Abstract: For the recent two years, companies such as Starlink, Kuiper, and Telesat are launching low earth orbit (LEO) satellites to form LEO satellite mega-constellations. Unfortunately, the LEO satellite mega-constellations are not sustainable in the long term since their large size makes LEO congested, causing issues such as satellite brightness, satellite conjunction, and space debris. The issues become worse as LEO satellites have shorter battery lifespans and experience drag force, which shortens the satellite life and produces more space debris objects when LEO satellites reach the end of life. To address the issues, we propose deploying higher-orbit satellites to form a satellite-based sustainable multi-tier space network (SMTSN) instead of launching a massive number of LEO satellites. In this paper, we model the costs and gains for routing traffic with our SMTSN framework. We propose a solution to find the optimal routing paths and an efficient distributed coverage-aware (EDCA) algorithm to predict the number of skipped LEO satellites when the traffic is routed through a higher-orbit satellite. We run extensive simulations to compare the LEO satellite constellations with and without our SMTSN framework, and the results show a significant improvement in the battery cell cycle life consumption with the SMTSN framework.
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