Galileo Update
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GALILEO UPDATE

Mar 2016 | No Comment

Galileo satellites atop Soyuz

Another pair of Galileo navigation satellites is scheduled for launch by Soyuz rocket in May, ahead of a quartet on an Ariane 5 in the autumn, bringing the Galileo system a step closer to operational use.

The European Commission asked ESA to look into the feasibility of a Soyuz launch in the first half of the year to speed up the deployment of the constellation and to increase its robustness for delivering initial services.

One satellite is in storage at ESA’s technical centre in the Netherlands, having completed all its testing to clear it for flight, with another due to join it very soon.

The satellite platforms are built by OHB in Bremen, Germany, with their navigation payloads coming from Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd in the UK, using a steady stream of high-technology equipment sourced from all across Europe.

The Galileo production line has attained a steady rhythm, as has the environmental testing, so six satellites are available for launch this year, more than were initially planned.

In the second half of the year, four satellites will be launched together for the very first time, on a customised “Ariane 5 ES Galileo”.

In development since 2012, it is based on the Ariane 5 ES (Evolution Storable), previously used to place ESA’s 20-tonne ATV vehicle into low orbit for resupplying the International Space Station. This new variant will carry a lighter payload – four fuelled 738 kg Galileos plus their supporting dispenser – but will take it up to the much higher altitude around 23 222 km.

The target orbit is actually 300 km below the Galileo constellation’s final working altitude. This leaves Ariane’s upper stage in a stable ‘graveyard orbit’, while the four satellites manoeuvre themselves up to their operating position.

Following this first Ariane 5 flight, there should be 18 Galileo satellites in orbit. www.esa.int

Galileo sats 9 and 10 sending valid signals

The European Space Agency (ESA) has announced that the ninth and tenth satellites in the planned 30-bird fleet started sending “valid navigation signals” as of January 29th. Galileo’s eleventh and twelfth satellites are also aloft, but are undergoing testing. The ESA says the two satellites have reached their fi nal orbits and that “payload activation is proceeding according to schedule.” Another pair of satellites have completed pre-flight testing and are in storage ahead of launch. The ESA’s plans for Galileo call for a constellation of 30 satellites. Eight birds will be grouped in one of three orbits for a total of 24 operational satellites. Each orbit will also host a pair of backup satellites. Each satellite has an expected working life of a dozen years. www.theregister.co.uk

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