The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) said in a
statement it had approved a licence for the aerospace giant "to construct,
deploy, and operate a satellite constellation" that will "provide
broadband and communications services for residential, commercial,
institutional, governmental, and professional users in the United States and
globally."
"Advanced satellite broadband services have an
important role to play in connecting hard-to-serve communities," said
Jessica Rosenworcel, the FCC chairwoman.
The FCC gave the green light for 147 satellites, the vast
majority of which will be in low orbit: 132 could be placed at an altitude of
about 600 miles (1,000 km), and 15 would be much higher, between about 17,000
and 27,000 miles.
The service will first be available to clients in the United
States and then around the world.
"Boeing sees a multi-orbit future for satellite
technologies," the aerospace company said in a statement.
"As the demand for satellite communications grows,
diversity will be required across orbital regimes and frequencies to satisfy
unique customer demands, and we see V-band as helping to provide some of that
diversity," Boeing added.
Other satellite constellation projects are already being
rolled out by competing companies.
US billionaire Elon Musk, head of the space company SpaceX,
has already put more than 1,500 satellites into orbit to create the Starlink
network, while Amazon founder Jeff Bezos has a similar project called Kuiper.
0 comments:
Post a Comment