How does Starlink Satellite Internet Work?📡☄🖥

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With Starlink internet, data is continuously being sent between a ground dish and a Starlink satellite orbiting 550km above. Furthermore, the Starlink satellite zooms across the sky at 27,000km/hr! How can the dish and satellite maintain a continuous connection? And then how is data sent back and forth? Well, in this video we're going to dive into the inner workings for the ground dish and Starlink satellites, and see how a beam of data is formed, how this beam is swept across the sky, and then finally what exactly is in that beam that allows for incredibly fast internet! This is an incredible feat of technology and engineering, so stick around!
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Table of Contents:
00:00 - Intro to Starlink
01:00 - Overview of Exploring Starlink
01:46 - Difference between Starlink and Broadcast Satellites
03:28 - Parts Inside a Dishy McFlatface
05:06 - How does an Aperture Couple Patch Antenna Work?
09:13 - Electromagnetic Wave Emission
12:45 - Forming a Beam that Reaches Space: Beamforming
15:22 - Brilliant
16:52 - Steering a Beam to Sweep Across the Sky
18:54 - Starlink: Phase Array Beam Steering
21:11 - Notes on Phased Array Beam Steering
22:24 - Sending Data in a Beam to the Starlink Satellite
23:27 - Innerworkings of 64QAM
26:02 - Actual Size of Starlink Dishy & EM Waves
26:55 - Images from the Starlink Patent
27:49 - Outro
Key Branches from this video are: How does Bluetooth Work?
Erratum:
At 2m50s, the orbits are inaccurate. The TV satellite should be in geostationary orbit moving in the same direction as the Earth. Furthermore, all the Starlink satellites should be orbiting West to East. Credit to Paul S.
Script, Modeling, Animation: Teddy Tablante
Twitter: @teddytablante
Modeling: Prakash Kakadiya
Animation: Mike Radjabov
Voice Over: Phil Lee
Sound Design: www.drilu.mx
Sound Effects: Luis Zuleta
Sound Effects and Music Editor: David Pinete
Sound Effects: Raúl Núñez
Supervising Sound Editor and Mixer: Luis Huesca
Animation built using Blender 3.1.2 www.blender.org/
Post with Adobe Premiere Pro
References:
Antenna Theory: www.antenna-theory.com/
Distributed Phase Shifter Array System and Method [Starlink Patent]
patents.google.com/patent/US2....
Elon Musk's Starlink and Satellite Broadband dgtlinfra.com/elon-musk-starl...
SpaceX Filings with FCC fcc.report/IBFS/Company/Space...
SpaceX Reveals More Starlink Info After Launch of First 60 Satellites techcrunch.com/2019/05/24/spa...
Wikipedia contributors. "Antenna Types","Aperture(Antenna)" ,"Low Earth Orbit", "Patch Antenna", "Phased Array", "Starlink" Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, Visited August 2022
#Starlink #Satellite #Internet

Пікірлер: 7 600

  • @BranchEducation
    @BranchEducation Жыл бұрын

    How many shooting stars did you see throughout the video? Post what you counted and we'll pick a random correct comment to receive a prize. Also, check out the Creator's Comments found in the English (Canada) subtitles for many additional details. Note: you can access them via the options button -> transcript -> English(Canada). FAQ: Q1) Do the two phase shifts from beam steering and 64QAM mess each other up? A: No. For transmission, the data is encoded into the 64QAM signal and sent to all the beamformers where then the beam steering phase shift is added. Then the signal is sent to the front-end modules which increases the power for the patch antennas.

  • @jithendrareddy7108

    @jithendrareddy7108

    Жыл бұрын

    12 shooting stars Branch Education!!

  • @sciencespectrum3855

    @sciencespectrum3855

    Жыл бұрын

    Almost 10 times🙂

  • @mrtbts

    @mrtbts

    Жыл бұрын

    i think about 12-15 idk

  • @danielfmyers

    @danielfmyers

    Жыл бұрын

    42

  • @persiancarpet5234

    @persiancarpet5234

    Жыл бұрын

    22 I'm very sure

  • @JerryRigEverything
    @JerryRigEverything Жыл бұрын

    Way cool. Very interesting process. I'm glad there are smart people in the world who understand all this stuff.

  • @aviral1230

    @aviral1230

    Жыл бұрын

    Hello Zack, it's nice that you too like these type of videos. Have a great day.

  • @TheSculptr

    @TheSculptr

    Жыл бұрын

    cool

  • @workspilot.

    @workspilot.

    Жыл бұрын

    It is the job of an engineer man

  • @bishromerabdelrahman1177

    @bishromerabdelrahman1177

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice to see you here Zack

  • @secretservice1816

    @secretservice1816

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey! Jerry, don't u think Elon musk is a con artist? He is just lying to his investors and the customers, his cars are a safety hazard

  • @loukmor
    @loukmor Жыл бұрын

    The fact that a KZread channel produces greater content than a big science tv channel while in the same time making it easy to understand blows me always. Your videos are so good (and infrequent (in a good way (for quality))) always leave me wondering how do you people make do. Anyway, keep up the amazing work.

  • @BattousaiHBr

    @BattousaiHBr

    Жыл бұрын

    actually fucking nuts that this content is available. hugely underappreciated channel.

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    I greatly appreciate it! We're slowly building a team... to make it more frequent, but still maintain the depth and quality. tbh, it's always a little boggling how cursory a 2 hr long science special on 'quantum computers' or 'some other complex topic' is when it's on the TV science channel. Like I love it- but still it doesn't get into the deep details.

  • @loukmor

    @loukmor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BranchEducation exactly. Someone who see this kind of stuff doesnt want to be just told that the dish uses math to boost the signal. He/she want to learn how .

  • @TheTonyMcD

    @TheTonyMcD

    Жыл бұрын

    What is this tv you speak of? It has channels? Is it like a serious competitor to KZread? Sounds like an interesting concept, what's the website address?

  • @itsMe_TheHerpes

    @itsMe_TheHerpes

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BranchEducation you made this video unwatchable. stop being so cringy. "dishy" ... WTF don't you have any respect at all towards your viewers ? do you think we are special needs ?

  • @AlgernonNormanOwen
    @AlgernonNormanOwen4 ай бұрын

    With my degree in physics, all the concepts are pretty natural and intuitive for me, but my mind is still blown to realize that some engineers and technicians actually made it real, and error proof, and commercialized it! And as a teacher, I can still say that you did an amazing job explaining how these things work. Great job, and thank you!

