World of Satellite-News Updates

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May 6th, 2013
University Of Colorado Boulder...Instrumental In Building Instruments For NOAA’s Weather Assessment

“We are excited because we developed and built all new technology for the EXIS instrument package for the GOES-R satellite...”
A multimillion dollar University of Colorado Boulder instrument package to study space weather has passed its pre-installation testing and is ready to be incorporated onto a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration satellite for a 2015 launch.

Designed and built by CU’s Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, the instrument suite known as the Extreme Ultraviolet and X-ray Irradiance Sensors, or EXIS, is the first of four identical packages that will fly on four NOAA weather satellites slated for launch beginning in 2015. CU-Boulder’s EXIS will measure energy output from the sun that can affect satellite operations, telecommunications, GPS navigation and power grids on Earth as part of NOAA’s next generation Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites, or GOES-R.

NASA issued the contract with CU-Boulder on behalf of NOAA to design, build, test, deliver and scientifically support the four instrument packages for roughly $95 million, said LASP Senior Research Scientist Frank Eparvier, principal investigator on the project. The EXIS instrument package will be delivered to Lockheed Martin Space Systems Co. in Littleton, Colorado, for installation on the spacecraft in the coming months.

“We are excited because we developed and built all new technology for the EXIS instrument package for the GOES-R satellite,” said Eparvier. “We already have a close working relationship with NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center in Boulder, and these extremely sensitive instruments should help scientists better understand solar events and help to mitigate the effects of space weather on Earth.”


EXIS consists of two LASP instruments, including XRS, an X-ray sensor that can determine the strength of solar flares and provide rapid alerts to scientists, said Eparvier. Large solar flares, equivalent to the explosion of millions of atomic bombs, can trigger “proton events” that send charged atomic particles flying off the sun and into Earth’s atmosphere in just minutes. They can damage satellites, trigger radio blackouts and even threaten the health of astronauts by penetrating spacecraft shielding, he said.

“The XRS gives the first alert that a solar flare is occurring, providing NOAA with details on its timing, magnitude and direction within seconds,” said Eparvier. “We call it the ‘money’ instrument.” The newest version of the XRS designed and built by LASP for the GOES-R satellite program has a larger range of sensitivity than previous GOES X-ray sensors, he said.

The second EXIS instrument, EUVS, will monitor solar output in the extreme ultraviolet portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, which is completely absorbed by Earth’s upper atmosphere, said Eparvier. When the extreme UV light wavelengths penetrate the upper atmosphere during active periods on the sun, they can break apart, ionize and heat the molecules in the upper atmosphere, changing the property of the atmosphere through which satellites fly and radio waves propagate, he said.

Not only can rapid fluctuations in extreme UV wavelengths from the sun ionize the upper atmosphere and interfere with communications like cell phones and GPS signals, they can create satellite drag, causing spacecraft to slowly fall out of orbit and burn up months or years before such events are anticipated, said Eparvier.

“Modern technology has made us vulnerable to extreme variations in space weather that can have significant effects on Earth communications,” he said. “Extreme solar activity can cause problems for power companies all around the world, for example, in part because they all are interconnected.”

NOAA’s GOES satellites are a series of weather satellites that help scientists make timely and accurate weather forecasts. Two GOES satellites are now in geostationary orbit at a height of about 22,000 miles, with one focusing on the east part of the Americas overlapping with another focusing on the west. NOAA also keeps a third, spare GOES in the same orbit in the event of a satellite failure. Satellites in geostationary orbits complete one revolution in the same amount of time it takes for the Earth to rotate once on its polar axis, allowing them to “stare” at a portion of Earth.

In addition to the GOES contract, LASP is receiving $18 million from NASA for instruments and electronics flying aboard the Van Allen Probes mission launched in 2012 to study Earth’s radiation belts. LASP also designed and built a $32 million instrument for NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory that launched in 2010, and designed, built and operates the $100 million SORCE solar satellite from campus.

“LASP is the one-stop shop for all solar irradiation instruments and measurements,” said Eparvier.

CU-Boulder is the first university to contract with NOAA on a GOES satellite mission. More than 100 LASP personnel ranging from scientists and engineers to technicians, programmers and students have worked on the EXIS program since 2006. CU-Boulder’s LASP will support EXIS on the four NOAA GOES satellite missions through spacecraft integration, testing, launch and commissioning, said Eparvier.

“One of the biggest challenges for us was to design and build the EXIS instruments for longevity,” said Eparvier. “Each has to be built to withstand five years of storage on Earth, five years of ‘on orbit’ storage and 10 years of operation. These instruments have to meet performance requirements 20 years after delivery.”

