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Graph-Aware Temporal Encoder Based Service Migration and Resource Allocation in Satellite Networks

Published: November 20, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2511.16011v1

By: Haotong Wang , Jun Du , Chunxiao Jiang and more

Potential Business Impact:

Satellite computers move services to keep you connected.

Business Areas:
Geospatial Data and Analytics, Navigation and Mapping

The rapid expansion of latency-sensitive applications has sparked renewed interest in deploying edge computing capabilities aboard satellite constellations, aiming to achieve truly global and seamless service coverage. On one hand, it is essential to allocate the limited onboard computational and communication resources efficiently to serve geographically distributed users. On the other hand, the dynamic nature of satellite orbits necessitates effective service migration strategies to maintain service continuity and quality as the coverage areas of satellites evolve. We formulate this problem as a spatio-temporal Markov decision process, where satellites, ground users, and flight users are modeled as nodes in a time-varying graph. The node features incorporate queuing dynamics to characterize packet loss probabilities. To solve this problem, we propose a Graph-Aware Temporal Encoder (GATE) that jointly models spatial correlations and temporal dynamics. GATE uses a two-layer graph convolutional network to extract inter-satellite and user dependencies and a temporal convolutional network to capture their short-term evolution, producing unified spatio-temporal representations. The resulting spatial-temporal representations are passed into a Hybrid Proximal Policy Optimization (HPPO) framework. This framework features a multi-head actor that outputs both discrete service migration decisions and continuous resource allocation ratios, along with a critic for value estimation. We conduct extensive simulations involving both persistent and intermittent users distributed across real-world population centers.

Country of Origin
🇨🇳 🇦🇪 China, United Arab Emirates

Page Count
16 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Networking and Internet Architecture