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ABSTRACT
The High Altitude Long Operation NetworkTM is a broadband wireless metropolitan area network, with a star topology, whose solitary hub is located in the atmosphere above the service area at an altitude higher than commercial airline traffic. The HALO/Proteus airplane is the central node of this network. It will fly at altitudes higher than 51,000 ft. The signal footprint of the network, its "Cone of Commerce," will have a diameter on the scale of 100 km. The initial capacity of the network will be on the scale of 10 Gb/s, with growth beyond 100 Gb/s. The network will serve the communications needs of each subscriber with bit rates in the multimegabit per second range. A variety of spectrum bands licensed by the FCC for commercial wireless services could provide the needed millimeter wavelength carrier bandwidth. An attractive choice for the subscriber links is the LMDS band. The airplane's fuselage can house switching circuitry and fast digital network functions. An MMW antenna array and its related components will be located in a pod suspended below the aircraft fuselage. The antenna array will produce many beams, typically more than 100. Adjacent beams will be separated in frequency. Electronic beamforming techniques can be used to stabilize the beams on the ground, as the airplane flies within its station keeping volume. For the alternative of aircraft-fixed beams, the beams will traverse over a user location, while the airplane maintains station overhead, and the virtual path will be changed to accomplish the beam-to-beam handoff. For each isolated city to be served, a fleet of three aircraft will be operated in shifts to achieve around-the-clock service. In deployments where multiple cities will be served from a common primary flight base, the fleet will be sized for allocating, on average, two aircraft per city to be served. Flight
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operational tactics will be steadily evolved and refined to achieve continuous presence of the node above each city. Many services will be provided, including but not limited to T1 access, ISDN access, Web browsing, high-resolution videoconferencing, large file transfers, and Ethernet LAN bridging.
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Chapter-1
Introduction
1.1 Introduction
Passage of the 1996 Telecommunications Act and the slow growth of infrastructure for transacting multimedia messages (those integrating voice, text, sound, images, and video) have stimulated an intense race to deploy non-traditional infrastructure to serve businesses and consumers at affordable prices. The game is new and the playing field is more level than ever before. Opportunities exist for entrepreneurs to challenge the market dominance enjoyed for years by incumbents. New types of service providers will emerge. An electronic "information fabric" of a quilted characterincluding space, atmospheric, and terrestrial data communications layerswill emerge that promises to someday link every digital information device on the planet. Packet-switched data networks will meld with connection-oriented telephony networks. Communications infrastructures will be shared more efficiently among users to offer dramatic reductions in cost and large increases of effective data rates. An era of inexpensive bandwidth has begun which will transform the nature of commerce. The convergence of innovative technologies and manufacturing capabilities affecting aviation, millimeter wave wireless, and multi-media communications industries enables Angel Technologies Corporation and its partners to pursue new wireless broadband communications services. The HALO Network will offer ubiquitous access to any subscriber within a "super metropolitan area" from an aircraft operating at high altitude. The aircraft will serve as the hub of the HALO Network serving tens to hundreds of thousands of subscribers. Each subscriber will be able to communicate at multi-megabit per second data rates through a simple-to-install subscriber unit. The HALO Network will be steadily evolved at a pace with the emergence of data communications technology world-wide. The HALO Network will be a universal wireless communications network solution. It will be deployed globally on a city-by-city basis. The equipment needed to perform the functions of this broadband wireless service will be evolutionary in nature, not revolutionary. Most of the technology already
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exists. The engineering effort will be focused primarily at adapting and integrating the existing components and subsystems from terrestrial markets into a complete network solution. Proven technology will be used to the maximum extent. Since the HALO Aircraft are operated from regional airports, the equipment will be routinely maintained and calibrated. This also allows for equipment upgrades as technology advances yield lower cost and weight and provide increased performance.
50 million subscribers to wireless telephone service 28 million dollars annual revenue for wireless services 38,000 cell sites with 37 billion dollars cumulative capital investment 40% annual growth in customers 25 million personal computers sold each year 50 million PC users with Internet access "The demand for Internet services is exploding and this creates a strong de-
mand for broadband, high data rate service. It is expected that there will soon be a worldwide demand for Internet service in the hundreds of millions". (Lou Gerstner, IBM, April 1997) The growth in use of the World Wide Web and electronic commerce will stimulate demand for broadband services.
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An airplane specially designed for high altitude flight with a payload capacity of approximately one ton is being developed for commercial wireless services. It will circle at high altitudes for extended periods of time and it will serve as a stable platform from which broadband communications services will be offered. The High Altitude Long Operation (HALO) Aircraft will maintain station at an altitude of 52 to 60 thousand feet by flying in a circle with a diameter of about 5 to 8 nautical miles. Three successive shifts on station of 8 hours each can provide continuous coverage of an area for 24 hours per day, 7 days per week. Such a system can provide broadband multimedia communications to the general public.
