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U'S' SpaceBased PNT Policy, Programs, and International Cooperation

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Title: U'S' SpaceBased PNT Policy, Programs, and International Cooperation


1
U.S. Space-Based PNTPolicy, Programs, and
International Cooperation
David A. Turner, Deputy Director Office of Space
and Advanced Technology Bureau of Oceans,
Environment and Science U.S. Department of
State December 1, 2009
2
Overview
  • U.S. Space-based PNT Policy
  • GPS Augmentation Programs Status
  • International Cooperation Activities

2
3
U.S. Space-Based PNT Policy
GOAL Ensure the U.S. maintains space-based PNT
services, augmentation, back-up, and service
denial capabilities that
  • Provide uninterrupted availability of PNT
    services
  • Meet growing national, homeland, economic
    security, and civil requirements, and scientific
    and commercial demands
  • Remain the pre-eminent military space-based PNT
    service
  • Continue to provide civil services that exceed or
    are competitive with foreign civil space-based
    PNT services and augmentation systems
  • Remain essential components of internationally
    accepted PNT services
  • Promote U.S. technological leadership in
    applications involving space-based PNT services

3
4
U.S. Space-Based PNT Organization Structure
WHITE HOUSE
Ad HocWorking Groups
5
U.S. Policy Promotes Global Use of GPS Technology
  • No direct user fees for civil GPS services
  • Provided on a continuous, worldwide basis
  • Open, public signal structures for all civil
    services
  • Promotes equal access for user equipment
    manufacturing, applications development, and
    value-added services
  • Encourages open, market-driven competition
  • Global compatibility and interoperability with
    GPS
  • Service improvements for civil, commercial, and
    scientific users worldwide
  • Protection of radionavigation spectrum from
    disruption and interference

6
  • U.S. Space-based PNT Policy
  • GPS Augmentation Programs Status
  • International Cooperation Activities

6
7
GPS Constellation Status
30 Operational Satellites(Baseline
Constellation 24)
  • 11 Block IIA
  • 12 Block IIR
  • 7 Block IIR-M
  • Transmitting new second civil signal
  • 1 GPS IIR-M in on-orbit testing
  • 3 additional satellites in residual status
  • Next launch IIF June 2010
  • Global GPS civil service performance commitment
    met continuously since December 1993

8
SPS Signal in Space Performance
Signal-in-Space User Range Error (SIS URE) the
difference between a GPS satellites navigation
data (position and clock) and the truth,
projected on the line-of-sight to the user
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
7
2001 SPS Performance Standard (RMS over all SPS
SIS URE)
6
5
2008 SPS Performance Standard (Worst of any SPS
SIS URE)
4
RMS SIS URE (m)
RMS Signal-in-space User Range Error (URE), meters
3
Decreasing range error
2
1.6
1.2
1.1
1.0
1
0
1990
1992
1994
1996
1997
2001
2004
2006
2008
Selective Availability (SA)
System accuracy exceeds published standard
9
Recent Program Successes
  • Space Segment
  • SVN 49 launched in March 09
  • L5 demo payload secured frequency filing
  • Signal distortion investigation still underway
  • SVN 50 launched in August 09
  • Set healthy
  • Completed GPS Delta II launches
  • GPS IIF completed Pathfinder testing
  • GPS IIIA completed Preliminary Design Reviews
  • Ground Segment
  • Delivered new version of OCS (AEP 5.5) to final
  • regression testing with SAASM capability
  • Completed successful OCX, SDR,
  • Modernized Capability Demo and RFP release

10
GPS Modernization New Civil Signals
  • Second civil signal L2C
  • Designed to meet commercial needs
  • Higher accuracy through ionospheric correction
  • Available since 2005 without data message
  • Currently, 7 IIR-Ms transmitting L2C
  • Full capability 24 satellites 2016
  • Third civil signal L5
  • Designed to meet demanding requirements for
    transportation safety-of-life
  • Uses highly protected Aeronautical Radio
    Navigation Service (ARNS) band
  • On orbit broadcast 10 APR 2009 on IIR-20(M)
    secured ITU frequency filing
  • Full capability 24 satellites 2018

