Satellite Internet 

Why Ground-Based Networks Can Be Economically Unviable

  • Infrastructure dependency – relies on cables, optical fibres, and towers.

  • Economic limitations – high installation cost in sparsely populated or remote regions; poor return on investment.

  • Disaster vulnerability – floods, earthquakes, or storms can disrupt connectivity.

  • Mobility gap – inadequate for moving platforms (ships, aircraft) or temporary setups.


Why Satellite Internet is Needed

  • Provides global coverage, independent of terrain or terrestrial infrastructure.

  • Rapid deployment during disasters, emergencies, or conflict.

  • Reliable for remote locations (Siachen Glacier, offshore rigs).

  • Ensures mobility-based connectivity for transportation, defence, and tourism.


Dual Nature of Satellite Internet

  • Civil applications – broadband for rural areas, disaster management, telemedicine, agriculture, logistics.

  • Military/Strategic use – coordination in conflict zones, drone operations, real-time surveillance.

  • Security risks – misuse by insurgents, criminal networks, cross-border smuggling.


Components of Satellite Internet

  1. Space Segment – satellites in orbit (communication payloads).

  2. Ground Segment – user terminals, ground stations, network control systems.


Three Main Orbits for Deployment

Orbit Altitude Features Examples Pros Cons
GEO (Geostationary Earth Orbit) 35,786 km Stationary over one point; large satellites Viasat GX Wide coverage (⅓ of Earth), stable link High latency (~600 ms), unsuitable for real-time apps
MEO (Medium Earth Orbit) 2,000–35,786 km Fewer satellites than LEO, lower latency than GEO O3b Balance of coverage & latency Still needs constellation, costly
LEO (Low Earth Orbit) <2,000 km Small, fast-moving satellites Starlink Low latency (~20–40 ms), smaller/cheaper satellites Small coverage area, needs mega-constellation

Mega-Constellations – How They Work

  • Hundreds/thousands of LEO satellites in coordinated orbits.

  • On-board processing – improves efficiency, reduces terminal complexity.

  • Optical inter-satellite links – satellites talk to each other without always relying on ground stations.

  • Seamless hand-offs – antennas track and switch between satellites every few minutes.


Applications

  • Civil – rural broadband, smart cities, IoE, precision farming, tourism, environmental monitoring.

  • Transport – connected vehicles, improved navigation, logistics management.

  • Defence – real-time troop coordination, surveillance, communication in remote bases.

  • Disaster Relief – backup when terrestrial networks fail.


Cost Factor

  • Currently more expensive than terrestrial broadband:

    • User terminal: ~$500

    • Monthly plan: ~$50

  • Price justified in remote or high-importance sectors; costs may drop with wider adoption.

  • Direct-to-smartphone tech (AST SpaceMobile, Starlink) could remove need for terminals in future.


Strategic Significance for India

  • Bridge the digital divide in rural/tribal regions.

  • Enhance disaster readiness and border defence communication.

  • Reduce dependency on foreign systems by developing indigenous satellite internet.

  • Participate in international regulation of mega-constellations.

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