  • @juanballestermolina1046

    @juanballestermolina1046

    3 ай бұрын

    I agree, as an engineer the concepts used are very familiar. Got a chance of use a dish last week in the middle of nowhere and it blew my mind. Its crazy how long we have evolved in the past years where we SMS was mindblowing.

  • @Desman228

    @Desman228

    3 ай бұрын

    Give God the Glory great things he has done!

  • @omniyambot9876

    @omniyambot9876

    2 ай бұрын

    An electronics engineer, all of these technology, physics and protocols are familiar to me and very intuitive, even mathematics in physics level. But the amount of technical math to pull this off is an I don't fucking know how. To have this precision is god stuff but it's only one of these technologies.

  • @matthewgragg1880
    @matthewgragg18804 ай бұрын

    This is the epitome of KZread. The fact that such high quality educational content is free is one of the few things that give me hope that technology and understating is the true epitome of research of advancement in society.

  • @DemocracyManifest-vc5jn

    @DemocracyManifest-vc5jn

    Ай бұрын

    My thoughts exactly. As much as it’s been polluted by garbaj 2+2=5 nonsense there is stuff like this that shines through and gives hope

  • @brojoseph7

    @brojoseph7

    21 күн бұрын

    We need more videos like these for our children and less garbage on KZread.

  • @imthetruegotmilk
    @imthetruegotmilk Жыл бұрын

    I am absolutely ASTONISHED by the technology behind Starlink, and equally STUNNED by the effort Branch Education put to make it so accessible... This is very high quality content !

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! We appreciate!

  • @Almighty_Flat_Earth

    @Almighty_Flat_Earth

    Жыл бұрын

    Satellites don't exist. GPS not working in ocean. GPS is just the triangulation of cell towers. Internet cables are buried under the ocean. Time to wake up. Trust your senses.. _ Satellites don't exist. Those are cartoons. Men send signals to the sky at an angle (a solid dome placed by our Creator), and it reflects those signals back to flat plane(earth) at same angle. Everything is stable, the ground antenna that sends, the earth, the dome, the ground antenna that receives. Universe, solar system do not exist. Are you saying there are bus sized tin objects that float above our heads about 700 km which is supposedly 2000 C hot and doesn't melt the trash cans(so-called satellites) ?? _ Does it feel like we are travelling at 66600 mph around the sun? Earth inclined 23.4 degree? 90 -23.4 = 66.6 now you see it's 666 everywhere.. it's the devil's number.. YOU WILL KNOW THE TRUTH, AND THE TRUTH WILL SET YOU FREE. _ Why mercury and venus show up in the night sky? Can any scientist (Illuminati) explain this? No. All 12 months, we see the same stars in the night sky, but we should see some other stars which are in the other side for 6 months. Globe is busted again. _ Antarctica is the surrounding 300 ft. tall ice wall of our flat earth, and illuminati won't let anyone near by to discover that the world is flat, it's the most guarded place on flat earth. There is a treaty signed by 50 countries that no man can get to Antarctica, because it's the surrounding wall of our flat earth, and it extends very far.

  • @jameswright2974

    @jameswright2974

    Жыл бұрын

    Russia China sent one satellite which hatched 10 pirate drones today Russia has shut down usa ships Air craft no usa Or nato has entered In Chinese or Russian Airspace in the last 8 yrs

  • @beaconing7689

    @beaconing7689

    Жыл бұрын

    Why i cant see the other comments?

  • @dionysschub5350

    @dionysschub5350

    Жыл бұрын

    @@beaconing7689 Good question

  • @airmailman1971
    @airmailman1971 Жыл бұрын

    My background is in electronic engineering. I've watched thousands of KZread videos and I've never seen a more professionally made and complete video as this one. Just enough detail to not be overwhelming but complete enough to get the thought across. Excellent.

  • @chrisfoster3772

    @chrisfoster3772

    11 ай бұрын

    Starlink is kinda cool

  • @TINTUHD
    @TINTUHD16 күн бұрын

    I believe this might be the best video I have ever seen on KZread in my life. No exaggeration. The technology of starlink. The script of this video. The animations. I’m in awe

  • @donschneider8662
    @donschneider86622 ай бұрын

    I have been in the RF, Radar, and Comms industry since 1972. I have to say this is the best explanation of RF and the Antenna theory explanation I've seen. Thank you.

  • @PemboCycling
    @PemboCycling Жыл бұрын

    Network engineer here, with a physics background. Refreshing to see an accurate, techy video that breaks down so much of the system. It's a rabbit hole of information but you managed to cover everything in enough detail to introduce it, while allowing the audience to choose whether they want to go further into the rabbit hole. Many of the techniques used by starlink are used in your home WiFi, or other systems you're familiar with. Starlink brings a lot of things together (including Elons infinite wallet) in a way that hasn't been done before.

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks!! I appreciate it. Yeah- I like to think of it as supplements to courses that could fit in any 11th / 12th-grade science curriculum, and really expose students to engineering.

  • @videogamezzstreamingzz9480

    @videogamezzstreamingzz9480

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BranchEducation bro you are a genius please make a video on how to make my wife touch me

  • @boozecruiser

    @boozecruiser

    Жыл бұрын

    Like kessler syndrome?

  • @Mikelica69

    @Mikelica69

    Жыл бұрын

    Very cool

  • @Chryeon

    @Chryeon

    Жыл бұрын

    i wonder if in the future this Starlink will be able to takeover all our telco services :D

  • @douglassimpson8006
    @douglassimpson8006 Жыл бұрын

    This is the best explanation of phased array antennas that I have ever seen, especially from a layman's point of view. Great job!

  • @thulyblu5486

    @thulyblu5486

    Жыл бұрын

    It feels like I actually understood something rather than in some discovery channel documentary about any physical/technological topic where they simplify so much that you can't really understand it and they interview a dozen scientists making emotional statements about how marvelous and mysterious it all is.

  • @Almighty_Flat_Earth

    @Almighty_Flat_Earth

    Жыл бұрын

    Dude, are you not aware of the truth yet? Earth is not a globe, universe doesn't exist, sun & moon are the same size, made up of plasma hovering above our flat earth. If earth goes around the sun, then why do we see same stars for all 12 months? Shouldn't we see different stars on different directions? Globe liars got busted once again😁 solar system, big bang, planets are fake (photoshop). Are you people even real? Michaelson-Morley and Airy's experiment were supposed to prove the earth's rotation, but those proved the earth doesn't spin, they bite the dust, many experiments ended up with the result of non-moving flat surface. WELCOME TO REALITY. UNIVERSE DOESN'T EXIST. Governments , nasa, isro have been lying this whole time.

