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Block III GPS Satellite Starts Tests In Colorado

Block Iii Gps Satellite

DAN ELLIOTT   12/13/11 02:17 PM ET   AP

DENVER — A $5.5 billion upgrade to the Global Positioning System moved a step closer to launch this week when a prototype arrived at a Lockheed Martin complex in Colorado to begin months of tests.

It's the guinea pig for a new generation of GPS satellites, called Block III, that's expected to make military and civilian receivers more accurate, powerful and reliable.

They're also part of an international effort to allow civilian receivers to use signals from U.S., European, Russian and perhaps other satellite navigation systems.

GPS has become ubiquitous in American civilian and military life, with hundreds of thousands of receivers in cars and weapons systems. Financial systems use GPS receivers to get precise time stamps for transactions, relying on the atomic clocks onboard the satellites.

The Air Force Space Command oversees the United States' GPS satellites and ground control systems from its headquarters at Peterson Air Force Base, Colo.

The Block III satellites are expected to allow military and civilian users to determine their position within 3 feet, compared with 10 feet with current technology, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Higher-powered signals from Block III satellites are expected to be harder for enemies to jam and easier for receivers to tune in, especially in urban canyons or under thick tree canopies.

The U.S. and other countries have agreed to make a new, common frequency available to civilians. That means civilian receivers could calculate their position from a number of different satellite navigation systems.

The Block III prototype arrived Monday at an $80 million test facility at Lockheed Martin's Waterton Canyon complex south of Denver. Workers will do final assembly work on the prototype in a cavernous clean room and then run it through a gantlet of tests.

The prototype won't be launched into space. The first flight model is expected to arrive at Waterton Canyon next year and be launched in May 2014.

Flying versions of the satellite will go through final assembly in the same room where the prototype is assembled and tested. They'll also be subjected to extreme temperatures that mimic conditions in space.

Lockheed Martin, based in Bethesda, Md., has a $1.5 billion Air Force contract to build and test the GPS III prototype and build the first two satellites for launch. The contract includes an option for 10 more.

The company expects the Air Force to authorize construction to begin on the third and fourth flight satellites later this month.

The Pentagon expects to buy and launch a total of 32 Block III satellites. The Air Force says it will cost about $5.5 billion to design, build and launch all the satellites and upgrade the ground control systems.

The number of planned satellites helps reduce costs, said Keoki Jackson, Lockheed Martin program director for GPS III.

"GPS is unlike most space programs," he said. "The Air Force gets the advantage of mass procurement."

Other savings are expected from the satellite's design, which can accommodate technology updates with few physical changes, and from its planned operating life – 15 years compared with seven to 12 years for most military satellites – Jackson said.

___

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DENVER — A $5.5 billion upgrade to the Global Positioning System moved a step closer to launch this week when a prototype arrived at a Lockheed Martin complex in Colorado to begin months of test...
DENVER — A $5.5 billion upgrade to the Global Positioning System moved a step closer to launch this week when a prototype arrived at a Lockheed Martin complex in Colorado to begin months of test...
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waldopepper
I'd tell you all about me if you were my friend.
01:02 AM on 12/15/2011
"...users to determine their position within 3 feet, compared with 10 feet."

Maybe its just me but I don't really think that I could ever have a need for a gps that is accurate within 3 feet. Ten feet is all I could ever imagine that I would need. But I don't even need that. I can read a map.
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Rich Phitzwell
07:38 AM on 12/15/2011
Ill call them up right now and tell them to stop everything due to you not needing it.

Or on the flip side we can consider other applications that do need accuracy such as surveying, construction, dropping a bomb on Timmy but not Bob, and so forth
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
12:29 PM on 12/15/2011
It can make a difference to drivers who need the GPS to know which lane they are in, to surveyors, to aircrews, etc. I have had GPS receivers, very good ones, not be able to tell if I was on a highway or the frontage road next to the highway.
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speedy evans
03:18 PM on 12/14/2011
after reading that story all i can say is ..HEY MOM!!..
05:08 AM on 12/14/2011
While the article states the satellite arrived at the Denver facility it doesn't tell you were it came from (as if it just magically appeared in Waterton). For those interested the prototype was built in the Newtown Pa facility. Newtown is home to the engineering team responsible for the A2100 platform the satellite is based on. The next generation GOES-R weather satellite is also being designed there.
05:20 AM on 12/14/2011
Also the picture shown in the article is the older GPS-Block II spacecraft. The GPS-III prototype known as GNST (Non-Flight Satellite Testbed) will look more like the image at the URL below when completed.

