SSTL
selected
to build
third
batch of
Galileo
navigation
payloads
Under an
Authority
to
Proceed
signed
with
prime
contractor
OHB-System
AG
today,
Surrey
Satellite
Technology
Ltd
(SSTL)
is
commencing
work on
building
8
navigation
payloads
for
Galileo,
Europe’s
global
navigation
satellite
system.
The
contract
will be
worth
approximately
€140m,
and it
is a
continuation
of a
long and
successful
cooperation
between
SSTL and
OHB-System
AG, with
the
pairing
having
previously
built 22
FOC
satellites
for the
Galileo
Constellation.
Gary
Lay,
SSTL’s
Director
of
Navigation
said
“SSTL is
delighted
to have
been
selected
to build
the
third
batch of
navigation
payloads
needed
to
complete
the
initial
Galileo
Constellation.
I am
confident
that the
OHB-SSTL
solution
offered
the
lowest
risk and
best
value
for
money,
and I
believe
that our
selection
as
payload
providers
for the
third
time in
succession
demonstrates
a high
regard
for our
work.”
SSTL’s
state-of-the-art
Galileo
FOC
payload
comprises
different
units
including
European
sourced
atomic
clocks,
navigation
signal
generators,
high
power
travelling
wave
tube
amplifiers
and
antennas.
SSTL’s
payload
proposal
for
Batch 3
is for a
recurrent
build of
the
existing
payload,
with an
evolution
of the
atomic
clocks
to
incorporate
advances
made
under
the
European
GNSS
Evolution
Programme.
Fourteen
of
SSTL’s
Galileo
FOC
navigation
payloads
are
currently
operational
in
orbit,
with a
further
eight
payloads
already
delivered
to OHB
for
integration
and
test.
SSTL has
been
involved
in the
Galileo
programme
since
2003
with the
design
and
build of
GIOVE-A,
Galileo’s
pathfinder
mission.
GIOVE-A
was
launched
in 2005
and is
still
operational
today,
providing
valuable
data
about
the
radiation
environment
in
Medium
Earth
Orbit.
An
experimental
GPS
receiver
on board
GIOVE-A
is also
used to
map out
the
antenna
patterns
of GPS
satellites
for use
in
planning
navigation
systems
for
future
high
altitude
missions
in
Geostationary
orbit,
and
beyond
into
deep
space.