  • @A99OT

    @A99OT

    Жыл бұрын

    Amazing thing about this video, is it explains what defence departments around the world spend so much money on. The amount of effort in phased array applications in electronic warfare are insane!!! Billions and billions of $$

  • @user-pw5rv7ei8f
    @user-pw5rv7ei8fАй бұрын

    I am a radio engineer. I just want to say....Waw, explaining beam forming using massive antenna array ! That is very hard thing to do but you had the simplest and clearest explanation that I have ever seen!

  • @jrphillip1458
    @jrphillip14583 ай бұрын

    This channel has to be one of the greatest channels on KZread. Actually, the best educational content ever created in media. You don't ever get this level of detail and explanation on a multimillion dollar production on TV.

  • @pauls8771
    @pauls8771 Жыл бұрын

    Small nitpicks - in the orbital animation at 2:50 TV satellites should be shown to be geostationary, orbiting above the same area as the earth rotates. This is important because it explains why TV dishes can point at a single point in the sky, while Starlink beams need to be electronically steered. Furthermore, while the earth is correctly shown as rotating counterclockwise from the north pole, both satellites are orbiting in the wrong direction, east to west, while nearly all satellites orbit west to east to take advantage of earth's velocity. Overall though, very nice video that explains complex electronic and communications concepts.

  • @yumirow7487

    @yumirow7487

    Жыл бұрын

    Thx for the added details

  • @Truth4thetrue

    @Truth4thetrue

    Жыл бұрын

    well starlink also needs to transmit signals, so not only the movement of the satellites is what requires it to be electronically steered (phase arrayed)

  • @matthewfrost3677

    @matthewfrost3677

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes the retrograde orbits love it! Doesn't look like many people noticed though don't see very many comments. I think somebody got too focused on explaining phased arrays and forgot about orbits

  • @ZoulousProductions

    @ZoulousProductions

    Жыл бұрын

    And you can transmit data with a traditionnal dish if you have a Block upconverter, like in a VSAT

  • @christalbert722

    @christalbert722

    Жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't say that's nitpicking- it's just plain wrong and misleading. After I saw that I stopped watching.

  • @domenicocamacho6184
    @domenicocamacho6184 Жыл бұрын

    I'm an engineer, and thus I was amazed by the level of detail provided here, it is very educational and in my perspective one of the most valuable videos over the internet for the content, simplicity to explain, and understanding level of the subject explained. Please continue to do more videos like it, I'm for sure watching this video a couple of times more to pay attention to details that I missed on the first watch. Kudos to the people that created it!!

  • @user-ft9tw9zw5p

    @user-ft9tw9zw5p

    Жыл бұрын

    These days the Yoytube and Tiktok college are much amazed me than those knowages back in school

  • @gkasprow

    @gkasprow

    Жыл бұрын

    Have a look at the signal path channel where the guy does microwave analysis of the dish PCB

  • @SaraMurphy2010

    @SaraMurphy2010

    Жыл бұрын

    My husband is an EE and watching programs like this with him and our 6yo makes explanations make sense to us!

  • @cooljoker2027

    @cooljoker2027

    Жыл бұрын

    im engineer too and its so lovely video he made it easy for people to understand it well

  • @d.mort.
    @d.mort.6 ай бұрын

    How incredible! I made a 4x4 phase array in undergrad and that was weeks of headaches and only worked in simulation. I can’t imagine getting something like this off the ground. Your videos are of amazing quality!!

  • @anl2468
    @anl24687 ай бұрын

    The amount of dedication and detail of this video is out of this world, literally a master piece. Thanks.

  • @RideGasGas
    @RideGasGas Жыл бұрын

    As a satcom engineer with over 40 years of experience in the field, I can say that you did a really good job of distilling this information down to something a layperson can grasp. Well done. I would point out that in addition to receive only satellite TV antennas that communicate with geostationary satellites, there are also two way antennas that communicate to GSO satellites as well, along with other variants which provided two way communications with other non-geostationary satellite networks in different orbits.

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad that you enjoyed the video!! I included details for geostationary internet in the creator's comments, but I don't actually know exactly how non-geostationary satellite networks work.

  • @mahi-kp3fq

    @mahi-kp3fq

    Жыл бұрын

    humans age 200 000 years dinosaurs age 160 000 000 years.............. .kzread.info/dash/bejne/Zauc05qSZtrJe9Y.html.............. NO NEXT DIMENSION NO NOTHING.

  • @Almighty_Flat_Earth

    @Almighty_Flat_Earth

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BranchEducation Satellites don't exist. GPS not working in ocean. GPS is just the triangulation of cell towers. Internet cables are buried under the ocean. Time to wake up. Trust your senses.. _ Satellites don't exist. Those are cartoons. Men send signals to the sky at an angle (a solid dome placed by our Creator), and it reflects those signals back to flat plane(earth) at same angle. Everything is stable, the ground antenna that sends, the earth, the dome, the ground antenna that receives. Universe, solar system do not exist. Are you saying there are bus sized tin objects that float above our heads about 700 km which is supposedly 2000 C hot and doesn't melt the trash cans(so-called satellites) ?? _ Does it feel like we are travelling at 66600 mph around the sun? Earth inclined 23.4 degree? 90 -23.4 = 66.6 now you see it's 666 everywhere.. it's the devil's number.. YOU WILL KNOW THE TRUTH, AND THE TRUTH WILL SET YOU FREE. _ Why mercury and venus show up in the night sky? Can any scientist (Illuminati) explain this? No. All 12 months, we see the same stars in the night sky, but we should see some other stars which are in the other side for 6 months. Globe is busted again. _ Antarctica is the surrounding 300 ft. tall ice wall of our flat earth, and illuminati won't let anyone near by to discover that the world is flat, it's the most guarded place on flat earth. There is a treaty signed by 50 countries that no man can get to Antarctica, because it's the surrounding wall of our flat earth, and it extends very far.

  • @ron.v

    @ron.v

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BranchEducation Wow! What a candid, honest answer. The world needs more educators like you.

  • @ron.v

    @ron.v

    Жыл бұрын

    RideGasGas, thanks for your comment. Glad to know there are few old guys still interested in this stuff. I first worked on analog computers in nuclear bombers 55 years ago. It wasn't until 37 years ago, though, that I got the chance to work in computer data communications for a large telecom. As a sys tech in a major data center, I was disappointed that their tech was so old school in the late '80s. All the computer data connections were via RS-232c (25 pair) cable. It wasn't until the very late '80s and early '90s that they began using TCP/IP and RJ-45 in house. Even then, it took them many years to replace everything. By then, I had retired. You'd laugh at the punch cards and paper tape we used on some minicomputers to load data. LOL! All that was from a center where we monitored datacom from several mainframes, 2,000 minicomputers, and around 30,000 servers on a WAN that covered 9 U.S. states.

