A
Boeing Delta 2 booster pierced the night sky Sunday evening, successfully
launching the first modernized Global Positioning System satellite to build a
bridge from the navigation network of today to the advancements of tomorrow.
Following a smooth-as-silk countdown,
the blue and white rocket shot off Cape Canaveral's pad 17A at 11:37 p.m. EDT
(0337 GMT) trailing a plume of blinding flame. Night owls as far away as Miami
spotted the launch.
The two-ton GPS 2R-M1
spacecraft rode its three-stage launcher into a temporary, looping orbit
stretching from 150 to nearly 11,000 miles where the Delta successfully
released its payload nearly 25 minutes after liftoff.
Ground controllers will
spend the next several days guiding the $75 million satellite to its final destination
by firing an onboard kick motor to raise the orbit's low point. The
power-generating solar panels will be deployed and antennas unfurled during the
critical early days, too.
If all goes according to
plan, a separate mission control team takes over Friday to commence an
extensive four-month test regimen that will put the Lockheed Martin-built
satellite through its paces.
GPS 2R-M1 begins a new breed of updated GPS satellites that will not only
broadcast the navigation signals as previous spacecraft but also provide two
new military signals and a second civilian signal. Those improvements promise
to bring greater accuracy, added resistance to interference and enhanced
performance for users around the world.
The advancements for the
military will provide warfighters with a more robust jam-resistant signal and
enable better targeting of GPS-guided weapons in hostile environments, while
the new civilian signal removes navigation errors caused by the Earth's
ionosphere.
"I think this is a
pretty huge step. We have essentially been operating on the original-design
signals of GPS for over a decade, and this is going to be the first time we are
actually adding new signals from space," said Col. Allan Ballenger, GPS
system program director at the Space and Missile Systems Center.
"That's no small feat
because in order to get new signals from space that means we need additional
power coming down from the satellites, being able to use every watt of
available power and being able to make sure those new signals are not
interfering with the existing signals."
Ensuring the new signals do
not cause problems will be a key focus during the next four months of on-orbit
tests.
"One
part of our responsibility that we take very seriously is what we call
backwards compatibility -- making sure while we are modernizing and adding new
signals for both the military and civil customers we're not introducing
inadvertent problems for those users out there already with their GPS receivers
across many hundreds of thousands of DoD platforms, coalition partner military
platforms as well as millions of civil users -- things like OnStar, what's
embedded in cell phones as well as automobiles. We want to be very careful to
make sure that we don't do anything to (mess) those up," Ballenger said.
Lockheed Martin has built
21 of the GPS 2R satellites for the Air Force, of which 14 have now launched.
Five years ago, the military decided to add the modernization features to the
final eight spacecraft in the series.
The changes fit within the
existing GPS 2R satellite design. The modernized spacecraft weigh 4,545 pounds
at launch, only 60 pounds heavier than the earlier model, have a redesigned
external antenna panel and higher-power, more-efficient transmitters.
The second modernized
satellite will be shipped to Cape Canaveral later this year for launch in early
2006. The exact launch date depends on the results of the GPS 2R-M1 testing.
The spaceborne network
features 24 primary and several backup satellites flying in six orbital
groupings. The Air Force began launching the fleet in 1989 and continues to
send up new satellites as replacements to keep the navigation system in good
health. There are 28 functioning GPS satellites today.
GPS 2R-M1 will assume the
Plane C, Slot 4 position, taking over for the GPS 2A-20 craft launched in May
1993. The aging satellite, although still operational, will be repositioned
within the GPS constellation for the remainder of its life. The new slot for
the old spacecraft will be determined later.
The Air Force is expecting
to deploy three new GPS satellites next year. Getting multiple modernized
spacecraft in orbit is necessary to reap the benefits of the new signals by
covering more of the planet at any given time.
"At our current
projected launch rate, which is between two and four satellites a year, that
takes us out some number of years before we actually populate the full
constellation. Obviously, one satellite will give you only several hours of
coverage to a particular receiver. As we launch more and more satellites, that
coverage will improve over time," Ballenger said.
"On the military side,
we're also looking to modernize user equipment for military users to take
advantage of the military code. But that will involve making modifications in
ships and tanks and planes."
Ballenger said some
civilian receivers already on the market can pick up the new signal, while
older units will have to be replaced.
Millions of people across
the globe use GPS every day, and that commercial marketplace for GPS technology
has exploded in recent years, growing from $16 billion in 2003 to what analysts
predict will be $68 billion in 2010, said Michael Shaw, director of
radionavigation and positioning at the U.S. Department of Transportation.
"We are seeing
continued growth in precision civilian applications such surveying, precision
agriculture, infrastructure monitoring, geodesy, as well as volcano and
earthquake research. More specifically at the Department of Transportation
where I work, we are expanding our applications across the entire U.S.
transportation infrastructure," Shaw said.
"The bottom line --
GPS is absolutely critical to our nation's economic well being."
"We have the most
robust and capable global positioning system in the history of space. The
navigation and timing signals our GPS satellites provide have changed the face
of war, enabling precision operations and more importantly saving lives by
helping minimize collatoral damage. GPS has also spurred on an international
multi-billion dollar civilan and commercial market for a variety of GPS and
timing applications," Ballenger said.
Adding more of the new
modernized satellites is eagerly awaited, Shaw said.
"We are starting on a
journey of one satellite at a time."
While the new series has
just begun to fly, the Air Force has the next generation already in the works.
The GPS 2F satellites are under construction at a Boeing plant in California.
They will feature the original and the new modernized signals, plus offer a
third civilian signal of particular interest to the aviation industry. A dozen
of those satellites will be built, with the first launch anticipated in 2007
from the Cape.
Sunday's launch was the
53rd for a GPS satellite and the 42nd carried on a Delta 2 rocket.
For Boeing's workhorse
booster, it marked the 118th successful Delta 2 rocket launch out of 120
flights since 1989 and extended the string of consecutive successes to 65
dating back to 1997.
The next Delta 2 rocket
launch occurs from California's Vandenberg Air Force Base around October 26
carrying the CloudSat and CALIPSO environmental satellites for NASA. The next
Delta 2 from Cape Canaveral will be early next year carrying either GPS 2R-M2
or the MITEX experimental military satellite for the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency.