UK researchers have claimed a key milestone in the development of a
next-generation satellite navigation system.
Galileo
test satellite Giove-A, built in Guildford by
Surrey Satellite
Technology, is a key part of a project that aims to bring benefits to
drivers, pilots and sailors as well as sectors that have not used satellite
navigation before, such as air traffic control, the emergency services and rail
networks.
The satellite could also be accessed by mobile phone users to find out local
information such as local cinema listings or directions to the nearest
restaurant.
Giove-A is due to be launched from Baikonur, Kazakhstan by the end of
December 2005. It will broadcast the very first Galileo signals from space and
together with Giove-B, a second test satellite developed by
Galileo
Industries which includes UK-based firm
EADS
Astrium, will trial new technology.
Science Minister
Lord
Sainsbury said: "Galileo offers an opportunity to increase the information
services provided by satellites and make a real difference to people's lives.
"I am very proud that UK engineers and their world-class satellite technology
are playing a leading role in this ambitious European programme."
Galileo is a joint European
Space
Agency/European
Union Trans-European Networks programme. Due to be operational in 2010, the
civil system will comprise 30 satellites and is designed to complement the
existing US GPS and to provide additional value-added and safety-critical
services.
The UK government is one of four major contributors to Galileo, along with
Germany, France and Italy. To date the British
National Space
Centre and the
Department
for Transport have invested over €136m in the project.
The 660kg Giove-A satellite is the first to use Surrey Satellite Technology's
Geostationary Minisatellite Platform, designed to carry a wide range of
communication and navigation payloads. The satellite was designed, built and
tested in 27 months.
Professor Sir Martin Sweeting, chief executive at Surrey Satellite
Technology, said that this is the first time the company has developed a
complete satellite for the European Space Agency. "Giove-A is our largest and
most complex satellite to date," he explained.
A 25-metre antenna at
Chilbolton
Observatory in Hampshire will detect Giove-A's signals. The observatory is
an outpost of the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory.
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