Score: 0

Towards Robust RTC in Sparse LEO Constellations

Published: July 13, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2507.09798v1

By: Aashish Gottipati, Lili Qiu

Potential Business Impact:

Improves video calls on fast-moving satellites.

Google's congestion control (GCC) has become a cornerstone for real-time video and audio communication, yet its performance remains fragile in emerging Low Earth Orbit (LEO) networks. Sparse direct-to-device constellations offer longer duration links and reduced handover frequency compared to dense deployments, presenting a unique opportunity for high-quality real-time communication (RTC) in environments with limited terrestrial network infrastructure. In this paper, we study the behavior of videoconferencing systems in sparse LEO constellations. We observe that video quality degrades due to inherent delays and network instability introduced by the high altitude and rapid movement of LEO satellites, with these effects exacerbated by WebRTC's conventional ``one-size-fits-all'' sender-side pacing queue management. To boost RTC performance, we introduce a data-driven queue management mechanism that adapts the maximum pacing queue capacity based on predicted handover activity. Specifically, our approach employs shorter queue limits during stable, no-handover phases to prioritize low latency communication, and preemptively increases pacing queue capacity when entering periods of increased handover activity to absorb disruptions. Our method yields up to $3$x improvements in video bitrate and reduces freeze rate by $62\%$ compared to default WebRTC.

Page Count
8 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Networking and Internet Architecture