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Satellite
television is television delivered by way of
communications satellites, as compared to conventional
terrestrial television and cable television. In many
areas of the world, satellite television services
supplement older terrestrial signals, providing a wider
range of channels and services, including
subscription-only services.
Satellites
used for television signals are generally in either
highly elliptical (with inclination of +/-63.4 degrees
and orbital period of about 12 hours) or geostationary
orbit 37,000 km (22,300 miles) above the earth’s
equator.
Satellite television, like other communications relayed
by satellite, starts with a transmitting antenna located
at an uplink facility. Uplink satellite dishes are very
large, as much as 9 to 12 meters (30 to 40 feet) in
diameter. The increased diameter results in more
accurate aiming and increased signal strength at the
satellite. The uplink dish is pointed toward a specific
satellite and the uplinked signals are transmitted
within a specific frequency range, so as to be received
by one of the transponders tuned to that frequency range
aboard that satellite. The transponder 'retransmits' the
signals back to Earth but at a different frequency band
(to avoid interference with the uplink signal),
typically in the C-band (4–8 GHz) or Ku-band (12–18 GHz)
or both. The leg of the signal path from the satellite
to the receiving Earth station is called the downlink.
A typical satellite has up to 32 transponders for
Ku-band and up to 24 for a C-band only satellite, or
more for hybrid satellites. Typical transponders each
have a bandwidth between 27 MHz and 50 MHz. Each
geo-stationary C-band satellite needs to be spaced 2
degrees from the next satellite (to avoid interference).
For Ku the spacing can be 1 degree. This means that
there is an upper limit of 360/2 = 180 geostationary
C-band satellites and 360/1 = 360 geostationary Ku-band
satellites. C-band transmission is susceptible to
terrestrial interference while Ku-band transmission is
affected by rain (as water is an excellent absorber of
microwaves).
The downlinked satellite signal, quite weak after
traveling the great distance (see inverse-square law),
is collected by a parabolic receiving dish, which
reflects the weak signal to the dish’s focal point.
Mounted on brackets at the dish's focal point is a
device called a feedhorn. This feedhorn is essentially
the flared front-end of a section of waveguide that
gathers the signals at or near the focal point and
'conducts' them to a probe or pickup connected to a
low-noise block downconverter or LNB. The LNB amplifies
the relatively weak signals, filters the block of
frequencies in which the satellite TV signals are
transmitted, and converts the block of frequencies to a
lower frequency range in the L-band range. The evolution
of LNBs was one of necessity and invention.
The original C-Band satellite TV systems used a Low
Noise Amplifier connected to the feedhorn at the focal
point of the dish. The amplified signal was then fed via
very expensive 50 Ohm impedance coaxial cable to an
indoor receiver or in other designs fed to a
downconverter (a mixer and a voltage tuned oscillator
with some filter circuitry) for downconversion to an
intermediate frequency. The channel selection was
controlled, typically by a voltage tuned oscillator with
the tuning voltage being fed via a separate cable to the
headend. But this simple design evolved.
Designs for microstrip based converters for Amateur
Radio frequencies were adapted for the 4 GHz C-Band.
Central to these designs was concept of block
downconversion of a range of frequencies to a lower, and
technologically more easily handled block of frequencies
(intermediate frequency).
The advantages of using an LNB are that cheaper cable
could be used to connect the indoor receiver with the
satellite TV dish and LNB, and that the technology for
handling the signal at L-Band and UHF was far cheaper
than that for handling the signal at C-Band frequencies.
The shift to cheaper technology from the 50 Ohm
impedance cable and N-Connectors of the early C-Band
systems to the cheaper 75 Ohm technology and
F-Connectors allowed the early satellite TV receivers to
use, what were in reality, modified UHF TV tuners which
selected the satellite television channel for down
conversion to another lower intermediate frequency
centered on 70 MHz where it was demodulated. This shift
allowed the satellite television DTH industry to change
from being a largely hobbyist one where receivers were
built in low numbers and complete systems were expensive
(costing thousands of Dollars) to a far more commercial
one of mass production.
Direct broadcast satellite dishes are fitted with an
LNBF, which integrates the feedhorn with the LNB.
The satellite receiver demodulates and converts the
signals to the desired form (outputs for television,
audio, data, etc.). Sometimes, the receiver includes the
capability to unscramble or decrypt; the receiver is
then called an Integrated receiver/decoder or IRD. The
cable connecting the receiver to the LNBF or LNB must be
of the low loss type RG-6 or RG-10, etc. It cannot be
standard RG-59.
(A new form of omnidirectional satellite antenna, which
does not use a directed parabolic dish and can be used
on a mobile platform such as a vehicle, was recently
announced by the University of Waterloo.
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