  • @Woogachaka42
    @Woogachaka42 Жыл бұрын

    I'm a phd student working on these kinds of projects, and I want to applaud you. This is the cleanest and clearest explanation of phased array antennas I've seen and will be super helpful in helping me explain what I do to others

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    What's your phd in?

  • @Woogachaka42

    @Woogachaka42

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BranchEducation Computational Electromagnetics. We do a fair amount of metamaterial/metasurface (the latter of which is often a variant of a phased array) design, simulation , and optimization work. Your explanation of beam forming I think did a great job of striding the line between useful info and minutiae. No need to go into full array-factor theory for an introductory video, but still get the point across with the appropriate nod at the end about side lobes and such.

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    That sounds super cool!! Would ya perhaps be familiar with smartphone antenna design? Or perhaps wifi router antennas?

  • @Woogachaka42

    @Woogachaka42

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BranchEducation the theory behind them yes, those kinds of design no. Most of my work is more in the optical range.

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    @Ben Zerbe ah, well if ya have any video topics in mind, feel free to email us

  • @totoksaikam4236
    @totoksaikam4236Ай бұрын

    I worked as a radio and antenna engineer for over 30 years. This video really provides an extraordinary explanation. Thank you so much for giving us videos like this. We are waiting for other great videos

  • @IhabFahmy
    @IhabFahmy7 ай бұрын

    _Those little details in the animations that make them technically correct are a HUGE aid to correct understanding. Your animations are far beyond just pretty pictures, and it shows! Your videos are amazingly good at helping engage the next h neration of engineers and scheintists that will hopefully fully make some thing far better than Starlink one day. My deep, deep gratitude and admiration for what you do._

  • @richardschaller638
    @richardschaller638 Жыл бұрын

    Wow! I'm a retired Nuke Engineer with a BS in Physics. This brought me back to the days of being an undergrad trying to comprehend antenna theory. My early career was in submarines where I got to see the phased array stuff in the real world with sonar and radar. Great video!

  • @p3yp649

    @p3yp649

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice video.

  • @silvermediastudio
    @silvermediastudio Жыл бұрын

    As an engineer and semi-physicist who understands these topics quite well, I was looking for a summary/visual to help explain it to less technical people. This is very well done, and unlike many presentations on the internet, there is no glaringly wrong information. A testament to the research done. Assumptions and simplifications are identified. Good job indeed.

  • @dongyang31
    @dongyang313 ай бұрын

    I was blown away when your team explained cell phone and display technologies, and now you take it to another level. Salute to you!

  • @jeffreymelton2200
    @jeffreymelton22005 ай бұрын

    I want to say that the quality of this video blows my mind. i am glad to see that there are still channels focused on informing the viewers. not only that but really going deep on the subject matter. So for that alone, I thank you. I also want to thank you for the hard work you did in animating the video so that the complex things you were talking about had a very high quality visual aid, that helped immensely to allow what was being said to be comprehended and retained. The script was amazing also.

  • @IsmaelLa
    @IsmaelLa8 ай бұрын

    Words can't express the scale of knowledge in your videos. I use Starlink daily (heck this comment is being sent to you via Starlink at this moment) and now I understand more how all this is possible. It's incredible how this works and the labor of love you put on these explanations. Thank you.

  • @HRIapstrategy

    @HRIapstrategy

    7 ай бұрын

  • @user-fg6ju2fw5b
    @user-fg6ju2fw5bАй бұрын

    Exceptionally clear explanation of Phased array and QAM and the overall understanding of the Starlink data transfer is so easy to ingest. The voiceover and graphics are exceptional. Best technical video I have ever seen and I have been in IT for 50 years.

  • @jeffersonwu952
    @jeffersonwu9524 ай бұрын

    I am half way through watching, but I couldn't stop myself from thanking you for making such a video full of comprehensible knowledge!

  • @muttarameshchandraprem1478
    @muttarameshchandraprem1478 Жыл бұрын

    Studying this in a course is one thing and seeing it with such a good animation of a real usecase is completely different thing. Thanks for making such videos, I am sure lot of effort goes into this.

  • @richardacevedo280

    @richardacevedo280

    Жыл бұрын

    But you may agree on that both course level work as well as this type of high level presentations are worth? One of my concerns is that my son wishes he could do away with university without realising that even E. Musk completed his undergraduate degrees in physics and economics. Good day

  • @muttarameshchandraprem1478

    @muttarameshchandraprem1478

    Жыл бұрын

    @@richardacevedo280 Don't get me wrong. If I have to choose one of them I will always go with University studies. This helped me recollect what l learnt, making me feel good.

  • @saulsavelis575

    @saulsavelis575

    Жыл бұрын

    @@muttarameshchandraprem1478 you cannot learn if you cannot visualize yourself in your head

  • @louiserwin3726

    @louiserwin3726

    Жыл бұрын

    @@richardacevedo280 I have a BA in Applied Math And a BS in Computer Science. I too am concerned with the discussion of limiting the math, science and arts to focus on just building electronic devices. The arts do more to push the math and science than anything. An education is a "total mental" experience!

  • @lionelcox9119

    @lionelcox9119

    Жыл бұрын

    Had Elon bend a Black South African people would be burning Teslas on the streets for what he has done with Tweeter,,.

  • @rexlucas493
    @rexlucas493 Жыл бұрын

    As an electronics engineer familiar with this technology I am really impressed at the level of detail you go into with each aspect of the technology whilst maintaining an excellent level of clarity throughout.

  • @richardacevedo280

    @richardacevedo280

    Жыл бұрын

    These are seasoned engineers that have become real systems engineers.

  • @lionelcox9119

    @lionelcox9119

    Жыл бұрын

    Had Elon bend a Black South African people would be burning Teslas on the streets for what he has done with Tweeter,,.

  • @Michaelobama184

    @Michaelobama184

    Жыл бұрын

    @@richardacevedo280 you silly goose. We live under a Firmament that cannot be penetrated. NASA is SATANIC. Do not be Deceived

  • @jimparr01Utube

    @jimparr01Utube

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely agree with your comment.

