| OPERATIONS of the QIKCom Payload IN THE AMATEUR SATELLITE SERVICE | 13 Nov 2014 |------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | |There is sensitivity to the inapproprite attempts at licensing and |operating some spacecraft and experiments in the Amateur Satellite |which should more appropriately be licensed via other services. | |QIKcom is an Amateur Radio Communications payload with the sole |mission of providing an open digital packet radio transponder for use |by duely licensed radio operators around the world fully within the |intent of the Amateur Satellite Service. This paper addresses how the |licensing of the QIKCom payload is fully compliant with the intent and |specfics of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) Radio |Rules for the Amateur Satellite Service. It extracts the pertinent |sections of the IARU (International Amateur Radio Union) guildelines |for INFORMATION FOR PROSPECTIVE OWNERS AND OPERATORS OF SATELLITES |UTILIZING FREQUENCIES ALLOCATED TO THE AMATEUR-SATELLITE SERVICE which |helps assure compliance with the ITU rules. The IARU Rules document |may be viewed in its entirety at: |http://www.iaru.org/satellite/prospective.html | |RULES: | "Amateur-Satellite Service: A radiocommunication service using space | stations on earth satellites for the same purposes as those of the | amateur service." [RR S1.57] | | "Amateur Service: A radiocommunication service for the purpose of | self-training, intercommunication and technical investigations | carried out by amateurs, that is, by duly authorised persons | interested in radio technique solely with a personal aim and without | pecuniary interest." [RR S1.56] | |QIKcom COMMENT: | |Sponsoring Organization: US Naval Academy |Operating Organization: Volunteer Licensed Amateur Radio Operators |Satellite Station Licensee: Todd Bruner, WA1HAI | |Dr. Kang KB3UKS is a professor and Bob Bruninga, WB4APR is an engineer |in the Naval Academy Aerospace Student project lab who gives engineering |guidance to student satellite projects. | |Todd Bruner, WB1HAI is an active friend of the Academy, a past Division |of Engineering Director at USNA and a retired US Naval Officer. He is |an unpaid volunteer with NO PECUNIARY association with the US Naval |Academy, NASA nor any other Organization involved in this project. His |oversight as licensee is to assure the payload is operated within the |rules of the FCC and ITU for Amateur Radio Payloads. | |RULES: | | "VI. OPERATIONAL GUIDELINES. The following operational guidelines, | based on interpretations by IARU of the Radio Regulations and good | amateur practice, are intended to help in planning the missions, | management, and control of satellites planned to operate in the | amateur-satellite service. | | Organisations building satellites should compare their mission plans | to the requirements of the amateur-satellite service. Then, they | should determine if it is possible to comply with the requirements of | the amateur-satellite service or if licensing and operation should be | in some other radio service which is more consistent with the nature | and requirements of the mission. | | A. The purposes of an amateur satellite should be: | | (1) To provide communication resources for the general amateur | radio community and/or | (2) To conduct technical investigations in all respects consistent | with the Radio Regulations. [See RR S1.56 and RR S1.57.] | | Technical investigations carried out using frequencies allocated to | the amateur-satellite service should be relevant to the development | of "radio technique," that is, have a reasonable possibility of | application to the development of radio communication systems. | [See RR S1.56 and RR S1.57.] | | Examples of such technical investigations include: propagation | studies, operational analysis of protocols used for digital voice and | data communication, development of attitude determination methods, | development of command and control procedures, studies of radiation | effects on various electronic components, studies of meteor trail | reflection, and measurement of the orbital environment useful in | designing future amateur satellites. | | While many other types of technical investigations are conceivable, | those not having a reasonable possibility of application to radio | communication systems are probably not in accordance with the treaty | requirements. An administration can reject whatever it decides is | inappropriate use of the amateur-satellite service or questions may | be raised by other administrations. | |QIKcom Comment A(1): This project is fully in compliance. The |communications payload on QIKcom serves as a bent-pipe relay for Amateur |Radio Operators worldwide identical to data transponders still flying on |the first USNA satellite PCSAT launched in 2001 and via the amateur |radio on the International Space Station on 145.825 MHz. | | |RULES: | | B. Station Control. | | All stations operating in the amateur service and the amateur | satellite service, including space and Earth stations, must be | controlled by "duly authorised persons," that is, licensed amateur | radio operators who must be acting "solely with a personal aim and | without pecuniary interest." [See RR S1.56 and RR S1.57.] | | Even with these limitations, organisations and amateurs have common | interests and work together for their mutual benefit. (For this | discussion, an organisation can be a university, research institute, | for-profit or not-for-profit corporation, association, club, or other | similar entity.) | | AMSAT-NA, for example, is an organisation which owns and builds space | stations to operate in