Hi My Friends: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., With the initial satellites of the Galileo constellation working well in
orbit, it has been decided to end the mission of ESA’s pioneering
GIOVE-A navigation satellite.
Download:
| HI-RES JPEG (Size: 307 kb) |
Artist's impression of GIOVE-A in orbit. | Credits: ESA - P. Carril |
With the initial satellites of the Galileo constellation working well in
orbit, it has been decided to end the mission of ESA’s pioneering
GIOVE-A navigation satellite.
Launched on 28 December 2005, this first experimental satellite performed the vital task of securing the radio frequencies provisionally set aside for Galileo by the International Telecommunications Union.
Launched on 28 December 2005, this first experimental satellite performed the vital task of securing the radio frequencies provisionally set aside for Galileo by the International Telecommunications Union.
It also flight-tested Galileo atomic clocks and other equipment in space
for the very first time and investigated the radiation environment of
medium-altitude orbits, never used before by a European mission.
ESA formally ended GIOVE-A’s mission at the end of June, although it will go on being operated for now by prime contractor Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd of Guildford, UK, to gather radiation data and performance results from a GPS receiver.
ESA formally ended GIOVE-A’s mission at the end of June, although it will go on being operated for now by prime contractor Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd of Guildford, UK, to gather radiation data and performance results from a GPS receiver.
“GIOVE-A had a design life of only 27 months, so to continue operating
for 78 months is impressive,” said Valter Alpe, managing GIOVE
activities for ESA.
“In August 2009, the satellite was moved into a graveyard orbit around
100 km above its normal 23 222 km to make way for the Galileo validation
satellites.
Download:
| HI-RES JPEG (Size: 716 Kb) |
The Soyuz carrying GIOVE-A climbs into the sky above Kazakhstan. | Credits: ESA | ||
“The first two of these were launched on 21 October 2011 and are
performing well, so while GIOVE-A has served ESA well it no longer has a
job to do.”
Built to a tight deadline by SSTL, GIOVE-A carries a rubidium atomic clock accurate to three seconds in a million years.
On 27 April 2008 it was joined by GIOVE-B, built by an Astrium-led
consortium, which carries an even more accurate passive hydrogen maser
clock – the first to be flown in space for navigation, accurate to one
second in three million years – as well as a second rubidium clock.
Operational Galileo satellites carry two pairs of both kinds of clock,
for redundancy.
Download:
| HI-RES JPEG (Size: 3023 kb) |
GIOVE-A mated with Fregat launcher upper stage | Credits: ESA |
They are very different missions in other ways too. The GIOVEs were
modified from existing satellite platforms: a prototype geostationary
minisatellite for GIOVE-A, and a commercial French Proteus platform
typically used for Earth observation for GIOVE-B.
Galileo satellites are based on an entirely new platform and improved
payload, specifically engineered for extremely high reliability, only
intended to go into safe mode for a few days over their planned 12 years
of operation thanks to a robust design based on reconfigurable
redundancy.
Even when entering ‘intermediate safe mode’ they can continue to supply
navigation signals, although without the usual service guarantee.
Artist's impression of GIOVE-B in orbit
Credits: ESA
GIOVE-B, with an orbital lifetime of 50 months and counting, will be
used in payload fine calibration tests this summer with the two Galileo
satellites.
Then, in September, it will be manoeuvred into a graveyard orbit 300 km higher. At this point, GIOVE-B’s own mission will end.
“Early October will see the launch of the next two Galileo satellites by
Soyuz rocket from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana,” added Valter.
“This will be an important step forward because four satellites are the minimum to perform navigation measurements, so Galileo system testing can proceed.”
“This will be an important step forward because four satellites are the minimum to perform navigation measurements, so Galileo system testing can proceed.”
ESA
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achuteguiayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
Inscríbete en el Foro del blog y participa : A Vuelo De Un Quinde - El Foro!
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario