Green light for Galileo
Second Generation satellite design
12/06/2024
Production of Galileo Second
Generation satellites advances at full speed after
two independent Satellite Critical Design Review
boards have confirmed that the satellite designs of
the respective industries meet all mission and
performance requirements. This achievement is
another crucial milestone hit on time in the
ambitious schedule to develop the first 12
satellites of the Galileo Second Generation fleet.
The European Galileo navigation
system, the most precise worldwide, is gearing up
for the Second Generation (G2). G2 will bring
unprecedented positioning, navigation and timing
capabilities to support a wide array of user needs
and services.
The Second Generation fleet
will comprise two different satellite families that
are being developed in parallel. Both models have
recently been subject to in-depth assessment by the
ESA-led Critical Design Review (CDR) boards. As part
of the review, independent technical experts have
verified the satellites’ design robustness and
technical capabilities.
The satellite CDR boards, with
senior experts from ESA, EUSPA and the European
Commission, confirmed that both Galileo Second
Generation satellite designs are in accordance with
the full mission profile, operable from the Galileo
ground segment and compatible with the selected
launcher vehicle, Ariane 6.
The first board met on 18 April
to review the Thales Alenia Space satellite design,
and the second gathered on 16 May to examine the
design from Airbus Defence and Space. Both meetings
took place at ESA ESTEC in the Netherlands,
following preparatory meetings at the respective
industry offices.
Eric Villette and Alberto
Bramante, leading the management of the two G2 Space
Segment contracts, describe the ESA CDR process. “It
is structured around peer review panels led by
independent technical experts from ESA specialised
in satellite design,” explains Villette. Bramante
adds, “The review is based on design descriptions,
analyses, test plans and test results made available
by the industrial consortia.”
Galileo Second Generation
satellites will be groundbreaking: they will have
fully digital navigation payloads, use electric
propulsion, host a more powerful navigation antenna,
have inter-satellite link capacity and an advanced
atomic clock configuration. Moreover, their
architecture will offer a high degree of
flexibility.
G2 can now ramp up its
production. Industry is already busy manufacturing
all the onboard equipment and satellite structures,
and the teams will begin assembling and integrating
the components in the proto-flight models soon.
Additionally, in the coming
months the first satellite compatibility test
campaigns will validate the communication between
the satellites and ground segment.
Head of the Galileo Programme
Office, Miguel Manteiga, thanked all the teams that
participated in the satellite CDR process, “It is
remarkable to see how, when faced with the most
exigent requirements for GNSS satellite systems in
history, European industry can answer in time to
deliver a state-of-the-art design. We are really
looking forward to ramping up manufacturing and to
starting the System Compatibility Test campaigns
with satellites, ground segment and Galileo
receivers.”
To this date, the Galileo
constellation has 30 First Generation satellites in
orbit and an additional eight are ready to be
launched, two in September this year and six more
starting in 2025. Second Generation launches will
begin before the end of this decade.
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