  • @SereneBliss

    @SereneBliss

    Жыл бұрын

    Too good

  • @user-hs1ec5mp5p
    @user-hs1ec5mp5p3 ай бұрын

    In just 2 of your videos I have a level of understanding about electromagnetic waves and how it drives our most advanced technology than I ever thought was possible. I just assumed some concepts were beyond my ability to comprehend. Turns out the quality of the teacher is as important to our ability to learn as the amount of effort we put into it. I cant believe I understand this! Thanks for expanding my horizon!

  • @meerghalib320
    @meerghalib3206 ай бұрын

    It's been a while the days of 2.5Gcollular and first get WiFi when I learned the core concepts here as an engineer implementing this stuff, so I was super excited at how much you've just caught me up on current concepts like beam forming and 64QAM in under 30 minutes using an incredibly well explained approach (simplifying where helpful without omitting important information). My quickest subscribe ever! Amazing work. Thanks👍🏼

  • @shekharkushwaha8280
    @shekharkushwaha8280 Жыл бұрын

    As a electronic graduate, I understand almost everything, it difficult to explain this complexity but the animation, simplest explanation of everything of how it works, you guys made this engineering a piece of cake..Your team really deserves appreciation.

  • @miscbits6399
    @miscbits6399 Жыл бұрын

    I first encountered phase steering 40 years ago. It's amazing to see how far it's come. Likewise the first 64QAM kit I used back then was a 7 foot tall 19 inch rack for 140Mb/s @ 12GHz terrestrial linking and only went 20km. 3 years later there were 7 of them in the same 7 foot tall rack Each rack drew close to 3kW for 200mW transmit power As an aside, audio modems used 64QAM for 33k6 and DSL uses hundreds of discrete 64 QAM carriers. The difference is the carrier frequency and symbol rate

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    That's pretty cool to hear about! During the research, I saw images of the early phased arrays and Lincoln Labs using dipole antennas. Pretty cool stuff indeed.

  • @SomeRandomPiggo

    @SomeRandomPiggo

    Жыл бұрын

    Could you transmit data modulating frequency, phase and amplitude? Then you'd be able to have a sort of 3D array of symbols!

  • @miscbits6399

    @miscbits6399

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SomeRandomPiggo phase modulation and frequency modulation are closely related. Frequency shift keying was the original method of modulating signals in most cases The problem is that frequency modulation generates masses of sidebands and ends up being spectrally fairly inefficient (AM is inefficient from a power point of view)

  • @SomeRandomPiggo

    @SomeRandomPiggo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@miscbits6399 I see, quite often if an obvious idea seems good, its almost definitely been tried before

  • @thatguy-art6229

    @thatguy-art6229

    Жыл бұрын

    ADMITTING THAT IS ENOUGH TO BRAND YOU AS SIMPLE - STUP.

  • @keithmccann6601
    @keithmccann66015 ай бұрын

    only just found this - brilliant video - i'm a retired telecoms engineer and didn't know most of this content!!! - modern compute and comms tech is getting really close to magic now!!!

  • @OrianIglesias
    @OrianIglesias6 ай бұрын

    The unreal detail and sheer effort that this took to create doesn't go unnoticed. Thank you.

  • @theodoro89
    @theodoro89 Жыл бұрын

    Even though I know these stuff (I'm an antenna engineer) that video was insanely well made and enjoyable. Making an informative video about EM and antennas that everybody can understand is incredible. Well done and thank you!

  • @y5mgisi

    @y5mgisi

    Жыл бұрын

    What degree did you have to get to become an antenna engineer?

  • @theodoro89

    @theodoro89

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@y5mgisi Computer science and communications, but my thesis was on antennas and I was pretty good building antennas. I wish I went straight to Electrical Engineering from the beginning and follow an RF and Electromagnetics masters degree, but here we are.

  • @y5mgisi

    @y5mgisi

    Жыл бұрын

    @@theodoro89 thanks for the reply! Trying to figure out what I want to do.

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    That's great to hear!! I'm glad you enjoyed it!! My background is EE, however, I never worked on RF, so I had to do some research / catch-up.

  • @tvguide4khv

    @tvguide4khv

    Жыл бұрын

    Yap, had a few tears in a middle ))

  • @BhupenderSingh-mm2rk
    @BhupenderSingh-mm2rk Жыл бұрын

    Can't even imagine we are getting this for almost free on the internet this much information, my god.... Thanks guys for creating such a great content.

  • @yashbhanushali858
    @yashbhanushali858Ай бұрын

    I am so glad that I found this channel…The audience on this channel is the best..inly respectful and appreciative comments, and obviously because this channel deserves that! The best channel I have seen👌❤️

  • @brianslota4861
    @brianslota486111 ай бұрын

    This is among the clearest and most understandable explanation I’ve ever heard! Hats off to the team that produced this content😊

  • @idzkk

    @idzkk

    10 ай бұрын

    Scale is the answer

  • @TheMphc
    @TheMphc Жыл бұрын

    This feels like the old school Discovery channel, before it all became reality TV. Huge quality, simple to understand without the content being dumbed down, thanks for the great video

  • @tomcole2077
    @tomcole20775 ай бұрын

    Extremely informative, enlightening and entertaining. Easy enough for a laymen like myself to understand but details are complete. I am in awe of the technology.

  • @galret9899
    @galret98995 ай бұрын

    Mind blown. Saw this video on Roku. Had to comment my appreciation for the research and work that went into this. Thank you.

  • @crowned-blue
    @crowned-blue Жыл бұрын

    Things we take for granted, are so complex and require lots of work and research. Im truly stunned by the working of this system as well as the animation and overall video. Detailed yet easy to understand and focusing on the required points. I thank each and everyone involved in making of this video, thanks for the information.

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks!! We appreciate it!

  • @Nithr1s

    @Nithr1s

    Жыл бұрын

    So true! and then we'll have people bitching about delays while posting a pic (give it some time. it goest to the space!). Or this service costing $$. This is astounding piece of work! It is hard to me to understand, but people theorized, calculated, prototyped, implemented the software for it, built the hardware, sent it all to space! This is magic.

  • @stolearovigor281

    @stolearovigor281

    Жыл бұрын

    Everything possible in the cartoons world.

  • @stolearovigor281

    @stolearovigor281

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Nithr1s it's magic and witchcrafting . Nothing is going to the space and bouncing back. All are ground based antennas and sea cables.

  • @Almighty_Flat_Earth

    @Almighty_Flat_Earth

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BranchEducation Dude, are you not aware of the truth yet? Earth is not a globe, universe doesn't exist, sun & moon are the same size, made up of plasma hovering above our flat earth. If earth goes around the sun, then why do we see same stars for all 12 months? Shouldn't we see different stars on different directions? Globe liars got busted once again😁 solar system, big bang, planets are fake (photoshop). Are you people even real? Michaelson-Morley and Airy's experiment were supposed to prove the earth's rotation, but those proved the earth doesn't spin, they bite the dust, many experiments ended up with the result of non-moving flat surface. WELCOME TO REALITY. UNIVERSE DOESN'T EXIST. Governments , nasa, isro have been lying this whole time.

