Officials Announces Initial Test Transmissions From GPS Satellite
Los Angeles AFB (AFNS) Jun 21, 2010 Officials from the Space and Missile Systems Center's Global Positioning Systems Wing announced that the first GPS IIF satellite, launched May 27, has begun test transmissions of the new safety-of-life (L5) navigation signal. The L5 signal is a key element of efforts to modernize the GPS constellation for civil users. It was designed in close coordination with civil aviation and other organizations worldwide and is transmitted in a frequency band protected for safety-of-life applications. It will be transmitted from all GPS IIF and later spacecraft. GPS IIF is also designed to broadcast all of the signals on L1 and L2 frequency bands that users worldwide already receive from the rest of the GPS constellation. Initial test transmissions from this latest GPS satellite (known as SVN-62) began June 5 as part of its on-orbit checkout phase. Test transmissions of the L5 signal from the spacecraft will take place intermittently. Currently, the vehicle is set unhealthy to users and has the capability to transmit the new modernized civil navigation data message. These signals should not be used for navigation until the spacecraft is set healthy after the completion of approximately three months of on-orbit testing. At that point, a notice advisory to Navstar users will be published and properly equipped GPS receivers will receive transmissions from this latest addition to the world's premier space-based satellite navigation system. Air Force and Air Force Space Command officials have been the diligent stewards of GPS since its conception in the 1970s and continue its commitment to this critical component of our national infrastructure. The current GPS constellation has the most satellites and the greatest capability ever. Air Force officials are committed to maintaining the current level of service, as well as striving to improve service and capability through on-going modernization efforts. Air Force officials will continue to pursue an achievable path maintaining GPS as the premier provider of positioning, navigation and timing for military and civilian users around the world.
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Solar flare activity might threaten GPS Ithaca, N.Y. (UPI) Jun 11, 2010 A Cornell University expert on global positioning and satellite systems is warning they will be challenged as solar flare activity rises. Paul Kintner.a professor of electrical and computer engineering, says an increasingly complex and brittle U.S. technical infrastructure has been created since 2004 - a period of minimum solar flare activity. And during future periods of solar activit ... read more |
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