GPS III and OCX
Successfully Demonstrate Key Satellite Command and Control
Capabilities
Dec. 17, 2014
Raytheon Company and Lockheed Martin
successfully completed the fourth of five planned launch and
early orbit exercises to demonstrate new automation
capabilities, information assurance and 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 4,
on Oct. 3, represents a key
milestone demonstrating the end-to-end capability to
automatically transfer data between Raytheon's OCX and Lockheed
Martin's GPS III satellite. One additional readiness exercise,
five launch rehearsals and a mission dress rehearsal are planned
prior to launch of the first GPS III satellite with OCX.
The exercise used the latest baseline
of Raytheon's OCX Launch Checkout System (LCS) software
featuring integrated information assurance functionality for the
first time and the latest version of Lockheed Martin's GPS III
satellite simulator. Exercise 4 successfully demonstrated
mission planning and scheduling capabilities with the simulated
Air Force Satellite Control Network (AFSCN) for the first time,
including a replan scenario that would occur in the event of a
launch slip.
The system also automatically
generated antenna pointing angles for the simulated AFSCN, which
until now have been manually generated. Exercise 4 expands on
three previous exercises, introducing maneuver planning and
reconstruction capabilities, as well as advanced planning and
scheduling with AFSCN assets. The automation of these
capabilities will allow GPS operators to spend their time
optimizing system performance rather than focusing on routine
operations.
"As part of establishing the LCS Block
0 baseline, the completion of Exercise 4 demonstrates the
capability of OCX to successfully support a GPS-III satellite
launch in an information assurance hardened environment," stated
Matthew Gilligan, Raytheon
vice president and GPS OCX program manager. "Exercise 4
began the instantiation of vital OCX automation capabilities
that give operators their time back in order to focus on mission
critical activities, one of the important elements of a
modernized GPS."
"Launch Exercise 4 demonstrated the
team's ability to complete nearly 100 percent of the GPS III
space vehicle 1 launch and early orbit mission sequence," said
Mark Stewart, vice president
for Lockheed Martin's Navigation Systems mission area. "The
findings the team made during this robust launch exercise will
help mature the processes, procedures, and tools necessary to
enter our rehearsal phase and ultimately the launch and checkout
mission."
GPS III satellites will deliver three
times better accuracy, provide up to eight times improved
anti-jamming capabilities, and include enhancements that extend
spacecraft life to 15 years, 25 percent longer than the newest
Block IIF satellites. GPS III will be the first generation of
GPS satellite with a new L1C civil signal designed to make it
interoperable with other international global navigation
satellite systems. The first GPS III satellite is currently
undergoing integration and testing, with final space vehicle
delivery planned for late 2015.
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 4 was conducted using the recently completed
Iteration 1.5 software, representing an early delivery of the
final software baseline. Exercise 5, scheduled for 2015, will
include critical information assurance features needed to
support launch of the first GPS III satellite.