Title: U'S' SpaceBased PNT Policy, Programs, and International Cooperation
1U.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
2Overview
- U.S. Space-based PNT Policy
- GPS Augmentation Programs Status
- International Cooperation Activities
2
3U.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
4U.S. Space-Based PNT Organization Structure
WHITE HOUSE
Ad HocWorking Groups
5U.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
7GPS 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
8SPS 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
9Recent 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
10GPS 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
11GPS 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
12GPS 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
13FAA GPS Augmentation Programs
14WAAS Architecture
38 Reference Stations
3 Master Stations
4 Ground Earth Stations
4F3 98 W
(21) Geostationary Satellite Links
2 Operational Control Centers
15Global SBAS Coverage
16Local 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
17LAAS/GBAS International Efforts
Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Malaga, Spain
Sydney, Australia
Frankfurt, Germany
Bremen, Germany
18Nationwide Differential GPS
- Expansion of maritime differential GPS (DGPS)
network to cover terrestrial United States - Built to international standard adopted in 50
countries
19National 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
21U.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
22Current International Signal Plans
Note GINS modulations TBD
22
23The 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
24Bilateral 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
25Bilateral 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
26U.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
27International 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
28Fourth 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
29APEC 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
30Summary
- 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
31Contact 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/
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