Hi Hesham

> On 2. Mar 2024, at 16:03, Hesham ElBakoury via Starlink 
> <starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
> 
> Time synchronization, for satellite networks, faces several challenges:
> 1. Signal Propagation Delays: Unlike terrestrial networks where signals 
> travel through cables at the speed of light,

[SM] The speed of light in your typical glas fibers (and accidentally the 
information propagation speed in metallic conductors) comes in roughly at 2/3 
of the speed of light in vacuum, while the speed of light in air at see level 
is a mere 90 KM/s slower than in vacuum. 

> satellite communication involves signals traveling vast distances through 
> space. This creates significant delays.

[SM] Sure distances might be larger, but propagation speed is around 100000Km/s 
faster... my main point is speed of light is a) dependent on the medium b) not 
the things that differentiates space from the earth's surface here, but mere 
geometry and larger distances on larger spheres...

> 2. Clock Drift: Even highly precise atomic clocks, used in satellites, are 
> susceptible to "drift" - gradually losing or gaining time. This drift, caused 
> by factors like temperature variations, radiation exposure, and power 
> fluctuations, can lead to inconsistencies in timekeeping across the network.
> 3. Signal Degradation: As signals travel through space, they can degrade due 
> to factors like atmospheric interference, ionospheric disturbances, and solar 
> activity. This degradation can introduce noise and errors, impacting the 
> accuracy of time synchronization messages. 
> 4. Limited Resources: Satellites have limited power and processing 
> capabilities. Implementing complex synchronization protocols can be 
> resource-intensive, requiring careful optimization to minimize their impact 
> on other functionalities.
> 5. Evolving Technologies: As satellite technologies and applications continue 
> to evolve, new challenges related to synchronization might emerge. For 
> example, the integration of constellations with thousands of satellites poses 
> unique synchronization challenges due to the sheer scale and complexity of 
> the network.
> These challenges necessitate the development of robust and efficient time 
> synchronization protocols for satellite networks and an integrated satellite 
> and  terrestrial networks
> Are you aware of such time synchronization protocols?
> I would think that using Satellite simulators is the most viable way to 
> develop and test these protocols given that using satellites is not that easy.
> Thanks
> Hesham
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Starlink mailing list
> Starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net
> https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink

_______________________________________________
Starlink mailing list
Starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net
https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink

Reply via email to