GRC NEWS RELEASE 00-032
00-032
For Release: May 30, 2000
Barbara L. Kakiris
Media Relations Office
(216) 433-2513
Lori J. Rachul
Media Relations Office
(216) 433-8806
For ACTS ExperimentsAll Good Things Must Come To An End
After 81 months of operations and far exceeding its planned 24-month
mission, NASA’s Advanced Communications Technology Satellite
(ACTS) will conclude its extensive experiments program tomorrow, May
31.
Launched in September 1993 as a partnership among NASA, industry and
academia, ACTS opened the door for U.S. satellite communications
technology in demonstrating the use of the high frequency Ka-band
(30/20 GHz). Until ACTS, this frequency was virtually
unused—the majority of communication satellites used lower
frequency bands called C- and Ku-bands. Exploring Ka-band technology
was designed to relieve orbital crowding and demonstrate the first
band of frequency wide enough to carry simultaneous services ranging
from multiple voice, video and data communications to computer
connections at optical fiber data rates.
“The ACTS Experiments Program has been an outstanding research
and development achievement that resulted in a unique operational
capability for the Center and the Agency,” said Donald J.
Campbell, NASA Glenn Research Center Director. “It was a bold
step to put a new communication satellite into operation with minimal
support, and based on program results, it was the right decision
because it laid the foundation for advancements in communication
satellites.”
Throughout its impressive lifespan, ACTS, which is managed by the NASA
Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH, opened new frontiers by
utilizing a unique hopping spot beam antenna system that generated 51
tightly focused signal beams. Each spot beam typically had a diameter
of 150-200 miles and was able to “hop” from one location
to the next, covering up to 40 locations in a
millisecond.Concentrating satellite power in such a way permitted
significantly smaller and less expensive Earth stations.In addition,
the spot beam was better able to penetrate through rain and mitigate
rain fade.
"The ACTS Experiments Program had the foresight to step beyond the
conventional thinking and prove the technology needed for the future,
as well as the present,” said Joseph H. Rothenberg, NASA
Associate Administrator for Space Flight.
The ACTS Experiments Program has achieved remarkable milestones with
103 experiments and numerous demonstrations involving over 200
diverse partners, paving the way for the next generation of
communications satellites. The experiments program succeeded in areas
as diverse as advanced networking, medicine, education, defense,
emergency response, maritime and aeronautical mobile communications,
and science and astronomy. Examples include:
Telemedicine—ACTS transmitted data-intensive imagery that linked
urban medical specialists to under-served areas of the U.S.
Electric utility companies—ACTS controlled power grids by using
ultra-small terminals to poll the grid in remote areas, demonstrating
potential cost saving.
Distance learning—ACTS improved high-quality interactive video
and audio for delivery of advanced degree, continuing and remedial
training to people in remote locations.
Business—ACTS utilized its high-speed links with major computers
to integrate design teams that used remote research equipment to
explore natural resources. This process increases the possibility of
saving millions of dollars in annual cost.
Personal and airborne mobile communication services—ACTS
demonstrated technologies such as enabling advanced passenger
services onboard the U.S. commercial airline fleet.
“The timeliness of ACTS technologies could not have been
better,” said Robert A. Bauer, ACTS Project Manager. “Had
they arrived too early, few would have been ready to utilize the
bandwidth being offered. Had they arrived too late, fiber may have
completely shadowed the satellites’ consideration in offering
wideband services to diverse and remote locations.”
ACTS set the standard for next generation communications satellites.
Its pioneering advanced technologies for space communications have
shown the feasibility of the next generation communication satellites
to meet ever-growing communications needs.
Its successes have been recognized through numerous awards including
induction into the U.S. Space Foundation’s Space Technology
Hall of Fame in 1997, an R&D 100 Award in Significant Technology
in 1995 and the prestigious Federal Technology Leadership Award in
1995.
For more information on the ACTS Program, please visit:
http://acts.grc.nasa.gov
For more information on the Glenn Space Communications Program, please
visit:
http://spacecom.grc.nasa.gov
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