Abstract. Within the next years, a large number of new satellite systems for broadband multimedia communications will be developed, mainly for fixed terminals, but to a lesser degree also for portable and mobile terminals. The most important systems will be based on low earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellations with intersatellite links (ISLs), and will be seamlessly integrated into the environment of terrestrial broadband networks. Since most of the terrestrial broadband networks will be based on the Asynchronous Transfer Mode ATM, it is advantageous for the satellite networks to adopt the ATM transmission scheme and implement ATM switches on board the satellites. However, compared to communication in fixed networks, satellite communication is characterised by special constraints (limited bandwidth, propagation delay, transmission errors, dynamic network topology) requiring the development of a new ATM-based communication technology. In the paper, an ISL-based LEO satellite network for multimedia communication will be considered. Several relevant aspects will be discussed, such as the system architecture, the system requirements, and the protocol architecture. Since the users access the satellite network via a radio interface, an error control scheme and a multiple access scheme suitable for multimedia communication must be implemented. The aspects of TDMA-and CDMA-based medium access control are discussed. Further issues are ATM resource management, radio resource management, and ISL routing. Finally, methods for terminal antenna steering are adressed, and the demonstration of aeronautical multimedia communication via the ITALSAT satellite is described.
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