  • @kevink1958
    @kevink1958 Жыл бұрын

    I was an electrical engineer a long time ago. It’s great to see some of the fundamentals of transmission lines and signal processing in a clear visual manner. Great work.

  • @anzalahsonata
    @anzalahsonata4 ай бұрын

    The amount of knowledge and design put into this tech just terrifies me in a sense that i understand how extremely complex each concepts presented/applied in here. This is literally human sorcery.

  • @paulo123-
    @paulo123-4 ай бұрын

    I worked on law enforcement radio equipment 20 years ago and thought I had a good grasp on most of the basics. This blew my mind!

  • @LorenzoGiordanoGomes
    @LorenzoGiordanoGomes Жыл бұрын

    I'm amazed by the high quality and detail presented in an incredible series of animations here. Good work guys.

  • @LorenzoGiordanoGomes

    @LorenzoGiordanoGomes

    Жыл бұрын

    @Science Revolution If you had any idea of how much nonsense you're telling you'd be ashame

  • @timmyjones1921

    @timmyjones1921

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome Work On A Whole Top Beam Level.

  • @garywilburn7384
    @garywilburn73842 ай бұрын

    i was a radar tech in the navy, this is an Excellent, Grade A explanation. top notch

  • @OldDogNewTrick
    @OldDogNewTrick5 ай бұрын

    I am amazed and blown away by the level of electronic technology as explained in this video. I had an intense interest in electronics since I was a boy - first, building a crystal radio from a kit and then many more from scratch for my friends. (they called me 'Brainwave') Later on I built many more electronic projects first with tubes and later with transistors. I grew up on a farm and was destined to be a farmer but my interest in electronics eventually led me to a career in mainframe computers starting in 1965. And of course, I built my first personal computer from a magazine article around 1975. Over the years I have gained a very good understanding of how radio and TV work, and the learned about computers from the ground up as I started my career as a field technician - installing and maintaining mainframe computers. So my understanding and knowledge of electronic technology now also included the digital realm. I am now 83 years old and many years retired and no longer in touch with the latest and greatest. So it was most rewarding to come across this video and the clear explanation of the workings of modern satellite technology. Thank you.

  • @GrantLangley
    @GrantLangley Жыл бұрын

    I also do not usually comment, but I needed to express how impressed I am by the depth and quality of your content. Too many other educational videos take specific technologies for face value and don’t go much deeper than surface level. I appreciate you digging into every process down to the electron level before moving on.

  • @tommybusselle4991
    @tommybusselle4991 Жыл бұрын

    I think I would have done much better back in school if we had videos like this, as I'm a very visual person. I can't even imagine how long it would take me to absorb all that information reading it in a book or listening to a teacher trying to explain it. Thank you to all of you that contributed to this and other videos like it.

  • @Coecoo

    @Coecoo

    Жыл бұрын

    Educational systems everywhere- globally speaking, are absolute garbage dumpsterfires that are built on crooked groundworks with crooked understanding of knowledge and crooked misconceptions on what methods are best to relay this knowledge... Oh yeah, and they're also currently saturated to the brim with politics. Stay away from them and question everything you ever "learned" if it came from a school.

  • @bmmaaate

    @bmmaaate

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here. A teacher could repeat the same thing over and over for a month and I would still have questions but show me a diagram and I'm done.

  • @alexnovac8089
    @alexnovac80896 ай бұрын

    Can’t say how much we appreciate the quality of these videos ! Keep up . Great respect !

  • @jakenicol2404
    @jakenicol24046 күн бұрын

    This is incredible. Thank you to the team involved for researching and creating this video

  • @mm8ball
    @mm8ball Жыл бұрын

    As a retired Navy engineer this was very informative and interesting. I worked on phased array 3D radar, so this was not entirely new. Although the technology is very advanced from my work in the 1980's, the basics are the same. This was done in such a professional manner with super graphics that one run through pretty much brought me up to speed. Super job, folks.

  • @JoshWalker1

    @JoshWalker1

    Жыл бұрын

    Ayy, SPY fam?

  • @mm8ball

    @mm8ball

    Жыл бұрын

    AN/SPS 48 mostly!

  • @JoshWalker1

    @JoshWalker1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mm8ball I feel happy to classify that as "SPY extended fam". 80s, so that's NTU-era deployment of the 48 yeah?

  • @mm8ball

    @mm8ball

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, that was my later years. I retired in '84. I started out on 55b tracking radar, but quickly saw that opting for a different school would be a good Idea. I went 48 while it was still young, about 1966, and then kept up with all the schools on the radar until my retirement. I was lucky to stay either a technician, or teacher, until the very end of my career when I made E8.

  • @JoshWalker1

    @JoshWalker1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mm8ball So are we FC fam then, though? All my schools were in Dahlgren, and though that's mostly AEGIS central, iirc there were a couple of non-Aegis schools there. Feel like maybe something 48 adjacent was one of them. Something SSDS related maybe, idk.

  • @matyw91
    @matyw91 Жыл бұрын

    You guys did an astonishing job here! From the amazing 3D animations, to the clarity of the detailed explanation.. Speechless... Bravi!

  • @PrabhjotSinghDhillo
    @PrabhjotSinghDhillo6 ай бұрын

    Elegantly explained. Thanks. Watching just once is enough if you have understanding of underlying subjects.

  • @Conrad-jc5uq
    @Conrad-jc5uq4 ай бұрын

    Thank you to all the staff behind the scenes who contributed to making excellent content.

  • @lowstrife
    @lowstrife Жыл бұрын

    I'm sitting here stunned by how well I learned how this technology worked. I don't just know, but I actually understand how the 64 QAM encoding works and in general, how digital information is encoded and like... what it looks like. I'm stunned. This is an incredible presentation.

  • @afrosheent3arcmichael69

    @afrosheent3arcmichael69

    Жыл бұрын

    This is all thanks to the behavior of light. So if our communication system gives life to your devices then what electromagnetic frequency encompasses your conscious? Probably the sun. Entanglement could be Entangled mind. You could really be in two places at once. As a wave in the corona of the sun and as a particle, which is partial, here on the earth.

  • @sensiblewheels

    @sensiblewheels

    Жыл бұрын

    Hold onto that! I don't know if you have a background in STEM but if not, this is a very strong indicator of your inclination towards it.

