The Multiple Access Telecom Reconfigurable Inter-satellites X-factor (MATRIX) project is a satellite communications architecture proposed by ESA
By splitting user-link and feeder-link functions, using feeder satellites linked to user satellites through inter-satellite links, it tackles one of the most pressing bottlenecks in high-throughput satellite systems: the feeder-link. With modular satellites, fewer gateways, scalable deployment and higher spectrum utilisation, it presents compelling business and technical advantages.
MATRIX will reshape how satellite communications networks are built, enabling higher capacity, lower cost and more flexible space-based connectivity systems. Application domains include Very High Throughput Satellite (VHTS) services for broadband, where user-link capacity is huge, but feeder-link is a bottleneck; data relay and Earth observation, where large volumes of data must be routed via satellites to ground stations; and science and communications systems requiring multiple satellites connected through inter-satellite links and high-capacity gateways.
The ambition of MATRIX
The satellite communications market is undergoing a major shift: user-demand for bandwidth is increasing dramatically, driven by high-throughput broadband, mobile connectivity, streaming and IoT services. At the same time, existing systems, especially geostationary Earth orbit (GEO) multi-beam satellites, are running into feeder-link bottlenecks. In those systems the user-link capacity has grown, but the feeder-link cannot scale easily because gateway sites are scarce and expensive.
ESA identified this bottleneck and conceived MATRIX to separate the user-link and feeder-link operations via a distributed satellite architecture. Instead of a single monolithic spacecraft with both user links and feeder links, the innovation splits the functions: user-satellites handle the many user beams and feeder-satellites handle high-capacity links to ground gateways, interconnected via inter-satellite links.
The system concept
Under MATRIX, the system architecture will work as follows:
MATRIX innovations and advantages
ATLAS is implemented as an extension to ESA’s ARTES Core Competitiveness programme. Its specific remit is to support the demonstration phase in space for telecommunications flight hardware. ATLAS supports