the amateur-satellite service. But, because it | is an organisation and not an individually licensed radio amateur, it | may not control an amateur station. Licenses under which AMSAT-NA | owned amateur stations are operated are issued either in the name of | an individually licensed amateur radio operator or an amateur radio | club (in this case, AMSAT-NA itself) where a licensed amateur radio | operator is named on the license as trustee (the person responsible) | for the club station. | | In every case, an individual licensed amateur radio operator, who is | neither employed nor paid by AMSAT-NA, is legally responsible for the | operation of every amateur station or amateur-satellite station. | | Commonly, the licensee is an unpaid member of the organisation which | owns the amateur station equipment or is a volunteer acting in close | association with it. In these cases, the owner's interest and the | licensee's "personal interest" are usually the same. | | Of course, it is theoretically possible (although to the best of our | knowledge, it has never occurred in practice) that the licensee or | trustee of an amateur station or amateur-satellite station may | determine that something he or she has been requested to do is not in | accordance with the rules and regulations of his/her administration. | If this happens, the licensee would inform the organisation and, if | possible, they would work out a solution that satisfies and protects | both. | | Thus, the individual responsibility of the licensed amateur radio | operator, effectively imposed by the Radio Regulations, works as a | kind of legal safety check for the organisation and the amateur to | protect both of their interests as well as that of the amateur | satellite service itself. | |QIKcom COMMENT: This project is fully in compliance. The |organizational structure and operators are compliant with these rules. |The operating organization are those volunteer operators around the |world that use the commmunications transponder for learning about the |radio art and may participate by collecting telemetry and who may |send commands as needed to maintain the proper operation of the pay- |load. The Licensee of the spacecraft transmitter is a local volunteer |with his own home ground station only a few blocks from the Naval |Academy Radio Club who is responsible for proper operation of the |payload transponder within the FCC and ITU rules. | |The interest of these individuals is in the operation of the satellite |for personal training and intercommunications with other satellite |experimenters in the amateur satellite service and without pecuniary |remuneration for such interest. The Naval Academy volunteers, Dr Jin |Kang, KB3UKS and Bob Bruninga,WB4APR have decades of non-pecuniary |history with the Amateur Satellite Service, are the authors of dozens of |related papers in AMSAT and other Amateur Radio publications, and the |instigator of Packet Radio experiments on numerous other spacecraft such |as SAREX, MIR, ARISS, SUNSAT, SAPPHIRE, PCSAT,PCSAT2, ANDE, RAFT, and |DRAGONS for purely personal aims of learning about radio and promoting |the Amateur Satellite Service. | | |RULES: | D. Plain Language. The amateur-satellite service, by its nature, | involves stations of more than one country. International communi- | cation between amateur stations in different countries must be in | plain language. [See RR S25.2.] The plain language requirement | includes telemetry and data exchanged between users. | | To meet the plain language requirement, technical descriptions of all | emissions, codes, and formats must be made publicly available. No | system intended to conceal the meaning of a transmission may be used. | | NOTE: Space telecommand transmissions for critical spacecraft | functions are generally accepted as exempt from the requirement to | use plain language. | |QIKcom COMMENT: This project is fully in compliance. The design, |telemetry, data and all aspects of this payload are in plain language |(AX.25 protocol) and all details are published and in the public domain. |They will be maintained for easy access on a web page such as those |maintained for our earlier payloads: maintained current on the |following WEB page: http://aprs.org/pcsat.html and aprs.org/pcsat2.html | |RULES: | E. Open Access. All telecommunication facilities, except telecommand, | operating in amateur-satellite service allocations should be open for | use by amateur radio operators world-wide. All experiments utilizing | frequencies allocated to the amateur-satellite service should be | freely available for use by radio amateurs world-wide and for | reception by students and educators. | |QIKcom COMMENT: This project is fully in compliance. All |communications modes (except command codes) and all telemetry |will be available to all amateur radio operators worldwide in accordance |with the published user operating recommendations. There is no other |usage of these communications transponders, nor circuits beyond what has |been described here for use in the Amateur Satellite Service. There may |be periods when the transponder is commanded off for the purpose of |saving power, or keeping temperatures under control, or to avoid |interference with other Amateur Radio experiments, but such OFF times |will apply to all users equally. When communications modes are |activated, they are open to all radio amateurs worldwide who adhere to |the recommended user station requirements and uplink parameters. | |Bob Bruninga, WB4APR |Trustee, |US Naval Academy Amateur Radio Club |410-293-6417 | |Todd Bruner, WB1HAI |Licensee, QIKcom |Cell: 202-689-5471 |Home: 410-280-2460