  • @hamzaqadeervlogs179

    @hamzaqadeervlogs179

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi

  • @bpg786
    @bpg786 Жыл бұрын

    This is a fantastic explanation with an important level of detail that is left off so many other explanations. As an electrical engineer I could see this being useful in universities as an introduction to the topic to help give people a baseline understanding to build on. Great work 👍

  • @JosephTatumPage
    @JosephTatumPage4 ай бұрын

    How am I just now finding this channel. My heart breaks for my younger self. So great. Thank you!

  • @brrruski8436
    @brrruski84366 ай бұрын

    This video is incredible! Really enjoy the animation's way of explaining sophisticated knowledge like how the phased array of antennae works! I took a lot of notes with the screenshots, learning has never been so vivid!

  • @SMETSYSGNIMIT
    @SMETSYSGNIMIT Жыл бұрын

    Amazing video. As an RF engineer who has designed satellite ground stations, this is by far the best video and training I have ever seen.

  • @suicideistheanswer369
    @suicideistheanswer369 Жыл бұрын

    As soon as you mentioned phase shift, it immediately clicked to me how the steering would work. I was pretty proud of myself at the moment because I consider myself dumb. Thanks for all the effort and time spent on this great video.

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you!! Glad to help you recognize how smart you truly are!

  • @CounterFiat
    @CounterFiat3 ай бұрын

    This is now my favorite KZread channel. I am completely mesmerized by every video 🤯

  • @user-bm7ty7kp5z
    @user-bm7ty7kp5z2 ай бұрын

    An absolute masterpiece of ingenuity. This video's quality does it justice. Quickest subscribe even though I'm already subscribed to more channels than I watch regularly. My respect!!!

  • @junktrunk909
    @junktrunk9098 ай бұрын

    It's been a while since the days of 2.5G cellular and first gen WiFi when I learned the core concepts here as an engineer implementing this stuff, so I was super excited at how much you've just caught me up on current concepts like beam forming and 64QAM in under 30 minutes using an incredibly well explained approach (simplifying where helpful without omitting important information). My quickest subscribe ever! Amazing work. Thank you!

  • @swankitydankity297
    @swankitydankity297 Жыл бұрын

    Your videos leave me absolutely speechless every time. You consistently explain and demonstrate complex concepts in very accessible terms, and with phenomenal visuals. The production quality is always fantastic and each video always proves to be well worth the wait. This video was no different - as someone who has never quite understood the domain of electronics and wireless technologies, I found this content very interesting and really enjoyed watching it. Great work as always!

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you tons!! The next set of videos will follow similar levels of depth, so we're excited to finish them up.

  • @unoone4613

    @unoone4613

    8 ай бұрын

    😅

  • @unoone4613

    @unoone4613

    8 ай бұрын

    Copper-circle@BranchEducation

  • @marcelinovogel
    @marcelinovogel2 ай бұрын

    I have no words to describe the quality and the depth of knowledge that this video provides! I wish I had such a source of material during my graduation.

  • @dheerajgk5545
    @dheerajgk55457 ай бұрын

    This is most detailed and knowledgeable video I saw since my engineering… made me appreciate in awe the technology we take for granted .ll. Thank you for this great work

  • @Ben_5273
    @Ben_5273 Жыл бұрын

    I am really impressed by the quality of animations and explanations. Big respect

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    Much Appreciated!

  • @louis9116
    @louis9116 Жыл бұрын

    This channel is the only reason I'm not leaving KZread. The quality of the content is superb and visuals are unmatched.

  • @satisfyingvideos3426

    @satisfyingvideos3426

    Жыл бұрын

    Hello from Starlink space

  • @davidclark9469
    @davidclark94692 ай бұрын

    As a retired radio engineer this is a fabulous production. Crystal clear explanation of the subscriber connection. Have you made one for the other connection ... Satellite to satellite and satellite to ground stations ? I'm subscribed for sure !!

  • @casedistorted
    @casedistorted Жыл бұрын

    The way they figured out how to form beams and do all of this blows my mind. It is also wild to be that we are constantly fighting each other as a species, but there are some amongst us that are so focused and intelligent that they’re pushing us forward into the future.

  • @epstein_isnt_dead7726

    @epstein_isnt_dead7726

    9 ай бұрын

    You think starlink isn't a weapon? 🤣😂🤣 Dude, get real. Don't even consider the cost of engineering this system, just go with the physical properties. These are supposed to be used to bring internet to "under developed" (without internet) areas, right? Well "under developed " areas tend to not have a bunch of extra $ on their hands. But before they could turn the first penny of profit they had to launch hundreds of these satellites into orbit. Then ship out a receiver dish to each individual customer. How much do you think all those satellites and receivers cost? And that's all before getting the first customer. And you think that's another business venture buly spaceman Elon? It never occurred to you that this whole idea could never even recoup the startup costs, let alone turn a profit? You're watching this video, so obviously you have some interest in the starlink system. But that obvious flaw never crossed your radar? So naive and trusting

  • @musicman53
    @musicman53 Жыл бұрын

    This is a stunningly good explanation, huge thanks from this retired nerd! . Its amazing how simple and reliable SpaceX have made this highly complex technology to use. I know a few people here in NZ with Starlink, and it absolutely rocks for our relatively tiny rural population. One friend had his zero-techie wife unbox and set it up, and within 5 mins they had 250 Mbps. And even the US military were gobsmacked by how SpaceX managed to drop in 000's of terminals into the Ukraine military 2-3 days after the war broke out, and completely neutralise Russian's prior mega attack on the Ukrainians' Viasat satellite military comms system. The Ukraine military now have the world's best integrated comms system for weapons targeting and control, and Starlink is one of the key reasons (along with Ukrainian tech brilliance). The Russians also tried to radio-jam the Starlink terminals, but Starlink downloaded a patch to all terminals immediately to stop this jamming in its tracks. Starlink is now Ukraine's military backbone as well as providing wifi internet to 100,000+ Ukrainians in areas where the Russians have destroyed the mobile infrastructure. And, amazingly, these hugely complex terminals can all run off a 12V vehicle cigarette lighter.

  • @berniv7375

    @berniv7375

    Жыл бұрын

    The situation in the Ukraine is not of Russia's making. It is all down to NATO aggression which is led by the US and the UK. Agreements and commitments were not honoured by NATO. It takes brilliant minds to build this technology but it takes commonsense to stop us all getting killed and you people seem to be lacking in that.🌱

  • @Redfvvg

    @Redfvvg

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah.. but not. This will not help the Ukrainian, Nazi authorities. You have no idea what signal jamming is. A patch alone can't fix it. For Russia, it does not cause any inconvenience, the presence of Starlink access points for Ukrainians. Ukrainians need this in many ways only to send fakes to the West. Each access point is a transceiver. If this transmitter is located in a special operation zone, it will be localized and destroyed. Over time, depending on legislative decisions, these access points will be taken away from the population, or deactivated.