http://www.lockheedmartin.com/data/assets/ssc/PressRelease/GPS3Art.jpg
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webwzrd
Reality is liberal indoctrination
03:10 AM on 12/14/2011
For all you paranoids. GPS doesn't track you. It only transmits a beacon signal, which a device triangulates from at least three.
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06:16 AM on 12/15/2011
you think
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webwzrd
Reality is liberal indoctrination
12:25 PM on 12/15/2011
Yes. I DO think. Has proven useful for many things.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
12:36 PM on 12/15/2011
We know the satellites do not track you.
12:53 AM on 12/14/2011
I think it is funny how paranoid some of you are. My husband works GPS I like my google working and I thank him daily.
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brandon20678
Corporations have 99 problems and I'm 1
12:05 PM on 12/13/2011
Big Brother is Watching.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
12:26 PM on 12/13/2011
GPS satellites have no idea where you are.
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12:56 PM on 12/13/2011
apple does.
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authorized-user
macho macho man
09:13 PM on 12/14/2011
True, but your GPS equipped cell phone and new car (On Star) will squeal on you constantly.
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Big0725
Large...........but definitely NOT in charge!
05:41 PM on 12/13/2011
We've been watching you long before this. Google NGA.
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Yorksgal
'Conservative Christian' is a complete oxymoron.
11:12 AM on 12/13/2011
So, who is going to be paying for all this? Oh never mind I know the answer already.
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Allen Bouchard
I worship His Divine Shadow.
01:48 PM on 12/13/2011
Your point? The GPS JPO allows civilian use of the GPS satellites for free. This is unheard of for military systems, so we definitely get a return on this investment.
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Big0725
Large...........but definitely NOT in charge!
05:43 PM on 12/13/2011
If we didn't have these systems, I couldn't sync up my simulcasted public safety radio system. The benefits far outweigh the financial output.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
10:37 AM on 12/13/2011
Guess with the 3 billion dollar tax payer paid failure of LightSquared Inc.'s GPS that the pentagon was placing their bets on, they had to react fast and get some good PR to try to distract from this giant clustermuck. http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-12-12/falcone-s-lightsquared-said-to-disrupt-75-of-gps-in-tests.html
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
12:31 PM on 12/13/2011
"failure of LightSquar­ed Inc.'s GPS that the pentagon was placing their bets on"

Incorrect. LightSquared was not making a GPS and the Pentagon was not buying or betting on LightSquared.
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Allen Bouchard
I worship His Divine Shadow.
02:02 PM on 12/13/2011
1) LightSquared is developing a wireless broadband network, not a GPS (we already have a GPS).
2) When the FCC approved LightSquared's plan, there were complaints of potential interference with GPS.
3) It has since been confirmed that LightSquared's system does jam GPS.
4) LightSquared is not funded with taxpayer dollars. That $3 billion is from a hedge fund.

Reading comprehension is a hell of a drug.
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edenooch
nefarious humor
10:31 AM on 12/13/2011
just make sure my gps manufacturer will be good enough to release the firmware updates i would need to see the new birds
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
12:32 PM on 12/13/2011
You will probably need a new receiver to take full advantage of the new satellites, but they will work with the old receivers at least as well as the current satellites.
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07:53 PM on 12/14/2011
Ten feet is good enough for me. My eyesight is still good enough to take over from there. :-)
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10:22 AM on 12/13/2011
Big Brother is in the here and now to follow your every move. Ain't Freedom great!
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
12:33 PM on 12/13/2011
The GPS satellites do not know who or where you are.
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Allen Bouchard
I worship His Divine Shadow.
02:15 PM on 12/13/2011
You know what's also great? Educating yourself about technologies before making outrageous claims about them.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_positioning_system#position_calculation_introduction

The satellite sends a message containing it's current position (using x, y, and z coordinates) and the time sent to your receiver. The receiver needs to get this information from at least four different satellites in order to calculate its position. The receiver's position is never transmitted back to the satellites, they have better things to do.
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03:36 PM on 12/13/2011
Wikipedia. Good link Jeddidiah.
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georgecarlin76
09:45 AM on 12/13/2011
Lockheed wants us to pay them to spy on us. They have become Un-American.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
12:33 PM on 12/13/2011
GPS satellites are incapable of knowing where you are.
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Allen Bouchard
I worship His Divine Shadow.
02:15 PM on 12/13/2011
How are they spying on us?