One such platform will cover an area of approximately 2800 square miles encompassing a typical metropolitan area. A viewing angle of 20 degrees or higher will be chosen to facilitate good line-of-sight coverage at millimeter wave (MMW) frequencies (20 GHz or higher). Operation at MMW frequencies enables broadband sys-
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tems to be realized, i.e., from spectrum bandwidths of 1 to 6 GHz. MMW systems also permit very narrow beam widths to be realized with small aperture antennas. Furthermore, since the aircraft is above most of the earth's oxygen, links to satellite constellations can be implemented using the frequencies overlapping the 60 GHz absorption band for good immunity from ground-based interference and good isolation from inter-satellite links. The HALO Network can utilize a cellular pattern on the ground so that each cell uses one of four frequency sub-bands, each having a bandwidth up to 60 MHz each way. A fifth sub-band can be used for gateways (connections to the public network or dedicated users). Each cell will cover an area of a few square miles. The entire bandwidth will be reused many times to achieve total coverage throughout the 2800 square mile area served by the airborne platform. The total capacity of the network supported by a single airborne platform can be greater than 100 Gbps. This is comparable to terrestrial fiber-optic (FO) networks and can provide two-way broadband multimedia services normally available only via FO networks. The HALO Network provides an alternative to satellite- and ground-based systems. Unlike satellite systems, however, the airborne system concentrates all of the spectrum usage in certain geographic areas, which minimizes frequency coordination problems and permits sharing of frequency with ground-based systems. Enough power is available from the aircraft power generator to allow broadband data access from small user terminals.
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HALO Aircraft provide a new layer in the traditional hierarchy of wireless communications. The HALO Network can be thought of as a "tall tower" approach that provides better line of sight to customers without the high cost of deploying and operating a satellite constellation.
This paper will describe the architecture and the concept of operations of the HALO Network. It will also describe key characteristics of the HALO Aircraft and the communications payload and subscriber units. A companion paper1 entitled "The Cone of Commerce" covers the business and market aspects of the HALO Network. The paper by Djuknic2 provides an overview of the various options and highlights the unique advantages of stratospheric platforms for providing wireless communications services.
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Chapter-2
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High-Speed Data Links Transmitted Over Millimeter Wave Frequencies Provide Broadband Data Services to Various End-Users
Seamless ubiquitous multimedia services Adaptation to end user environments Enhanced user connectivity globally Rapidly deployable to sites of opportunity Secure and reliable information transactions Bandwidth on demand provides efficient use of available spectrum
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rates would be low while the peak rates would expand to a specified level. A gateway service can be provided for "dedicated" links of 25-155 Mbps. Based on the LMDS spectrum and 5-fold reuse, the service capacity would be 10,000 to 75,000 simultaneous, symmetrical T1 circuits (1.5 Mbps) per Communications Payload. The HALO Aircraft would provide urban and rural coverage from a single platform to provide service to: a. 100-750,000 subscribers b. 40-60 mile diameter service area (1,250 to 2,800 square miles)
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spectrum at 28 GHz for the Local Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS) and the microwave point-to-point allocations at 38 GHz. The FCC is expected to allocate 850 MHz of spectrum between 27.5 and 28.35 GHz for the LMDS service. The system characteristics described in this paper are for the LMDS frequency.
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Chapter-3
The major elements of the HALO Network are shown below. The HALO Network interfaces to the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) and to the Internet backbone through the HALO Gateway. On the subscriber side, the HALO Network provides connectivity to local networks of various kinds.
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The high look angle also allows the sharing of this spectrum with groundbased wireless networks since usually high-gain, narrow beams are used and the antenna beams of the HALO and ground-based networks will be separated in angle
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Service area
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Chapter-4
HALO AIRCRAFT
The HALO Aircraft is under development and flight testing is expected to occur by mid-1998. The aircraft has been specially designed for the HALO Network with the Communications Payload Pod suspended from the underbelly of its fuselage.
The HALO Aircraft will fly above the metropolitan center in a circular orbit of five to eight nautical miles diameter. The Communications Payload Pod is mounted to a pylon under the fuselage. As the aircraft varies its roll angle to fly in the circular orbit, the Communications Payload Pod will pivot on the pylon to remain level with the ground. Other details on the aircraft can be found in the Cone of Commerce paper.
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Chapter-5
COMMUNICATIONS PAYLOAD
The HALO Network will use an array of narrow beam antennas on the HALO Aircraft to form multiple cells on the ground. Each cell covers a small geographic area, e.g., 4 to 8 square miles. The wide bandwidths and narrow beam widths within each beam or cell are achieved by using MMW frequencies. Small aperture antennas can be used to achieve small cells. For example, an antenna having a diameter of only one foot can provide a beam width of less than three degrees. One hundred dish antennas can be easily carried by the HALO Aircraft to create one hundred or more cells throughout the service area. If lenses antennas are utilized, wider beams can be created by combining beams through each lens aperture, and with multiple feeds behind each lens multiple beams can be formed by each compound lens. If 850 MHz of spectrum is assumed, then a minimum capacity of one full-duplex OC-1 (51.84 Mbps) channel is available per cell. For example, a single platform reusing 850 MHz of spectrum in 100 cells would provide the equivalent of two, OC-48 fiber optic rings. Higher capacities are possible by increasing the number of cells. By using Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) technology with over-the-air dynamic bandwidth allocation, this capacity can be shared by multiple users in an efficient manner. An ATM-like packet switch on the HALO Aircraft provides the network switching capability to cross-connect all users within the coverage area as well as connections to other users through gateways. The elements in the communications payload are shown below. It consists of MMW transceivers, pilot tone transmitter, high-speed modems, SONET multiplexers, packet switch hardware and software, and associated ancillary hardware such as power supplies, processors, etc.
