Harris Corporation
Completes
Development of Fully
Digital Navigation
Payload for Future
GPS III Satellites
Harris Corporation
has completed
development of the
company’s fully
digital Mission Data
Unit (MDU), which is
at the heart of its
navigation payload
for Lockheed
Martin’s GPS III
satellites 11 and
beyond.
The current
Harris payload for
GPS III space
vehicles (SVs) 1-10
includes a greater
than three times
reduction in range
error, up to eight
times increase in
anti-jamming power,
added signals –
including one
compatible with
other Global
Navigation Satellite
Systems (GNSS) – and
greater signal
integrity. Harris’
GPS III SV11+ fully
digital navigation
payload will further
improve on
performance for the
U.S. Air Force by
providing more
powerful signals,
plus built-in
flexibility to adapt
to advances in GPS
technology, as well
as future changes in
mission needs.
“This design is
fully mature – an
Engineering
Development Model,
not a prototype –
and is ready to be
inserted into GPS
III SV11+,” said
Bill Gattle,
president, Harris
Space and
Intelligence
Systems. “The
payload has the
flexibility to serve
the warfighter over
the entire mission
life and can be
upgraded
incrementally over
its mission life due
to built-in
adaptability.”
The payload
design also ensures
flawless atomic
clock operations,
providing the
reliable GPS signal
that millions of
people – including
U.S. soldiers – and
billions of dollars
in commerce depend
on every day. It
also will provide
the clock signal for
a new GPS III Search
and Rescue (SAR)
payload.
Beyond
flexibility and
reliability, the new
Harris SV11+
navigation payload
offers a smooth
transition to the
Air Force’s GPS OCX
ground control
segment. The Harris
payload for the
first ten GPS III
satellites already
has been verified
for OCX
compatibility, and
this will allow
Harris to seamlessly
port the Harris
SV11+ design,
minimizing
integration risks
and associated
costs.