- a master control station (MCS),
- an alternate master control station,
- four dedicated ground antennas and
- six dedicated monitor stations
The MCS can also access U.S. Air Force Satellite Control Network (AFSCN)
ground antennas (for additional command and control capability) and NGA
(National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency) monitor stations. The flight
paths of the satellites are tracked by dedicated U.S. Air Force
monitoring stations in Hawaii, Kwajalein, Ascension Island, Diego
Garcia, Colorado Springs, Colorado and Cape Canaveral, along with shared
NGA monitor stations operated in England, Argentina, Ecuador, Bahrain,
Australia and Washington DC. The tracking information is sent to the Air
Force Space Command MCS at Schriever Air Force Base 25 km (16 mi) ESE
of Colorado Springs, which is operated by the 2nd Space Operations
Squadron(2 SOPS) of the U.S. Air Force. Then 2 SOPS contacts each GPS
satellite regularly with a navigational update using dedicated or shared
(AFSCN) ground antennas (GPS dedicated ground antennas are located
at Kwajalein, Ascension Island, Diego Garcia, and Cape Canaveral). These
updates synchronize the atomic clocks on board the satellites to within
a few nanoseconds of each other, and adjust the ephemeris of each
satellite's internal orbital model. The updates are created by a Kalman
filter that uses inputs from the ground monitoring stations, space
weather information, and various other inputs.
Satellite maneuvers are not precise by GPS standards. So to change the orbit of a satellite, the satellite must be marked unhealthy,
so receivers will not use it in their calculation. Then the maneuver
can be carried out, and the resulting orbit tracked from the ground.
Then the new ephemeris is uploaded and the satellite marked healthy
again.
No comments:
Post a Comment