BIER-Star: Stateless Geographic Multicast for Scalable Satellite-Terrestrial Integration
By: Mostafa Abdollahi, Wenjun Yang, Jianping Pan
The rapid expansion of LEO satellite constellations has enabled an integrated terrestrial network and non-terrestrial network (TN-NTN), connecting diverse users such as aircraft, ships, and remote communities. These networks increasingly need a scalable and efficient multicast protocol for critical applications like emergency alerts, large-scale software updates, and real-time broadcasting. However, traditional multicast protocols, such as IP-based multicast and software-defined multicast approaches, introduce significant control overhead and struggle to adapt to the dynamic and mobile nature of satellite topologies. This paper presents BIER-Star, a stateless multicast protocol designed for the integrated TN-NTN. BIER-Star uses a two-layer geospatial gridding scheme (i.e., H3) to encode destinations as Earth- and space-cell identifiers rather than per-terminal addresses. This cell-based abstraction shortens the header bitstring, simplifies forwarding, and eliminates per-flow state and complex signaling. Our simulations indicate that BIER-Star reduces header size versus BIER and avoids geographic path-finding failures seen in greedy methods.
Similar Papers
Cache-Aware Cooperative Multicast Beamforming in Dynamic Satellite-Terrestrial Networks
Networking and Internet Architecture
Saves power and traffic for faster internet.
StarStream: Live Video Analytics over Space Networking
Networking and Internet Architecture
Streams video from space for better disaster help.
ISAC-Powered Distributed Matching and Resource Allocation in Multi-band NTN
Networking and Internet Architecture
Boosts satellite internet speed by using different radio waves.