GMV Makes Headway In
Groundbreaking Passive Satellite Tracking
Techniques
05/25/2021
In the second half of 2020
GMV carried out a project for the Spanish
Industrial Technology Development Center (Centro
para el Desarrollo Tecnológico Industrial:
CDTI). The idea of the project was to analyze
passive satellite tracking techniques to gauge
their applicability to GEO space surveillance
and tracking systems and especially the Spanish
Space Surveillance and Tracking System (S3T)
under the umbrella of the European Space
Surveillance and Tracking System (EUSST).
This technique means that
satellites emitting an active communication
signal can now be tracked. This active signal is
simultaneously received by a suitably deployed
network of receiving antenna, making it possible
to determine with great precision and in near
real time the emitting satellite’s orbit while
also detecting and estimating its maneuvers.
Under this EUSST-consortium
H2020-funded project, GMV has carried out a
feasibility study for CDTI and has specified and
designed this system for providing S3T with data
to enhance the in-orbit collision avoidance
services currently rendered by S3T’s Operating
Center (S3TOC) for dozens of European operators
and several hundred satellites. GMV has also
developed for CDTI a prototype that simulates
the whole system and its data-processing chain.
Due to the interest of this
technique for space surveillance applications,
in which GMV is European leader, and to keep
this activity going into the future, GMV
initiated in 2021 the development of an inhouse
passive satellite tracking system called
Focusear. Focusear will provide data and
services not only for space surveillance systems
but also to support orbit determination
activities. The first tests of this system are
now being conducted on GMV’s Tres Cantos site in
Madrid. Additional antennae will be deployed in
other GMV offices in Spain (Seville, Valladolid
and Barcelona) to provide an operational
service.