Each instrument package—which is roughly the size of a large microwave oven and weighs 66 pounds—is about three times heavier than normal due to extra shielding that protects them from high-energy particle penetration, said Eparvier. Rather than build the instrument suites individually, the specific parts for each are built at the same time to save money. LASP’s Mike Anfinson is the project manager for EXIS.

NOAA manages the GOES-R Series Program — which consists of the GOES-R, GOES-S, GOES-T and GOES-U satellites — through an integrated NOAA-NASA program office that is staffed with personnel from NOAA and NASA.
 
May 3rd, 2013
Here's Looking @ Earth... Ventura Conflagration (Imagery—NOAA Environmental Visualization Laboratory)

A series of wildfires in Ventura County, California (northwest of Los Angeles), have burned more than...
...6,500 acres as of May 3rd, according to the U.S. Forest Service. The Suomi NPP satellite passed over the blaze on May 2, 2013, around 21:30 Z, capturing this high resolution imagery with its visible and infrared energy sensors.


Image is courtesy of NOAA/NASA.
A stream of smoke is clearly visible moving west over the ocean, as are the heat signatures from the active fires areas. The fires are expected to be contained by May 4th, and fire weather conditions in the region seem to be improving, according to the NOAA Storm Prediction Center.
 
May 6th, 2013
Steve Birnbaum Rewarded For Disaster Preparedness + Response... Honored @ The White House

...”and that robust communication networks catalyze optimal response and recovery by providing both survivors and community leaders access to information and resources.”

The U.S. White House honored Steve Birnbaum, the Global VSAT Forum (GVF) Chairman of Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Response (HA/DR) Programs, for providing expert and innovative assistance that enabled a locally-driven community response through the use of High-Throughput Satellite (HTS) communications during the Hurricane Sandy relief operations and set the stage for more effective disaster preparedness worldwide.

In the aftermath of the massive hurricane that struck the U.S. in October 2012, Mr. Birnbaum was deployed by GVF to work as an inaugural member of the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Innovation Team which—with support from GVF Members—concentrated combined efforts in the areas most devastated by “Superstorm Sandy”.

“The White House’s recognition of GVF’s HA/DR Chairman as a ‘Champion of Change’ is a tribute to Steve Birnbaum’s dedication and sets the stage for expanded use of satellite communications for disaster preparedness and relief throughout the world as a tool to empower grassroots community-led response and recovery,” said David Hartshorn, GVF Secretary General.

Applying his knowledge of satellite communications, Mr. Birnbaum helped implement FEMA’s “Whole of Community” approach to disaster response, which articulates that an effective response to a disaster requires the participation of the entire community, and that robust communication networks catalyze optimal response and recovery by providing both survivors and community leaders access to information and resources. Mr. Birnbaum and his colleagues put these principles into practice during the relief effort. He and the FEMA Innovation Team rallied local community leaders, non-government organizations (NGOs), government, industry, volunteers and GVF Members to deploy temporary disaster networks in the Rockaways, Redhook and Staten Island.

“This just-in-time telecommunications then empowered communities to coordinate their own volunteers, aid and donations,” according to a White House statement. “Their accomplishments soon facilitated the spawning of new, grass-roots community outreach initiatives, such as a cadre of FEMA Corps volunteers who went door-to-door with newly-networked tablet computers to register survivors for assistance at their doorstep.”

Through Steve's participation in the FEMA Innovation Team, and with support from GVF Members such as ViaSat, Hughes, and Cisco, whether it was for projects the Innovation Team was supporting, or in response to requests from others through the GVF Disaster Preparedness Registry, Steve supported the most devastated communities by utilizing new satellite systems and services to more quickly deploy communications and spread information between organizations and individuals.

"This is a great opportunity to recognize the importance of communications and information after disasters, and a strong validation that the GVF Disaster Preparedness Program is on the right path. I am deeply honored to be a part of this recognition," said Steve Birnbaum.

Mr. Birnbaum will provide a lessons-learned debriefing during GVF’s “High Throughput Satellite Roundtable”, which will be held on May 21-22, 2013, at the Renaissance Downtown Hotel in Washington, D.C. GVF and its partner EMP are organizing the event as a community service, and attendance is available on a complimentary basis for pre-registrants, on a first-come/first-served basis. To pre-register contact [email protected] or go to.

During the debriefing, Mr. Birnbaum will also provide an update on progress of the GVF Disaster Preparedness Registry —including communications industry leaders such as ViaSat, Hughes and Cisco—and related GVF efforts that have also been applied in support of government and humanitarian disaster-relief efforts in Africa, Latin America, and Asia.
 
