TeraByte InfraRed Delivery (TBIRD)
![A rocket launches.](/sites/default/files/styles/ifde_wysiwyg_full/public/project/video-images/2024-10/TBIRD%20video.png?itok=Z-5Q5yie)
In May 2022, the TBIRD payload onboard a small satellite was launched into orbit 300 miles above Earth's surface. A month later, this Lincoln Laboratory–built payload, roughly the size of a tissue box, delivered terabytes of data from space to a ground station at 100 gigabits per second (Gbps) — a rate 100 times faster than the best internet in most cities and more than 1,000 times faster than the radio-frequency (RF) links traditionally used for satellite communication. At this rate, the TBIRD mission, a partnership between NASA and the Laboratory, set the record for the fastest space-to-ground laser link ever achieved. In May 2023, TBIRD broke its own record, doubling the rate to 200 Gbps.
![A schematic showing a laser link between a satellite in space and a ground station on Earth.](/sites/default/files/project/image/2023-08/tbird_conops_public_notext.jpg)
![A person wearing gloves holds a tissue-box-sized communications payload, with its interior components displayed.](/sites/default/files/project/image/2023-08/box-blurred_r3.png)
Laser communications will enable 100 to 1,000 times more data to be sent to and from space than today's RF systems, akin to our terrestrial switch from dial-up to high-speed internet. By encoding data in the oscillations of infrared-light waves, which have a higher frequency than RF waves, laser communications systems can pack more data into each transmission. Recently, TBIRD delivered its highest data volume: 4.8 terabytes, equivalent to nearly 2,500 hours of high-definition video, in a single five-minute pass. A range of science areas, from Earth observation to space exploration, will benefit from this speedup — especially as instruments capture larger troves of high-resolution data, experiments involve more remote control, and spacecraft voyage further and further into deep space.
To enable these extraordinary data rates in such a small package, Lincoln Laboratory engineers developed multiple new technologies. One technology is a protocol for ensuring that laser communications data can be transmitted error-free through the atmosphere without a significant reduction in data rate. Another is a body-pointing scheme to precisely point the satellite toward the ground station; the TBIRD payload has no moving parts.
Next, the team seeks to explore performance with alternative ground stations to further investigate the limits of the technology.
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