Raytheon completes milestone for
next-generation GPS controls
June 27, 2016
Raytheon has
achieved another test milestone in its
development of the U.S. Air Force's
Global Positioning System Next
Generation Operational Control System,
or GPS OCX. This new system offers
significant improvements to the GPS on
which the U.S. military and millions of
civilians rely, including enhanced
availability, accuracy and security.
OCX's
development is delivered in "blocks,"
with Block 0 comprising the Launch and
Checkout System to take GPS III
satellites into early orbit. Block 1
builds on Block 0 to deliver the full
OCX capability, which allows the Air
Force to transition from its current GPS
ground controls to the modernized and
secure GPS OCX. Block 2 delivers
concurrently with Block 1 and includes
GPS Navigation Warfare enhancements.
Raytheon
recently completed its "Run For Record"
test of the OCX Black Wide Area Network,
or B-WAN, which provides network
connectivity to unclassified external
interfaces for GPS OCX. The
component-level testing included mission
capability and cyber controls, and was
completed with a 100 percent
requirements pass rate. The B-WAN will
be deployed as part of OCX Block 1 and
Block 0, with the first use of B-WAN in
2017, with the delivery of the Block 0
Launch and Checkout System.
"This latest
milestone shows that OCX will function
securely with external interfaces to
GPS, demonstrating the maturity of this
critical development program," said
Bill Sullivan,
GPS OCX vice president and program
manager for Raytheon.
The U.S. Air
Force-led GPS Modernization Program will
yield new positioning, navigation and
timing capabilities for both the U.S.
military and civilian users across the
globe. GPS OCX is being developed by
Raytheon under contract to the U.S. Air
Force Space and Missile Systems Center,
which is replacing the current GPS
operational control system.
GPS OCX
provides a number of significant
modernized capabilities for GPS users,
including robust cybersecurity and
deployment of jam-resistant, operational
military code, or M-code. The OCX Launch
and Checkout System provides an early
delivery of much of the overall OCX
capability, and will support the GPS III
satellite launches.