May 6th, 2013
World Surveillance Group Inc... Using A Better BiB... (UAV | UAS)

World Surveillance Group Inc. (OTCQB: WSGI), a developer of lighter-than-air aerostats and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAS), has announced that, with...
...the support of its wholly owned subsidiary Lighter Than Air Systems Corp. (LTAS), the operational team has delivered the second Blimp in a Box™ (BiB) aerostat system to the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD). The delivery included demonstrations and testing of the BiB as well as additional training sessions for soldiers at the Fort Polk, Louisiana, base as the systems are prepared for future military exercises. Formal DoD acceptance of the BiB system was issued following completion of the testing, training and a complete inventory accounting.

WSGI's and LTAS' operations were in cooperation with WSGI's wholly owned subsidiary Global Telesat Corp., who was awarded the contract from the DoD for a set of BiB systems in January 2013. The contract award included on-location support for technical fact gathering, installation and training for the BiB systems. The BiB is a self-contained mobile tactical aerostat system that can be towed from the back of a standard vehicle and is designed to provide semi-persistent, mobile intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) at the platoon level. Each BiB system can provide mobile ISR for days, weeks or months with the aerostat system only requiring a fifteen minute recovery and re-launch and a helium top-off every 24-36 hours.
 
May 6th, 2013
Espial... A Patented Proclamation (SatBroadcasting™—IPTV)

Espia has been granted U.S. Patent No. 8,286,217 by...
...the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. The patent covers technology that enables service providers to implement fast channel change (FCC) on STBs and TVs powered by IPTV networks. Together with the current patent grant, Espial now has patents with more than 80 claims that specifically cover the fast channel change technology area.

"Espial is honored to be awarded another patent by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office that further expands our intellectual property portfolio," said Jaison Dolvane, president and CEO, Espial. "Service providers globally are migrating to deliver live TV over IP networks, and a fast channel change user experience is crucial to enabling a successful transition. Espial's innovations in video over IP date back to products we have been commercially deploying since the early 2000s, and we continue to invest in further developments."
 
May 6th, 2013
Harmonic... Optimized For Netflix (SatBroadcasting™—Transcoder)

Harmonic (NASDAQ: HLIT) introduced predefined transcoding presets for its...
...ProMedia™ Carbon file-based transcoder that efficiently transform video and audio content into media formats optimized for Netflix, the world's largest Internet television network. Powered by Harmonic's Rhozet® technology, ProMedia Carbon facilitates the conversion of media content into a massive array of acquisition, editing, broadcast, web, and mobile formats. The predefined transcoding presets designed specifically for Netflix include SD/HD and MPEG-2 I-Frame video formats at various frame rates, as well as stereo and 5.1 surround sound audio.

The robust ProMedia Carbon also handles a variety of critical operations including PAL/NTSC conversion, logo insertion, color space conversion, color correction, and closed-captions extraction. Through a user-friendly interface or API, operators have complete control over every aspect of the transcoding process. Content providers also have the flexibility to deploy ProMedia Carbon as a stand-alone application or as part of a scalable, multi-node, fully automated transcoding farm under the control of the Harmonic WFS™ file-based workflow engine.
 
May 6th, 2013
Xytech’s Finger Is On The PGA Pulse With MediaPulse

"We designed our platform to support just the sort of work they are delivering."
Xytech, provider of facility management software for the broadcast and media services industries, announced that PGA TOUR Entertainment has chosen MediaPulse to support its wide range of services, which include commercial production, live event coverage, creative services, and licensed golf footage.


PGA TOUR Entertainment, headquartered in St. Augustine, FL, is a world-class, innovative entertainment company and the full service content production arm of the PGA TOUR. Established in 1985, the Emmy® Award winning company has produced numerous television series and specials for broadcast, cable and digital platforms. PGA TOUR Entertainment’s 32,000 square foot facility offers North Florida’s premier high definition edit facilities, state-of-the-art graphics, animation, audio sound design, and satellite and fiber transmission facilities. After a careful review of available solutions by PGA TOUR Entertainment, MediaPulse was chosen to support operations across an extensive roster of schedules, deliverables, facilities and project management.


David Dukes, Senior Director of Technical Operations for PGA TOUR Entertainment saw MediaPulse as a strong solution to their multi-faceted needs. “Sports entertainment organizations are uniquely focused on so many areas these days. Commercial and long form programming, live events, broadcast, and digital media are now all part of the mix for us. We found MediaPulse to be a perfect fit for our need to manage production staff, project schedules and reporting.“

Greg Dolan, COO of Xytech, said, “PGA TOUR Entertainment is at the top of the list of the great organizations we have had the pleasure of working with in the past year. It’s been a wonderful experience putting MediaPulse in place for this terrific group of professionals. We designed our platform to support just the sort of work they are delivering.”
 
