TAMPA, Fla. โ€” Italian ground segment service provider Leaf Space has deployed its first ground station with a Ka-band link to meet demand for higher data rate applications.

Leaf Space said the triband Ka, X and S-band antenna at its Blรถnduรณs, Iceland facility entered service in June following successful tests with a remote sensing customer, which is using the Ka-band link to download larger amounts of data from orbit.

Leaf Spaceโ€™s previous 26 antennas only provide services in the S, X and, in a limited number of locations, ultra high frequency (UHF) bands, supporting missions such as Earth observation and monitoring to communications with orbital transfer vehicles. 

While X-band enables remote sensing downlinks with data rates up to 1.2 gigabits per second, the Ka-band antenna currently supports data rates up to 6 Gbps, meaning operators can download larger amounts of data per satellite pass.

Jonata Puglia, Leaf Spaceโ€™s CEO, said current and potential customers are demanding faster speeds to downlink increasingly larger amounts of data generated in orbit.

โ€œThe remote sensing market is slowly but surely moving towards high data rate applications,โ€ Puglia said, โ€œeven if the Ka-band satellite radios are not yet widely available, expensive and power-hungry.โ€

Leaf Space antennas in Blonduos, Iceland. Credit: Leaf Space Credit: Leaf Space

Leaf Space chose Iceland for its first triband Ka, X and S-band antenna because the countryโ€™s northern location provides optimal revisit times and coverage for customers most interested in Ka-band.

Puglia said Leaf Space also recently commenced operations with two antennas in Punta Arenas, Chile.

The decade-old company plans to install 10 more antennas before the end of the year, including two additional Ka-band antennas.

The expansion plan follows a $22 million Series B funding round last year for Leaf Space, which supports more than 100 satellites with a ground network spanning 18 locations worldwide.

Leaf Space customers include Canada-based connectivity provider Kepler Communications, hyperspectral Earth observation operator Pixxel of India and AST SpaceMobile, a venture developing a direct-to-smartphone network out of Texas.

Jason Rainbow writes about satellite telecom, finance and commercial markets for SpaceNews. He has spent more than a decade covering the global space industry as a business journalist. Previously, he was Group Editor-in-Chief for Finance Information Group,...