Earth observation systems play important roles in many critical applications. The rapid increase of the number of satellites and their sensing capability, however, makes it challenging to send the massive… Click to show full abstract
Earth observation systems play important roles in many critical applications. The rapid increase of the number of satellites and their sensing capability, however, makes it challenging to send the massive amount of observed data back to the Earth. One promising direction to enhance the earth observation throughput is to use inter-satellite communication. Towards this, we identify two key design factors: 1) the capability to support on-demand scheduling of inter-satellite communication; and 2) the capability to co-optimize the scheduling of observation and transmission missions. For both, rigorous study is needed to determine whether they provide sufficient throughput gain to justify their additional complexity. Our work formulates a generic earth observation and transmission problem to study the maximum network throughput under different settings. By succinctly modeling the different constraints using a generalized time-varying graph representation, we can efficiently find the optimal scheduling solutions. We conduct an extensive study, which shows that using 40 relay satellites from the “starlink” constellation can increase the throughput of 10 sensing satellites from the “Gaofen” constellation by more than 400%. In particular, on-demand scheduling under heavy load and co-optimization of observation/transmission under light but time-critical load can improve the throughput by more than 180% and 100%, respectively.
               
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