  • @BranchEducation

    @BranchEducation

    Жыл бұрын

    Even tho it took forever, it was a super fun video to research because of just how impressively complex it is. I agree, it's soo awesome how this tech is helping out the Ukrainians defend their country. It's also crazy to think that this tech was designed by a fewer than 1000 engineers.

  • @lagunafishing

    @lagunafishing

    Жыл бұрын

    You need to reread history of Ukraine and check your propaganda sources. You will find that all of Zelenskyy's and Azov data is monitored.

  • @musicman53

    @musicman53

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BranchEducation you did a great job! Have you noticed the two panicked Russian trolls in my replies?😂

  • @__mati
    @__mati5 ай бұрын

    This is the best explanation I have ever seen in KZread, thank you so much for this.

  • @timothymcatee220
    @timothymcatee2207 ай бұрын

    Thanks! This was an absolute wonder of an answer to my questions! I’ll be watching many more.

  • @FrederickKline
    @FrederickKline Жыл бұрын

    Impressive. I am a long retired electronics engineer and found this video as clear and compelling an explanation of a complex system as one might find by a truly gifted instructor.

  • @mr.e9239
    @mr.e92398 ай бұрын

    The videos on this channel have really allowed me to appreciate just how complex technology is and just how tiny and precise some of the things that hold up our lives are!

  • @jaybrown6174
    @jaybrown61742 ай бұрын

    Great video, it’s been many years since I studied communication systems but your video helped give me the general big picture about how starlink works. Thanks

  • @gregb5149
    @gregb51492 ай бұрын

    Excellent Video! I work in the modulation part of satcom but I never had a good explanation of how phased array works. Now I do! - Thanks!

  • @brentnorrod300
    @brentnorrod300 Жыл бұрын

    Great video, right down to the antenna theory. James Maxwell applauds you :) I'm an RF design engineer and have been working with phase array antenna systems for the last 3 decades. Now days I do a lot of the beam steering control code. I'm passing your link on to some of my young coworkers, and others.

  • @johnm8693
    @johnm86937 ай бұрын

    This is seriously the best engineering animation I have ever seen. I understood the basics of phased arrays but this is mind blowing. I wish I had learning resources like this as a young student. Thank you so much!

  • @laed3520
    @laed35205 ай бұрын

    So grateful that there are dedicated, brilliant people at BranchEducation making these educational videos. This is what I wish learning was like when I went to school. The future looks bright for education. Thank you.

  • @billkinzler3773
    @billkinzler37732 ай бұрын

    Remote cabin in Northern WI have Starlink last summer and worked great. No cable or Direct TV nonsense. Hook up with app and worked within a few minutes. Turn on and off when you leave. No ongoing charges. This is big.

  • @Tyasur
    @Tyasur Жыл бұрын

    Just found this video, and I'm blown away by the quality. I am an electrical engineer in this field and have worked on almost every aspect of what you guys have described in this video. Your animations do an amazing job of describing how some very complicated processes work in laymen terms. I am going to share this video with many people - thank you for what you do!

  • @Riley-Thurm
    @Riley-Thurm Жыл бұрын

    The creation of these animation must have been about as difficult as designing the actual Dishy. Amazing!

  • @johnathanh9369
    @johnathanh93694 күн бұрын

    Preparing for a job interview with Starlink, greatly appreciate this information. I will be sure to flaunt my newly acquired knowledge.

  • @ericzucker
    @ericzucker Жыл бұрын

    Very nicely done. As a former MPEG/DVB trainer, I can relate to the amount of work, bringing the complex subjects of satellite transmission, phased array antennas, beam forming, modulation accessible to a wider audience. Very well done.

  • @victorsilverio1911
    @victorsilverio1911 Жыл бұрын

    It is amazing how everything we take for granted is loaded with deep layers of systems, history and science. I can't wrap my head around everything that was explained but I am in awe of all the solutions brilliant engineers have come up with to solve these complex problems. And thanks to this channel, we get a peak behind the curtains. Truly astounding!

  • @AMEERPalliyalil
    @AMEERPalliyalil3 ай бұрын

    Amazingly simpler and clear explanation without skipping any of the important information's

  • @akashj4724
    @akashj472425 күн бұрын

    You guys are making difference in millions of lives.

  • @zvisger
    @zvisger Жыл бұрын

    This is absolutely incredible. Wow, you guys deserve so much praise for all this research and work.. not only for this video but all of your videos are immaculate... thank you for providing this to us for free... without ads no less. I genuinely have no idea how you guys do this so well but just wow. You explain it so understandably.. I don't think there is a channel with anything near the quality and clarity as the videos you guys do. So yeah, all I can say is thank you very very much.

  • @russc.5726
    @russc.5726 Жыл бұрын

    I have been using a StarLink system for about 6 months. I love it for speed but it does have brief outages during Zoom calls and streaming films. The video is truly amazing, incredible and Brilliant. The complexity of the concept and design of the StarLink is mind boggling. I've never seen such a well designed video explaining such a complex subject so well executed. Kudos to all involved. Thank you.

  • @dtalkin
    @dtalkin4 ай бұрын

    A truly marvelous tutorial explaining an elegant ensemble of beautifully coordinated engineering concepts. Thank you!😊

  • @NachiketAyir
    @NachiketAyir5 ай бұрын

    A big thanks to the creators. It was like revisiting 3 years on engineering studies within 25 mins, rather in a more lucid way.

  • @Karxs
    @Karxs Жыл бұрын

    Some mindblowing moments right there! Especially how they redirect the beams without motors and the data transmission technique ❤

  • @funretirementprojects7765
    @funretirementprojects776510 ай бұрын

    Wow!!! So clear and easily understood. As a retired professional developer of educational material, I have to give the developers 5 stars! Makes me want to go back to college for engineering. Thanks a million!

  • @NetherlandsThambi
    @NetherlandsThambi5 ай бұрын

    Most well spend 30mins of my life. This is astonishing and great thanks to Branch Education for bringing this content.

  • @antigarathorn
    @antigarathorn2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this excellent explanation! All this physics I studied in university, and principals are known. Yet, when it comes to explain this to someone who is not familiar to this technology, it becomes magic to me.