Raytheon GPS Launch and Checkout
capability receives Interim Authorization to Test
Sept. 4, 2013
Raytheon Company received
Interim Authorization to Test (IATT) security certification
for the Global Positioning System Next Generation
Operational Control System (GPS OCX) Launch and Checkout
System (LCS) four months ahead of schedule. Raytheon
received a one-year certification with no liens, meaning the
government does not require any changes. The LCS IATT
certification enables Raytheon to move to the next stage of
testing the Launch and Checkout System in preparation for
launch of the first GPS III satellite.
"Successful IATT certification ahead of our original
schedule demonstrates not only that Raytheon meets the U.S.
Air Force's high standards for information assurance as we
develop this critical national system, but also the
efficient efforts of our government partners," said Matthew
Gilligan, Raytheon's GPS OCX program manager and a vice
president in Raytheon's Intelligence, Information and
Services business. "Typically IATT certification is given
for six-month increments; the LCS one-year accreditation
speaks to the quality of the information assurance design
and threat protection."
The Interim Authorization to Test not only includes the
LCS, but also Lockheed Martin's GPS III satellite support
systems, including the Exercise and Rehearsal Training Tool
and Upload Generation Tool.
Raytheon's OCX and the Lockheed Martin-built GPS III
satellites are critical elements of the U.S. Air Force's
effort to modernize the GPS enterprise while improving
capabilities to meet the evolving demands of military,
commercial and civilian users worldwide. OCX is being
developed in two "blocks" using a commercial best practice
iterative software development process. There are seven
iterations in Block 1 and one in Block 2. LCS is the fifth
Iteration of Block 1, and it successfully completed Critical
Design Review in June 2013.
The first GPS III satellite is in production at Lockheed
Martin and expected to be delivered to the U.S. Air Force
"flight-ready" in mid-2014. GPS III satellites are expected
to deliver three times better accuracy, provide up to eight
times more powerful anti-jamming capabilities, and include
enhancements that extend spacecraft life 25 percent further
than the prior GPS block. The GPS III also will carry a new
civil signal designed to be interoperable with other
international global navigation satellite systems, enhancing
civilian user connectivity.