학술논문

A broadband ship-to-shore communications network for the Naval Oceanographic Office
Document Type
Conference
Source
MTS/IEEE Oceans 2001. An Ocean Odyssey. Conference Proceedings (IEEE Cat. No.01CH37295) Oceans 2001 OCEANS, 2001. MTS/IEEE Conference and Exhibition. 2:1262-1267 vol.2 2001
Subject
Geoscience
Signal Processing and Analysis
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Robotics and Control Systems
Aerospace
Broadband communication
Communication networks
Marine vehicles
Military satellites
Oceans
Data communication
IP networks
Satellite communication
Transponders
Costs
Language
Abstract
The Naval Oceanographic Office (NAVOCEANO) conducts multimission, worldwide ocean surveys to provide specialized products and services for warfighters and civilians, national and international customers. A high-speed ship-to-shore data communications network is required to move the huge volume of survey data collected aboard T-AGS 60 USNS PATHFINDER class survey ships to the NAVOCEANO Survey Operations Center (SOC) at Stennis Space Center, Mississippi. The rapid growth in broadband terrestrial communications networks, driven primarily by the Internet, is now migrating to ships at sea. Commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) satellite communications (SATCOM) terminals for shipboard installation are available that provide T1 and higher data rates. Due to recent reductions in satellite transponder costs, the military has increased its utilization of commercial satellite resources to improve timeliness of data product delivery and wide-area network services to customers. This paper describes a highspeed asymmetrical (2048 Kbps from ships; 384 Kbps to ships) communications network using C-Band commercial geostationary satellites to provide real-time voice, video, and data connectivity between a fleet of survey ships and the NAVOCEANO SOC.