11
GPS Modernization Fourth Civil Signal (L1C)
  • Designed with international partnersfor
    interoperability
  • Modernized civil signal at L1 frequency
  • More robust navigation across a broad rangeof
    user applications
  • Improved performance in challengedtracking
    environments
  • Original signal retained for backward
    compatibility
  • Specification developed in cooperationwith
    industry recently completed
  • Launches with GPS III in 2014
  • On 24 satellites by 2021

Under Trees
Urban Canyons
12
GPS Modernization Semi-codeless Transition
  • GPS receivers attain very high accuracy by using
    "codeless" or "semi-codeless" techniques that
    exploit the encrypted military GPS signals
    without actually decoding them
  • Techniques will no longer be necessary once the
    new civil GPS signals are fully operational
  • US government published a notice for users to
    transition to GPS civil-coded signals by December
    31, 2020
  • Provided time for an orderly and systematic
    transition
  • Based on launch schedule and projected budget
  • US government led community-wide collaboration on
    this transition plan
  • US is committed to continually improving GPS
    services as users complete a timely transition to
    dual-coded civil GPS equipment

13
FAA GPS Augmentation Programs
14
WAAS Architecture
38 Reference Stations
3 Master Stations
4 Ground Earth Stations
4F3 98 W
(21) Geostationary Satellite Links
2 Operational Control Centers
15
Global SBAS Coverage
16
Local Area Augmentation System (LAAS)
  • Precision Approach For CAT- I, II, III
  • Multiple Runway Coverage At An Airport
  • 3D RNP Procedures (RTA), CDAs
  • Navigation for Closely Spaced Parallels
  • Super Density Operations

Air Services Australia says this date is
incorrect need correct date from the FAA
  • LAAS is Expected to Achieve Category-III By
    2012

17
LAAS/GBAS International Efforts
Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Malaga, Spain
Sydney, Australia
Frankfurt, Germany
Bremen, Germany
18
Nationwide Differential GPS
  • Expansion of maritime differential GPS (DGPS)
    network to cover terrestrial United States
  • Built to international standard adopted in 50
    countries

19
National Continuously Operating Reference
Stations (CORS)
  • Enables highly accurate, 3-D positioning
  • Centimeter-level precision
  • Tied to National Spatial Reference System
  • 1,200 sites operated by 200 public, private,
    academic organizations
  • NOAAs Online Positioning User Service (OPUS)
    automatically processes coordinates submitted via
    the web from around the world
  • OPUS-RS (Rapid Static) declared operational in
    2007
  • NOAA considering support for real-time networks

20
  • U.S. Space-based PNT Policy
  • GPS Augmentation Programs Status
  • International Cooperation Activities

20
21
U.S. Objectives in Working with Other GNSS
Service Providers
  • Ensure compatibility ability of U.S. and
    non-U.S. space-based PNT services to be used
    separately or together without interfering with
    each individual service or signal
  • Radio frequency compatibility
  • Spectral separation between M-code and other
    signals
  • Achieve interoperability ability of civil U.S.
    and non-U.S. space-based PNT services to be used
    together to provide the user better capabilities
    than would be achieved by relying solely on one
    service or signal
  • Primary focus on the common L1C and L5 signals
  • Ensure fair trade/open markets (non-discrimination
    )

Pursue through Bilateral and Multilateral
Cooperation
22
Current International Signal Plans
Note GINS modulations TBD
22
23
The Goal of Civil GNSS Interoperability
  • Ideal interoperability allows navigation with one
    signal each from four or more systems with no
    additional receiver cost or complexity

Interoperable Better Together than Separate
24
Bilateral Cooperation
  • U.S.-EU GPS-Galileo Cooperation Agreement signed
    in 2004
  • Four working groups were set up under the
    agreement
  • Improved new civil signal (MBOC) adopted in July
    2007
  • First Plenary Meeting successfully held in
    October 2008
  • Planning for the next Plenary meeting to be held
    next Spring
  • U.S.-Russia Joint Statement issued in Dec 2004
  • Negotiations for a U.S.-Russia Agreement on
    satellite navigation cooperation underway since
    late 2005
  • Working Groups on compatibility/interoperability,
    search and rescue