May 6th, 2013
Rohde & Schwarz... Analysis Bandwidth Doubled (Analyzer)

The new high-end R&S FSW50 signal and spectrum analyzer is ideal in the development, testing, verification and production of...
...transmitters and components such as those used in radar applications and satellite and military communications systems. The analyzer covers the frequency range from 2Hz through 50GHz. Using harmonic mixers from Rohde & Schwarz, the frequency range can be extended to 110GHz.

In addition, Rohde & Schwarz has doubled the analysis bandwidth of the R&S FSW50 from 160 to 320MHz. This value allows the demodulation of wideband signals such as radar chirps up to 50GHz. In the past, measuring these kinds of wideband signals often required complicated test setups consisting of a digital oscilloscope and a downconverter. The R&S FSW50 not only simplifies the test setup; it also offers significantly wider dynamic range and is easier to calibrate.

Featuring wide RF dynamic range, high measurement speed and numerous measurement functions, the R&S FSW50 is an excellent microwave analyzer that is particularly useful in industrial and university R&D laboratories. Aerospace and defense calibration labs requiring a maximum input frequency of 50 GHz or high repeatability of results will also benefit from the instrument. The low DANL of –164 dBm/Hz in the microwave range with activated preamplifier allows even the smallest of spurious emissions to be detected such as those found in radar signals. The analyzer offers high sensitivity close to the carrier even at 50GHz, featuring a phase noise of -114 dBc (Hz) at 10 kHz from the carrier.

The integrated multistandard radio analyzer (MSRA) function of the R&S FSW50 makes it possible to measure spectrum and modulation parameters of differently modulated signals, including their correlation in time. This makes it very easy to analyze how different signals affect each other and provides an efficient means of identifying errors caused by this interaction. The 12.1-inch (31cm) touchscreen interface makes operation very convenient, especially for complex measurement tasks. The MultiView function allows users to simultaneously display multiple measurements and different applications on the screen.

The high-end R&S FSW50 signal and spectrum analyzer is now available from Rohde & Schwarz. The 320MHz analysis bandwidth will be available soon.
 
May 8th, 2013
International Launch Services (ILS) + Eutelsat... Power Push Planned (Launch)

May 14th is set as the launch date for the EUTELSAT 3D communications satellite by...


...by International Launch Services (ILS) at the Baikonur Cosmodrome aboard a Proton M launch vehicle from launch pad 39. Built by Thales Alenia Space using their Spacebus 4000 platform, the EUTELSAT 3D will bring resources, reach and flexibility for high-growth professional video, data, telecom and broadband services at 3 degrees East, an orbital position that sits at the crossroads of Europe, Africa and Asia. Through a configuration of Ku- and Ka-band transponders connected to three footprints, Eutelsat’s new satellite will serve customers in Europe, North Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia. A fourth footprint in the Ku-band will serve customers in sub-Saharan Africa. EUTELSAT 3D will be located at 3 degrees East until the launch in 2014 of EUTELSAT 3B that will further extend coverage to South America and will subsequently continue service at 7 derees East.


EUTELSAT 3D entering the thermal vaccum chamber for testing,
Copyright Thales Alenia Space/Serge-Henri. The Proton M launch vehicle, using a 5-burn Breeze M mission design, will lift off from Pad 39 at Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, with the EUTELSAT 3D satellite on board. The first three stages of the Proton will use a standard ascent profile to place the orbital unit (Breeze M upper stage and the EUTELSAT 3D satellite) into a sub-orbital trajectory. From this point in the mission, the Breeze M will perform planned mission maneuvers to advance the orbital unit first to a circular parking orbit, then to an intermediate orbit, followed by a transfer orbit, and finally to a geosynchronous transfer orbit. Separation of the EUTELSAT 3D satellite is scheduled to occur approximately 9 hours, 13 minutes after liftoff.
 
May 7th, 2013
Arianespace... The Trio Make For Space... (Launch)

Arianespace’s light-lift Vega launcher performed an intricate mission from the Spaceport...


...successfully delivering three satellite passengers at two different Sun-synchronous orbital altitudes during a flight lasting just over two hours. It was Vega’s second mission from French Guiana, and further demonstrated the capabilities of a vehicle that completes Arianespace’s launcher family—joining its medium-lift Soyuz and heavyweight Ariane 5.


