Discovery Semiconductors Awarded Patent on Microsatellite Technology
Conventional satellites are ten times bigger and heavier than the patented design due to the bulk of packaging separate functions in individual sub-assemblies. By employing the company's capabilities to design and fabricate opto-electronic integrated circuits (OEIC) on Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) and Silicon (Si) wafers, complete sub-systems of the electronic module will be fabricated on individual wafers. These wafers are then stacked in a cylindrical central housing and interconnected to the module via contacts on the circumference of the wafers.
Selected signals can be communicated between wafers utilizing light sources and detectors integrated onto the wafers via methods patented by Discovery Semiconductors in US patent number 5,621,227 ("Method and apparatus for monolithic opto-electronic integrated circuit using selective epitaxy"). For example, the RF communications antenna would be fabricated on the wafer facing earth with one of the company's wide bandwidth detectors at its center. The antenna drive signal would be communicated from the signal-processing wafer via an integrated semiconductor laser, eliminating the need for bulky RF interconnects.
Edited by Gregg Miller
Managing Editor, RF Globalnet