24
25
Bilateral Cooperation (continued)
  • U.S.-Japan Joint Statement on GPS Cooperation in
    1998
  • Japans Quasi Zenith Satellite System (QZSS)
    designed to be fully compatible and highly
    interoperable with GPS
  • Bilateral agreements to set up QZSS monitoring
    stations in Hawaii and Guam. Guam station
    completed!
  • U.S.-India Joint Statement on GNSS Coop. in 2007
  • Technical Meetings focused on GPS-India Regional
    Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS) compatibility
    and interoperability held in 2008 and 2009
  • U.S.-China operator-to-operator coordination
    under ITU auspices
  • Bilateral Meetings at Geneva, June 2007 Xian,
    China, May 2008 Geneva, October 2008
  • Next meeting scheduled for December 2009

25
26
U.S. - Australia Cooperation
  • Long history of GPS cooperation between U.S. and
    Australia
  • U.S.-Australia Joint Delegation Statement on
    Cooperation in the Civil Use of GPS signed
    April 19, 2007
  • Cooperation expands upon existing efforts to
    ensure interoperability between U.S. and
    Australian GPS augmentation systems
  • U.S. Coast Guard NAVCEN posts a daily Position
    Dilution of Precision (PDOP) report in response
    to Australias concerns over planned GPS outages

27
International Committee on Global Navigation
Satellite Systems (ICG)?
  • Emerged from 3rd UN Conference on the Exploration
    and Peaceful Uses of Outer Space July 1999
  • Promote the use of GNSS and its integration into
    infrastructures, particularly in developing
    countries
  • Encourage compatibility and interoperability
    among global and regional systems
  • Members include
  • GNSS Providers (U.S., EU, Russia, China, India,
    Japan)
  • Other Member States of the United Nations
  • International organizations/associations

http//www.unoosa.org/oosa/en/SAP/gnss/icg.html
28
Fourth Meeting of the ICG St. Petersburg,
Russia, September 2009
  • Working Group on Compatibility and
    Interoperability will continue working on these
    important principles and their definition
  • Process of seeking users and manufacturers views
    on interoperability will continue workshop held
    yesterday
  • Adopted new principle on transparency Every
    provider should publish documentation that
    describes signal and system information, policies
    of provision and minimum levels of performance
    for its open services
  • Established Time and Geodesy Task Forces to
    pursue traceability to international standards,
    enhancing interoperability for the user
  • Agreed to support a proposal for a multi-GNSS
    Demonstration Project in the Asia/Oceania region

Fifth Meeting of ICG will be jointly hosted by
Italy and the European Union, October 18 22,
2010 in Turin, Italy
29
APEC GIT Cooperation
  • The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
    forum facilitates economic growth, cooperation,
    trade and investment in the Asia-Pacific
  • region for its 21 member economies
  • The APEC GNSS Implementation Team (GIT) has
    focused on air traffic control and aviation
    issues
  • The group has broadened its focus to the
    application of GNSS in all transportation sectors
  • Additional participation of GNSS government and
    industry experts at APEC GIT-13 at Singapore in
    July 2009 project proposal made on surface
    transportation
  • APEC GIT-14 meeting will be held in Seattle,
    Washington, June 21-24, 2010

30
Summary
  • GPS is highly dependable and its performance
    continues to improve
  • U.S. Space-based PNT policy encourages worldwide
    use of civil GPS and augmentations
  • Policy stability and transparency improve
    industry confidence and investment
  • The U.S. is actively engaged in bilateral, and
    multilateral GNSS cooperation
  • As new regional and global navigation satellite
    systems are emerging, interoperability is the key
    to success for all

31
Contact Information
  • David A. Turner
  • Deputy Director
  • Space and Advanced Technology
  • U.S. Department of State
  • OES/SAT, SA-23, Suite 410
  • Washington, D.C. 20520
  • 202.663.2397 (office)
  • 202.320.1972 (mobile)
  • TurnerDA_at_state.gov
  • http//www.state.gov/g/oes/sat/
  • http//pnt.gov/international/

32
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