Under a steady rain, Vega’s P80 solid propellant first stage is ignited to begin the light-lift launcher’s 2-hour mission from the Spaceport to deploy the Proba-V, VNREDSat-1 and ESTCube-1 satellite payloads.
Photo courtesy of Arianespace. “This launch confirms the full functionality of Vega, which is totally operational and ready to offer the best service to our customers,” said Stéphane Israël, Arianespace’s new Chairman and CEO. “With its three launchers operational at the Spaceport, Arianespace is the only launch services provider capable of placing all types of satellite payloads into all types of orbits.”
This mission, designated Flight VV02 in Arianespace’s launcher family numbering system, included numerous “firsts” for Vega. Arianespace assumed Vega operations responsibility for the first time on this mission, which followed the lightweight launcher’s February 2012 qualification flight performed under responsibility of the European Space Agency (ESA). The launch also marked the initial use of a multi-payload dispenser called VESPA (Vega Secondary Payload Adapter), which carried the Proba-V satellite atop it, while the VNREDSat-1 and ESTCube-1 spacecraft were installed inside the system. Additionally, VREDSat-1 became the first commercial satellite lofted by Vega. This mission was also the debut of the Europe Space Agency’s VERTA (Vega Research and Technology Accompaniment) flight series to demonstrate the launcher’s flexibility and versatility.

Lifting off on May 6th in rainy French Guiana conditions, Vega departed the Spaceport’s SLV launch facility at the planned precise moment of liftoff at 11:06:31 p.m. and disappeared into the cloud cover. After the initial powered phase performed by Vega’s three solid propellant stages (designated the P80, Zefiro-23 and Zefiro-9), the launcher’s AVUM upper stage was ignited for four separate burns during the payload deployment sequence. A final burn was planned to deorbit the upper stage—ensuring it does not remain as a debris threat. The AVUM has a bipropellant propulsion system to provide orbital injection, along with a monopropellant propulsion system for roll and attitude control.

The Proba-V satellite was released first during the flight profile, with this passenger to operate in a Sun-synchronous orbit of 820km. Proba-V (which is named from the acronym: Project for On-Board Autonomy and Vegetation) is part of the European Space Agency’s Proba spacecraft series that supports the development of new space technologies. Its primary objective is to continue the mission performed by Earth-monitoring Vegetation instruments carried on the Spot 4 and 5 satellites—which also were launched by Arianespace—and is designed to offer global coverage every two days for data on the influence of climate, the management of resources for surface water, monitoring of changes in agricultural zones, and food security estimates. Proba-V was built by QinetiQ Space Belgium, and weighed approximately 140kg. at launch.

The VNREDSat-1 optical satellite was separated in the second step of today’s mission, providing a resource for Vietnam’s initiative to create an infrastructure enabling better studies of climate change effects, improving predictions for natural disasters and optimizing natural resource management for the country. This 115kg. spacecraft was built by Astrium on behalf of the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology (VAST).

Completing the mission was Vega’s deployment of ESTCube-1, Estonia’s first satellite. The 1.33kg. cubesat will extend a small conductive tether for testing of electric solar wind sail technologies, and also is to help establish an Estonian infrastructure for future space projects. It resulted from a collaboration of students from Tartu University, Estonian Aviation Academy, Tallinn University of Technology and University of Life Sciences, and was developed in conjunction with the Finnish Meteorological Institute and the German Space Center (DLR).

Both VNREDSat-1 and ESTCube-1 were released for their operational lifetimes in Sun-synchronous orbits, bringing Vega’s 2-hour flight to a successful conclusion on May 7.


Vega is ready for its second mission from the SLV launch site. The four large towers protect against lightning strikes, while the facility’s mobile gantry has been rolled back to the parked position.
Photo courtesy of Arianespace. Vega is tailored for launching 1,500kg.-class payloads to a reference altitude of 700km., providing Arianespace with a vehicle capable of accommodating scientific, governmental and commercial satellites. It was developed in an European Space Agency program financed by Italy, France, Germany, Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland and Sweden. The Vega launcher’s design authority and prime contractor is Italy’s ELV company, a joint venture of Avio and the Italian Space Agency.
Arianespace’s next mission from the Spaceport is scheduled for June 5th, using an Ariane 5 to orbit the European Automated Transfer Vehicle named after Albert Einstein. It will be followed by a Soyuz flight—also scheduled in June—with the first four satellites for O3b Networks. Completing Arianespace’s current launcher family activity at the Spaceport are preparations for another Ariane 5 mission, planned for the second half of July with the Alphasat and Insat-3D satellites.
 
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