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Galileo-Navigation NEWS-Archiv |
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09-03-2006 GIOVE A transmits loud and clear After launch and platform commissioning, GIOVE A started signal transmission
on 12 January and the quality of these signals is now being checked. This
checking process is employing several facilities, including the Navigation
Laboratory at ESA’s European Space Research and Technology Centre
(ESTEC), in the Netherlands, the ESA ground station at Redu, in Belgium,
and the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL) Chilbolton Observatory in
the United Kingdom. Every orbital pass provides an opportunity to analyse the signals from
the satellite. The quality of the signals transmitted by GIOVE A will
have an important influence on the accuracy of the positioning information
that will be provided by the user receivers on the ground, so a detailed
check-out of the signal properties is mandatory. The signal quality can
be affected by the environment of the satellite in its orbit and by the
propagation path of the signals travelling from space to ground. Additionally,
the satellite signals must not create interference with services operating
in adjacent frequency bands, and this is also being checked. The GIOVE A mission also represents an opportunity for the testing of a key element of the future Galileo system, the user receivers. The first Galileo experimental receivers, manufactured by Septentrio of Belgium, were installed at the Redu and Chilbolton In Orbit Test Stations and at the Guildford, United Kingdom, premises of Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL), the manufacturer of the satellite and now in charge of its control in orbit. A meticulous task, sometimes tedious, but essential for the progress
of the project, ensuring that Galileo, the joint civilian navigation initiative
from the European Space Agency and the European Commission, can offer
the value added services which will fundamentally depend on the quality
of the transmitted signals. |
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