[gps-talkusers] Lockheed Martin is awarded 1.4 Billion contract to build next generation GPS III satellites
- From: Charles LaPierre <charles@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Sun, 18 May 2008 07:57:00 -0700
Hello everyone, this original post is from CNET, below is the
contents.
(http://www.news.com/8301-10784_3-9946617-7.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-5)
If you haven't already joined the rush to buy a handheld GPS device,
you probably will soon. Or maybe your next new car will come with
built navigation capabilities. It's increasingly likely, too, that
your cell phone has GPS built in.
For all the attention on the millions of gadgets that use GPS, the
heart of the
<http://www.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=119>Global Positioning
System really is the network of satellites orbiting the globe and
relaying signals to your Garmin. That network is now due for an
upgrade, starting in the middle of the next decade.
At Lockheed Martin's Valley Forge, Pa., plant, a GPS IIR(M) satellite
gets packaged for delivery to Cape Canaveral in anticipation of its
June launch date.
(Credit: Stephen B. Griffith/Lockheed Martin)
Earlier this week, Lockheed Martin announced that it had been awarded
a $1.4 billion contract from the U.S. Air Force to build the
next-generation system, known as GPS III. The goal is to deliver
better accuracy and availability for both civilian and military users
of the navigation technology (which, after all, was born as a
military innovation).
In the first round of the undertaking, lead contractor Lockheed,
along with ITT and General Dynamics, will build eight GPS IIIA
satellites, the first of which is due to go into orbit in 2014. Later
increments--for which no dates were specified--will see the
construction and deployment of eight GPS IIIB and 16 GPS IIIC
satellites, with progressively advanced capabilities.
One advance that Lockheed is promising: Eventually, all of the 32
satellites will be able to receive simultaneous updates from a single
ground station through a cross-linked command and control
architecture. The artificial constellation will also feature "a new
spot beam capability for enhanced military (M-Code) coverage and
increased resistance to hostile jamming."
The Air Force is set to launch its final two Lockheed-built GPS IIR
satellites, one in June and the other in September. That will make
for a total of 20 IIR satellites, which are more autonomous than
earlier models, put into service over the span of about a decade.
These last two are among eight IIR(M) models, which provide both
M-Code and L2C (for civilian use) signals. The satellite launching in
June also will transmit on a frequency called L5, intended primarily
for aviation safety-of-life applications.
Whatever the new satellites deliver in specific functions, they'll
certainly be sending signals to a wider audience. In January, the
Swedish analyst firm Berg Insight said
<http://www.news.com//Boom-predicted-for-GPS-enabled-handsets/2100-1039_3-6226211.html>the
number of GPS-enabled handsets is set to more than triple during the
next five years, reaching an expected worldwide total of 560 million
handsets by 2012.
The <http://www.news.com//8301-10784_3-9929910-7.html>European rival
to GPS, called Galileo, is expected to be fully operational by 2013.
Charles M. La Pierre
CTO Sendero Group
"The GPS company." Distributors of the mPower, PK, Victor Stream,
Voice Sense, KNFB Mobile Reader, Talks, Miniguide and ID Mate
1-888-757-6810
Lat. 37 15' 25" N Lon: 121 53' 04" W
- References:
- [gps-talkusers] M 1000
- From: john Harden
- [gps-talkusers] Re: M 1000
- From: George B
- [gps-talkusers] Re: M 1000
- From: Chris Grabowski
Other related posts:
- » [gps-talkusers] Lockheed Martin is awarded 1.4 Billion contract to build next generation GPS III satellites
- [gps-talkusers] M 1000
- From: john Harden
- [gps-talkusers] Re: M 1000
- From: George B
- [gps-talkusers] Re: M 1000
- From: Chris Grabowski