2021: The year in Viasat technology
12-14-2021
New devices and new methods of communication have evolved from modern marvels to must-haves in just a short time span. At the same time, the obstacles to achieve worldwide terrestrial communication remain daunting.
Line-of-sight wireless transmission is inherently limited to relatively short distances thanks to the curvature of our planet. And the alternative land-based solution — running lines to every home, school, business or organization — requires a high enough density of users to justify the significant infrastructure expense.
And the urgency to provide broadband for communities has become even more apparent with the pandemic, when millions had to rely on their home internet for work, school, shopping, healthcare and much more.
To meet the increasingly complicated demands of the 21st Century, we need to augment those terrestrial limitations with a greater reliance on space-based communications.
Satellite broadband is increasingly providing faster speeds and more data capacity. It will not only help bridge the digital divide in countries around the world, but it is valued in many other environments that need connectivity where terrestrial service is absent. Even ultra-modern line-of-sight 5G networks rely on satellites in some areas to do the heavy lifting of backhaul — the movement of content from the user back to the network.
The first of three of our new ultra-high-capacity communications satellites took a successful, but nerve-rattling, 400-mile road trip in June from the Viasat payload production facility in Arizona, to the Boeing Satellite Systems facility in California. It will eventually be launched to an orbital altitude about 23,000 miles above Earth.
This first leg of the journey was a highly calculated and meticulously planned mission to Boeing, where the satellite will be integrated with the rest of the spacecraft — the “bus” — which includes the propulsion, attitude control, power subsystems, and solar arrays.
The first ViaSat-3 satellite, which will cover the Americas, is known by the team as “Flight 1.” It’s the culmination of years of work for many people who began planning ViaSat-3 six years ago and who have watched it come together over the past three years.
While there is more testing ahead before it can be launched into space, the teams in Tempe already are using learnings from Flight 1 as a blueprint for the next system.
One of the biggest challenges with cybersecurity is ensuring potential victims have the information they need to help prevent attacks. That’s why the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) created the new Enhanced Cybersecurity Services program.
Viasat recently became just one of three companies approved to offer ECS services to customers.
Viasat has also taken a more innovative path than the other two service providers, who offer an external Off-Premises Defense Model. In contrast, Viasat offers an On-Premises Defense Model, in which a Trusted Cyber Sensors (TCS) system is placed behind the network gateway at customer sites.
The on-premises model adds a human element that can discern threat patterns that would be missed by an automated detection system. In addition, customers don’t need to upgrade their network architecture and the data is screened at the customers’ locations and never passes through an external site.
Viasat’s system could also help protect state and municipal governments from threats from ransomware and phishing attacks and even add an extra layer of security to elections to reassure election officials and the public.