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High altitude aeronautical platforms
High Altitude Aeronautical Platform Stations (HAAPS) is the name of a
technology for providing wireless narrowband and broadband
telecommunication services as well as broadcasting services with either
airships or aircrafts. The HAAPS are operating at altitudes between 3 to
22 km. A HAPS shall be able to cover a service area of up to 1'000 km
diameter, depending on the minimum elevation angle accepted from the
user's location. The platforms may be airplanes or airships (essentially
balloons) and may be manned or un-manned with autonomous operation coupled
with remote control from the ground. While the term HAP may not have a
rigid definition, we take it to mean a solar-powered and unmanned airplane
or airship, capable of long endurance on-station -possibly several years.
Various types of platform options exist: SkyStation™,
the Japanese Stratospheric Platform Project, the European Space Agency (ESA)
and others suggest the use of airships/blimps/dirigibles. These will be
stationed at 21km and are expected to remain aloft for about 5 years.
Angel Technologies (HALO™), AeroVironment/ NASA (Helios) and the
European Union (Heliplat) propose the use of high altitude long endurance
aircraft. The aircraft are either engine or solar powered and are
stationed at 16km (HALO) or 21km (Helios). Helios is expected to stay
aloft for a minimum of 6 months whereas HALO will have 3 aircraft flying
in 8- hour shifts. Platforms Wireless International is implementing a
tethered aerostat situated at ~6km.
A high altitude telecommunication system comprises an
airborne platform - typically at high atmospheric or stratospheric
altitudes - with a telecommunications payload, and associated ground
station telecommunications equipment. The combination of altitude, payload
capability, and power supply capability makes it ideal to serve new and
metropolitan areas with advanced telecommunications services such as
broadband access and regional broadcasting. The opportunities for
applications are virtually unlimited. The possibilities range from
narrowband services such as paging and mobile voice to interactive
broadband services such as multimedia and video conferencing. For future
telecommunications operators such a platform could provide blanket
coverage from day one with the added advantage of not being limited to a
single service. Where little or unreliable infrastructure exists, traffic
could be switched through air via the HAPS platform
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