades the signal quality and can
even cause the signal to be lost for a short time. Whilst this is
an unavoidable physical phenomenon, it does not affect the relatively
small antennas that are used for individual and collective reception
of broadcast television and entertainment services. |
| Sun-Satellite
Conjunction |
The alignment of the Sun with the satellite
as seen from an earth station, which takes place twice a year for
several minutes around local midday. This event can affect the performance
of receiving earth stations. See Sun Outage. |
| System
Noise Temperature |
The equivalent noise temperature of a complete
receiving system, taking into account contributions from the antenna,
the receiver and the transmission line that interconnects them,
referred to the receiver input. |
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| Telecommand
(TC) |
The transmission of coded signals towards
a satellite to initiate, modify or terminate equipment functions
on-board the satellite. |
| Telemetry
() |
Coded radiocommunication from the satellite
to the ground for the transmission of data relating to the functioning
and configuration of the satellite. |
| Thermal
Noise |
Any undesired electrical disturbance in a
circuit or communication channel. The term "thermal" refers to the
fact that the magnitude of the noise generated by an object is dependent
upon the object's physical temperature. |
| Tracking |
The process of continuously adjusting the
orientation of an antenna so that its boresight follows the movements
of the satellite about its nominal position. Used in earth stations
equipped with large antennas and earth stations operating to satellites
in inclined orbit. |
| Transparent |
A term used to describe satellite systems
or satellite transponders that do not alter the basic format of
the signals they receive before retransmitting them. A transparent
transponder simply converts signals to a lower frequency and amplifies
them prior to retransmission, as opposed to regenerative transponders
or on-board processing (see Regenerative and OBP respectively). |
| Transponder |
A transmitter-receiver device that transmits
signals automatically when it receives pre-determined signals. The
term "satellite transponder" refers to a transmitter-receiver subsystem
on-board the satellite that uses a single high power amplification
chain and processes a particular range of frequencies (the "transponder
bandwidth"). There are many transponders on a typical satellite,
each capable of supporting one or more communication channels. |
| TVRO |
Television Receive-Only. An earth station
incapable of transmitting to the satellite and intended for the
individual or collective reception of television (multimedia) services
from the satellite. |
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