The Telstar Command Circuit
As shown on pages [32] and [33], the operation of the Telstar I satellite was controlled by orders sent from the ground on a frequency of 123 megacycles. Fifteen different commands could be given to the satellite, each a coded signal made up of a series of ones and zeros. The signals, as you can see in the [table below], turn on or off the radiation experiments, the telemetry, the communications equipment, and the orientation coil. These are important functions, and we wanted them to be going on when they were needed. But we did not want them to be operating continuously.
Command was the only Telstar I function that we felt had to be “redundant,” so two duplicate chains of components were provided. As you can see in [the block diagram on the next page], the satellite has two radio receivers in parallel, so that one can operate if the other fails. There are also two command decoders, which take the pulse-coded signals from the receivers and translate their zeros and ones into usable instructions. In the command switching control, these instructions operate nine relays that turn on or off the power to all the electronic circuits except the command receiving chain, which operates continuously.
Telstar I’s telemetry unit reported back 112 measurements every minute over the 136-megacycle frequency. These told both what the satellite encountered in space and the condition of the satellite’s own components—as indicated by a variety of different sensors. The telemetry also gave a check on whether the commands sent to the satellite were actually obeyed.