How The Airborne Internet Will Work: Get Connected
How The Airborne Internet Will Work: Get Connected
How The Airborne Internet Will Work: Get Connected
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This diagram shows how the HALO Network will enable a high-speed wireless Internet connection
The word on just about every Internetuser's lips these days is "broadband." We have so much more data to send and download today, including audio files, video files and photos, that it's clogging our wimpy modems. Many Internet users are switching to cable modems and digital subscriber lines(DSLs) to increase their bandwidth. There's also a new type of service being developed that will take broadband into the air. At least three companies are planning to provide high-speed wireless Internet connection by placing aircraft in fixed patterns over hundreds of cities. Angel Technologies is planning an airborne Internet network, called High Altitude Long Operation (HALO), which would use lightweight planes to circle overhead and provide data delivery faster than a T1 line for businesses. Consumers would get a connection comparable to DSL. Also, AeroVironmenthas teamed up with NASA on a solar-powered, unmanned plane that would work like the HALO network, and Sky Station International is planning a similar venture using blimps instead of planes.
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We've already seen satellites used for broadband Internet access. In this article, you'll learn about the future of the airborne Internet. We'll take a look at the networks in development, the aircraft and how consumers may use this technology in their homes.
Airborne-Internet systems will require that an antenna be attached to the side of your house or work place.
In the next three sections, we will take a look at the three aircraft that could be bringing you broadband Internet access from the sky.
The Proteus plane will carry the network hub for the HALO Network.
One the three companies developing an airborne Internet network is Angel Technologies. Its HALO Network may be ready for deployment at the end of 2003 and in place over 10 cities by 2006. The centerpiece of this network is theProteus plane, which will carry wireless networking equipment into the air. The Proteus plane was developed byScaled Composites. It is designed with long wings and the low wing loadingneeded for extended high-altitude flight. Wing loading is equal to the entire mass of the plane divided by its wing area. Proteus will fly at heights of 9.5 and 11.4 miles (15.3 and 18.3 km) and cover an area up to 75 miles (120.7 km) in diameter. The plane still needs to receive approval from the Federal Aviation Administration.
Proteus Aircraft
Weight Wingspan Length Height Engines Range Speed 9,000 pounds at takeoff 5,900 pounds empty 77 ft 7 inches (23.7 m) Expandable to 92 feet (28 m) 56.3 ft (17.2 m) 17.6 ft (5.4 m) 2 turbofan engines 2,300 pounds of thrust 18 hours 65 knots (75 mph/120.7 kph) to 250 knots (288 mph/463.5 kph)
At the heart of Angel's Proteus planes is the one-ton airborne-network hub, which is what allows the plane to relay data signals from ground stations to your workplace and home computer. The airborne-network hub consists of an
antenna array and electronics for wireless communication. The antenna array creates hundreds of virtual cells, like mobile-phone cells, on the ground to serve thousands of users. The payload is liquid-cooled and operates off of about 20 kilowatts of DC power. An 18-foot dish underneath the plane is responsible for reflecting high-speed data signals from a ground station to your computer. Each city in the HALO Network will be allotted three piloted Proteus planes. Each plane will fly for eight hours before the next plane takes off. Angel CEO Marc Arnold says his company has identified 3,500 airports in the United States that can meet HALO's operational needs. After takeoff, the Proteus plane will climb to a safe altitude, above any bad weather or commercial traffic, and begin an 8-mile loop around the city. Each plane will accommodate two pilots, who will split flying duties during their eight-hour flight.
Floating On Air
Sky Station International is counting on its blimps to beat Angel to the punch in the race to deliver high-speed Internet access from high altitudes. Sky Station calls its blimps lighter-than-air platforms, and plans to station these airships over at least 250 cities worldwide, one over each city. Each station would fly at an altitude of 13 miles (21 km) and provide wireless service to an area of approximately 7,500 square miles (19,000 square km).
Each blimp will be equipped with a telecommunications payload to provide wireless broadband connections. The blimps will be able to carrying payloads of up to about 2,200 pounds (1,000 kg). Sky Station believes it can have its first blimp deployed by 2002. Each blimp will have a life span of about five to 10 years. Sky Station says that its user terminals will enable broadband connections of between 2 and 10 megabits per second (Mbps). Click hereto see how the Sky Station system works.
The Helios aircraft will be equipped with telecommunications equipment and stay airborne for six months straight.
Helios is currently in the prototype stage, and there is still a lot of testing to be done to achieve the endurance levels needed for AeroVironment's telecommunications system. AeroVironment plans to launch its system within three years of receiving funding for the project. When it does, a single Helios airplane flying at 60,000 feet will cover a service area approximately 40 miles in diameter.
Helios Aircraft
Weight Wingspan Length Wing Area Propulsion Range Speed 2,048 pounds (929 kg) 247 ft (75.3 m) 12 ft (3.7 m) 1,976 square ft (183.6 m2) 14 brushless, 2-horsepower, direct-current electric motors 1 to 3 hours in prototype tests 6 months when fully operational 19 to 25 mph (30.6 to 40.2 kph)
The Helios prototype is constructed out of materials such as carbon fiber, graphite epoxy, Kevlar and Styrofoam, covered with a thin, transparent skin. The main pole supporting the wing is made out of carbon fiber, and is thicker on the top than on the bottom in order to absorb the constant bending during flight. The wing's ribs are made of epoxy and carbon fiber. Styrofoam comprises the wing's front edge, and a clear, plastic film is wrapped around the entire wing body.
The all-wing plane is divided into six sections, each 41 ft (12.5 m) long. A pod carrying the landing gear is attached under the wing portion of each section. These pods also house the batteries, flight-control computers and data instrumentation. Network hubs for AeroVironment's telecommunications system would likely be placed here as well. It seems that airborne Internet could take off in the very near future. If and when those planes and blimps start circling to supplement our current modes of connection, downloading the massive files we've come to crave for entertainment or depend on for business purposes will be a snap -- even if we live somewhere in that "last mile."