earth from sapce

Bringing bandwidth when and where it's needed most

The ViaSat-3 constellation is designed to move capacity to meet demand where it's at
A ViaSat-3 satellite over earth

Dynamic bandwidth allocation

A "beam" describes the targeting field of a satellite signal. It's aimed at a specific area on the ground, moving data back and forth using radio spectrum.

 

A satellite's total bandwidth — or capacity — is shared across all of its beams. To get the highest productivity out of a satellite, it's important that the bandwidth is available in areas where demand is highest.

 

Rather than having bandwidth fixed to beams, the ViaSat-3 constellation is designed to move capacity between beams to bring bandwidth when and where it's needed most — what we call dynamic bandwidth allocation. By anticipating increases in demand throughout the world and move capacity to meet them — giving us the ability to meet dynamic and shifting market demands, help militaries and governments withstand and recover from stressors, better serve our business and residential customers, and provide superior bandwidth economics.

Duynamic bandwidth allocation moves bandwidth where it's needed in near real-time to meet changing demand throughout the day

What's exciting about the ViaSat-3 constellation's ability to dynamically allocate bandwidth?

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Ken Buer, CTO, Space & Commercial Networks

The enormous capacity of ViaSat-3 isn't worth nearly as much if it’s stranded in areas where there's no demand. So having the flexibility to move the capacity around means all of it is useful.

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Shawn Duffy, CFO

I think we've redefined what people think space is capable of — we can densify bandwidth in places or geographic regions where people are, where the businesses are, where boats and planes and all of our government customers are.

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Evan Dixon, President, Global Fixed Broadband

It's not about how much capacity you have, it's how much capacity you are putting in places where they need it — for us to be able to put as much bandwidth as possible over areas where there is high demand is going be a competitive edge.

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Jimmy Dodd, President, Global Enterprise & Mobility

When one of our airline customers has 50 jets on the ground, they all want to stay connected — and they have 100 people on each jet. Our ability to move bandwidth around and service those dense spots is a game changer.

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John Michalek, Director, Military & Space Programs

What’s revolutionary about ViaSat-3 is having approximately a terabyte of capacity — and then being able to put that wherever it's needed.

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Carlin Charteris, VP, Global Networks & Technology

If there's no demand at one location, you can move that capacity —and likewise, you can move it back just as seamlessly. That’s very, very powerful.

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