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The major design options for antennas in the Communications Payload are to utilize either platform-fixed beams or earth-fixed beams. For the case of platformfixed beams, each antenna would have a fixed field of view. The total field of view for the entire HALO Network would be the sum of these fields of view of the individual antennas. The network could initially have a small footprint and as demands on the HALO services increase, additional antennas could be added to the Communications Payload. This results in a modular design, readily adaptable for growth. Platform-fixed beams are simpler to construct generally, but require the "handoffs" between beams to be accomplished by the packet switching equipment as the beams "sweep" across the ground with the movement of the aircraft. However, the cost and performance penalties for frequently changing the virtual path through the packet switch may be appreciable. An alternative is to electronically steer the beams so they remain "fixed" on the ground as the aircraft moves. These results in more electronic and physical complexity for the antennas, but this may be a good trade-off to make since the burden on
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the packet switch and its network management software would be greatly reduced. These trade-offs are still being assessed. For the case of earth-fixed beams, each antenna would have a wider field of view than the sum of the beams in that antenna since each beam can be steered in all directions. Each beam could be capable of steering throughout the HALO footprint, or could be assigned a smaller portion. If there are "gaps" in the required coverage due to such things as rivers, hills, or forests, then the earth-fixed beams can be steered away from these undesirable coverage zones and more efficient usage of the antennas might result compared to the case of platform-fixed beams.
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Chapter-6
SUBSCRIBER UNITS
A block diagram describing the CPE (and BPE) is shown below. It entails three major sub-groups of hardware: The RF Unit (RU) which contains the MMW Antenna and MMW Transceiver; the Network Interface Unit (NIU); and the application terminals such as PCs, telephones, video servers, video terminals, etc. The RU consist of a small dual-feed antenna and MMW transmitter and receiver which is mounted to the antenna. An antenna tracking unit uses a pilot tone transmitted from the Communications Payload to point the antenna toward the airborne platform. The MMW transmitter accepts an L-band (950 - 1950 MHz) IF input signal from the NIU, translates it to MMW frequencies, amplifies the signal using a power amplifier to a transmit power level of 100 - 500 mW of power and feeds the antenna. The MMW receiver couples the received signal from the antenna to a Low Noise Amplifier (LNA), down converts the signal to an L-band IF and provides subsequent amplification and processing before outputting the signal to the NIU. Although the MMW transceiver is broadband, it typically will only process a single 40 MHz channel at any one time. The particular channel and frequency is determined by the NIU.
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The NIU interfaces to the RU via a coax pair which transmits the L-band TX and RX signals between the NIU and the RU. The NIU comprises an L-band tuner and down converter, a high-speed (up to 60 Mbps) demodulator, a high-speed modulator, multiplexers and de multiplexers, and data, telephony and video interface electronics. Each user terminal will provide access to data at rates up to 51.84 Mbps each way. In some applications, some of this bandwidth may be used to incorporate spread spectrum coding to improve performance against interference (in this case, the user information rate would be reduced).
The NIU equipment can be identical to that already developed for LMDS and other broadband services. This reduces the cost of the HALO Network services to the consumer since there would be minimal cost to adapt the LMDS equipment to this application and we could take advantage of the high volume expected in the other services. Also, the HALO RU can be very close in functionality to the RU in the other services (like LMDS) since the primary difference is the need for a tracking function for the antenna
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Chapter-7
SUMMARY
The HALO Network is capable of providing high rate communications to users of multimedia and broadband services. The feasibility of this approach is reasonably assured due to the convergence of technological advancements. The key enabling technologies at hand include:
GaAs RF devices which operate at MMW frequencies ATM/SONET Technology and Components Digital Signal Processing for Wideband Signals Video Compression Very Dense Memory Capacity Aircraft Technology These technologies are individually available, to a great extent, from commer-
cial markets. The HALO Network seeks to integrate these various technologies into a service of high utility to small and medium businesses and other multimedia consumers at a reasonable cost.
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REFERENCE
N. Colella and J. Martin, The cone of Commerce ,Proc. Of the SPIE International Symposium on Voice, Video, and Data Communications : Broadband Engineering for Multimedia Markets,1997. G. Djuknic , J. Freidenfelds, et al. Establishing Wireless Communications Services via High Altitude Aeronautical Platforms: A concept Whose Time Has Come? IEEE Communications Magazine , September 1997. www.angeltechnologies.com/techpapers
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