SpaceX Rival OneWeb Plans Next-Gen Constellation Thats Better Than Starlink – Observer

With more than 1,000 Starlink satellites beaming internet signals from the sky, SpaceX is leading the race of constellation-based broadband service. But its ambitious launch plan makes space environmentalists nervous: SpaceX has applied for regulatory permission to deploy 42,000 Starlink satellites over the next few years in low Earth orbit, an area already increasingly crowded with manmade objects and debris. Thats perhaps why Starlinks main competitor, U.K.-based OneWeb, despite having launched fewer than 200 satellites, is looking to develop a more efficient version of the emerging technology.

A consortium of space firms led by OneWeb has secured $45 million in funding from the British government to launch a beam-hopping satellite next year to test a second-generation network it aims to launch in 2025.

These new satellites, called Joey-Sat, are designed to be able to direct beams to increase capacity in specific areas in response to demand spikes or emergencies. From helping during a disaster to providing broadband on planes, this amazing technology will show how next-generation 5G connectivity can benefit all of us on Earth, U.K. Science Minister Amanda Solloway said in a statement Monday.

OneWeb is teaming up with antenna maker SatixFy, ground station builder Celestia and space debris removal startup Astroscale. The pilot mission is funded by the U.K. Space Agency through the European Space Agencys Sunrise program.

SatixFy, which receives the largest chunk of the fund ($35 million), will be tasked to build Joey-Sats beam-hopping payload and user terminals.

In March, SatixFy agreed to build an in-flight connectivity terminal for OneWebs existing LEO constellation. The company has a similar deal with the Canadian satellite operator Telesat, providing modem chips that will support beam hopping for Telesats Lightspeed LEO constellation project.

Celestia will build and test ground stations for Joey-Sat that feature a new multi-beam, electronically steered antenna. Astroscale is commissioned to develop technologies that could safely de-orbit these satellites when theyre dead so that they wont become free-floating space junk.

This ambitious project with OneWeb is the next step towards maturing our technologies and refining our U.K. capabilities to develop a full-service Active Debris Removal offering by 2024, Astroscale U.K. managing director John Auburn said in a statement.

OneWeb is partly owned by the U.K. government. The company aims to begin satellite broadband service to north of 50 degrees latitude by June, which would cover the U.K., northern Europe, Greenland, Iceland, Canada and Alaska.

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SpaceX Rival OneWeb Plans Next-Gen Constellation Thats Better Than Starlink - Observer

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