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Post Info TOPIC: GSTB-V2/A & GSTB-V2/B


L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Galileo is military
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Galileo, the planned European sat-nav system, has been acknowledged as having a military role by the European Commission.
EC Transport Commissioner Jacques Barrot said yesterday that Galileo will be "civilian controlled...but there will be military users".

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L

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Date:
Galileo satellites
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Travellers have relied on accurate timekeeping for navigation since the development of the marine chronometer in the eighteenth century. Galileo, Europes twenty-first century navigation system, also relies on clocks but they are millions of times more accurate than those earlier timepieces.
 The operational Galileo satellites will carry two types of clocks passive hydrogen masers and rubidium atomic frequency standards. Each satellite will be equipped with two hydrogen masers, one of which will be the primary reference for generating the navigation signals, with the other as a cold (non-operating) spare.
 Every operational satellite will also carry two rubidium clocks, one of which will be a hot (permanently running) backup for the operational hydrogen maser, instantly taking over should the maser fail and allowing signal generation to continue uninterrupted. The second rubidium clock will act as a cold spare.
 
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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
The Galileo project
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Europe is withdrawing its challenge to America's GPS for now. Ongoing squabbles between backers of the satellite navigation system have forced the European Commission to shelve it, but it may re-emerge as a taxpayer-funded project.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
GIOVE-A navigation message
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Earlier this week, GIOVE-A successfully transmitted its first navigation message, containing the information needed by user receivers to calculate their position. Prior to reaching this milestone, the satellite had been broadcasting only the data needed for measuring the receiver-to-satellite distance.
The first Galileo navigation message was created by the navigation signal generator unit on board GIOVE-A, using content prepared by the GIOVE Mission Segment. This week-one navigation message was uplinked to GIOVE-A on 2 May from the Guildford ground station operated by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (United Kingdom) and then transmitted from the spacecraft to the users. The objective of the test was to demonstrate an end-to-end link between the Mission Segment and the user receivers. The navigation message is being generated for demonstration purposes only no service guarantee is provided.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
RE: GSTB-V2/A & GSTB-V2/B
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The GIOVE-A Signal-in-Space Interface Control Document, the document that gives the technical details of the signals transmitted by the GIOVE-A satellite, has been released. This will allow receiver manufacturers and research institutions to use a real signal for their research and development.
 Following the launch of GIOVE-A on 28 December 2005 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome and the transmission of the first Galileo signals from medium Earth orbit on 12 January 2006, ESA and Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL – United Kingdom) have completed the GIOVE-A in-orbit validation activities. The GIOVE-A signal validation has been accomplished through a network of 13 Galileo Experimental Sensor Stations (GESS), deployed world wide, and a GIOVE Processing Centre which computes precise orbits and clock timings for the GIOVE satellites, based on the measurements made by the GESS and satellite laser ranging stations.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
RE: Galileo deal
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India’s participation in the Galileo project, a satellite navigation system being developed by EU and European Space Agency, expected to rival the United States’ GPS (global positioning system), has run into the hard ground realities of security concerns. India fears that sharing of sensitive data may not be adequately firewalled from individuals and other nations participating in the enterprise.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
GIOVE-A
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Fourteen laser ranging stations participated in a campaign to track ESA’s GIOVE-A satellite during the spring and summer of 2006, providing invaluable data for the characterisation of the satellite’s on-board clock. The campaign was coordinated by the International Laser Ranging Service (ILRS) and the GIOVE Processing Centre at ESA-ESTEC.

GIOVE-A, developed by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (UK), was launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome on 28 December 2005 and placed into a medium Earth orbit with an altitude of 23 260 km. Carrying a payload consisting of rubidium clocks, signal generation units and a phase array of individual L-band antenna elements, GIOVE-A started broadcasting Galileo signals on 12 January, securing the frequencies allocated by the International Telecommunications Union for the Galileo system.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Galileo Code Cracked
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Members of Cornell's Global Positioning System (GPS) Laboratory have cracked the so-called pseudo random number (PRN) codes of Europe's first global navigation satellite, despite efforts to keep the codes secret. That means free access for consumers who use navigation devices -- including handheld receivers and systems installed in vehicles -- that need PRNs to listen to satellites.

The codes and the methods used to extract them were published in the June issue of GPS World.

Because GPS satellites, which were put into orbit by the Department of Defence, are funded by U.S. taxpayers, the signal is free -- consumers need only purchase a receiver. Galileo, on the other hand, must make money to reimburse its investors -- presumably by charging a fee for PRN codes. Because Galileo and GPS will share frequency bandwidths, Europe and the United States signed an agreement whereby some of Galileo's PRN codes must be "open source." Nevertheless, after broadcasting its first signals on Jan. 12, 2006, none of GIOVE-A's codes had been made public.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
GIOVE-A
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Europe's experimental navigation spacecraft GIOVE-A has picked up signals from several Global Positioning System (GPS) satellites, a novel achievement that completes its primary mission objectives.

The spacecraft's final objective was to see if it could pick up the signals from positioning satellites already in orbit. This was to determine whether commercial geosynchronous (GEO) spacecraft (which orbit in step with the Earth's spin) could use satellites, rather than ground-based instruments, to calculate their position in space. That would cut operational costs significantly.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
RE: GSTB-V2/A & GSTB-V2/B
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Europe's Galileo satellite navigation system has already run more than €400-million over budget in its first phase, the head of the group managing the project said on Monday.

The over-run was due mainly to miscalculations for the costs of building and launching two test satellites...

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