GPS III And OCX Satellite Launch And Early Orbit Operations
Successfully Demonstrated
Sept.
12, 2013
Lockheed Martin and Raytheon
Company successfully completed the third of five planned
launch and early orbit exercises to demonstrate the launch
readiness of the world's most powerful and accurate Global
Positioning System (GPS), the U.S. Air Force's next
generation GPS III satellite and Operational Control System.
Successful completion of Exercise
3, on August 1, was a key
milestone demonstrating Raytheon's OCX software meets
mission requirements and is on track to support the launch
of the first GPS III satellite, currently being produced by
Lockheed Martin. Two additional readiness exercises and six
24/7 launch rehearsals are planned prior to launch of the
first GPS III satellite in 2015.
Using new installments of
Raytheon's OCX software and Lockheed Martin's GPS III Launch
and Checkout Capability (LCC), the Air Force Global
Positioning System Directorate and the industry team
completed a launch and early orbit exercise over a three-day
period in late July. Exercise 3 demonstrated
space-ground communications; first acquisition and transfer
orbit sequences; orbit-raising maneuver planning and
execution; and basic anomaly detection and resolution
capabilities. In addition, the industry and customer
teams jointly executed mission planning activities, such as
orbit determination and the generation of upload command
files.
Exercise 3 expands on two previous
exercises, with a longer mission timeline, and the
introduction of simulated vehicle and ground anomalies to
evaluate the combined response capabilities of the control
segment, satellite and operations crew. "Successful
completion of Exercise 3 clearly demonstrates that OCX is on
track to support the first GPS III satellite launch," stated
Matt Gilligan, a vice
president with Raytheon's Intelligence, Information and
Services business and Raytheon's GPS OCX program manager.
"The system responded as designed, and met all of the launch
exercise success criteria and successfully demonstrated our
anomaly response."
"Exercise 3 demonstrated that the
cross-organizational operations team is on track to support
successful GPS III launch and on-orbit checkout missions
from our
Newtown facility. I look forward to the
team's continued success as they progress through the
complex mission readiness program towards the first GPS III
launch," said
Keoki Jackson, vice
president of Lockheed Martin's Navigation Systems mission
area.
The Lockheed Martin-developed GPS
III satellites and Raytheon's OCX are critical elements of
the U.S. Air Force's effort to modernize the GPS enterprise
more affordably while improving capabilities to meet the
evolving demands of military, commercial and civilian users
worldwide.
GPS III satellites will deliver
three times better accuracy; provide up to eight times more
powerful anti-jamming capabilities; and include enhancements
which 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. The spacecraft bus and antenna
assemblies for the first GPS III satellite have been
delivered to Lockheed Martin's GPS III Processing Facility
and are in the integration and test flow leading to the
planned space vehicle delivery in mid-2014.
OCX is being developed in two
Blocks using a commercial best practice iterative software
development process, with seven iterations in Block 1 and
one iteration in Block 2. Exercise 3 was conducted using the
recently completed Iteration 1.4 software. Exercise 4,
scheduled for early 2014, will use Iteration 1.5 software,
which includes the Launch and Checkout System capability as
well as all critical information assurance features needed
to support launch of the first GPS III satellite.