Galileo navigation satellites
28may12
intro
17may12 galfacts sees the galileo satellites
Intro (top)
The galileo satellites are the European global
navigation satellite system
There are currently (may2012) 4 satellites in orbit:
Name
|
Launch
date
|
notes
|
GIOVE-A
|
2005
|
|
GIOVE-B
|
2008
|
|
GALILEO-PFM
(IOV-1)
|
21oct2011
|
IOV: InOrbitValidation
|
GALILEO-FM2
(IOV-2_
|
21oct2011
|
|
Galileo system
specifications. F0=10.23MHz,14hour orbit.
freq
|
Nm
|
chiprate
Mcps
|
Notes
|
1164-1189
|
E5a
115*Fo
|
Fo
115E5a cycles/chip
10.23MHz
|
carrier:1176.45. Also gpsL5
|
1189-1214
|
E5b
118*Fo
|
Fo
118E5b cycles/chip
10.23 MHz
|
carrier:1207.14.Also glonass
L3
|
1164-1189
|
ALTBOC
|
10.23 MHz
|
covers E5a and E5b.
cfr:1191.975
|
1260-1300
|
E6A,B
125*Fo
|
E6A unknown
E6B Fo
250E6 cycles/chip
5.115 MHz
|
1278.75 center. Commerical
service . coded
|
1544-1544.2
|
|
|
SAR downlink
|
1559-1563
|
E2
|
|
|
1563-1587
|
L1
|
|
shared with gps L1
|
1587-1591
|
E1
|
Fo/10 (Achan)
616L1 cycles/chip
2.5575 MHz
Fo/10 (B&C chan)
1540cyles/chip
1.023 MHz
|
carrier: 1575.42
|
17may12 galfacts sees the galileo
satellites (top)
On 17may12 project a2130 (galfacts) received
interference from the galileo satellite galileo-pfm (they saw it
on more than one night)
A2130 setup:
- They used the alfa receiver with the mock spectrometers.
- 7 beams
- full stokes
- 2x 172MHz 4096 channel full stokes bands
- Band cfr: 1300, 1450 MHz
- spectra sampled once a millisecond
- The dome moves from 2 to 19.6 degrees and back down at .025
deg/sec with the azimuth sitting at the meridian.
How close does galileo get to the AO during may12?
The plots show the galileo satellite passes over
arecibo for 7may12 - 31may12 (.ps) (.pdf):
- Each frame shows the closest passes for galileo at 4:00am
local time
- The horizontal axis is the source azimuth of the satellite (As
seen from AO). The azimuth for the dome will be 180 deg
different when pointing at the same location.
- The vertical scale is the zenith angle of the satellite (az
seen from AO).
- The labels on the right side of each frame contain:
- SatelliteName yymmdd hh:mm:ss when
this satellite reaches the minimum za.
- Page 4, 2nd frame is the satellite pass for the a2130
observation on 17may12 (galileo-pfm
red)
- The red color galileo-pfm reached it's lowest za at 04:18:00
ast.
- This satellite rose in the north and passed almost overhead
then setting in the south.
The interference:
The dynamic
spectra using stokes I showed the satellite as it went overhead
(.gif)
- The spectra have been averaged to .3 seconds
- I used the first 700 spectra to compute the bandpass
correction.
- The total power in 1315-1325 was used to flatten image in
time. This got rid of the za dependence of the tys.
- The rfi is centered at 1278.7 MHz and has side lobes that can
be seen out beyond 1300 MHz and below 1260 MHz (although
some of them may be instrumental).
The plots show the spectra and
angular separation (.ps) (.pdf)
- Page 1: the spectrum at the peak:
- Top: linear spectral plot:
- .3 second integration at 04:24:51 ast.
- The signal gets up to 8.5 Tsys(about 30K) in the
42Khz channels).
- bottom: Same plot on a db scale.
- The side lobes 10 MHz away are about 4 to 6db down from
the peak.
- Page 2: total power in 5 MHz about 1278.7 MHz.
- Top: total power vs hour of day (ast)
- Bottom: angular separation (great circle degrees) between
satellite and AO beam.
- The satellite got to about 4.5 degrees of the main beam.
The peak occurred about 4.8 degrees from the ao beam.
Summary:
- Galileo-pfm was seen in the a2130 data on 17may12.
- it got to about 7.5*Tsys in a 42Khz channel.
- The rfi was centered at 1278.7 MHz.
- It extended above 1300 MHz and down to 1220 MHz
- The satellite came right overhead AO. It came within 4.5
degrees of the galfacts pointing direction.
- The satellite passes seem to repeat every 10 days (at least in
the plots i made..) With a 14 hour orbits, they should repeat
every 7 days.
processing:
x101/120527/galileorfi.pro
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