IRNSS
The first of the IRNSS satellites is scheduled go into space aboard the PSLV on July 1.
About nine years back, the Indian Space Research
Organisation’s scientists and engineers began to look at the possibility
of establishing a navigation satellite system for the country, rather
like America’s Global Positioning System (GPS).
Like
the GPS, the Indian satellites would continually transmit data that
allowed suitably equipped receivers to establish their location with
considerable precision. The GPS requires a constellation of 24 orbiting
satellites, supported by a global network of ground stations, to cover
every part of the world. That kind of global system is expensive.
ISRO
had a more limited goal — creating a system wholly in India's control
for providing navigation signals over this country and surrounding
areas. The cost of such a system was a major consideration.
“We
looked at many thousands of configurations,” said one person who was
involved in those early studies. The configuration that was finally
chosen for the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS)
required just seven satellites.
All seven IRNSS
satellites will be at a height of about 36,000 km, taking a whole day to
circle the Earth. Three of the satellites will be placed over the
equator, in what is known as the geostationary orbit, where they match
the Earth's rotation and therefore appear from the ground to remain at a
fixed position in the sky. The remaining four satellites will be in
pairs in two inclined geosynchronous orbits. From the ground, these
satellites will appear to travel in figures of ‘8’ during the course of a
day.
The project to establish the IRNSS at a cost of
Rs. 1,420 crores was approved by the Union Government in June 2006. The
primary service area for the system covers India and up to 1,500 km
beyond its borders.
If necessary, the coverage area
around India could be enhanced by adding four satellites, the ISRO
Chairman, K. Radhakrishnan, told The Hindu.
The first of the IRNSS satellites is scheduled go into space aboard the
Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle on July 1.
Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle on July 1.
Navigation
satellites periodically transmit their precise position in orbit along
with the exact time when each transmission takes place. Since these
microwave signals travel at the speed of light, the delay between a
signal’s transmission and its reception allows a receiving device to
compute its distance from the satellite involved. With data from four
satellites, the receiver can then work out its own position.
Navigation
satellites therefore need to carry extremely accurate clocks. Each
IRNSS satellite is equipped with three rubidium atomic clocks, which
keep precise time down to a few tenths of a trillionth of a second in an
hour. Although currently these sophisticated clocks are imported,
research efforts to make them indigenously are in progress.
But
for the atomic clocks to function properly, they have to be kept at
within one degree Celsius of their optimum operating temperature. They
must also be protected from excessive vibration and electromagnetic
interference. The IRNSS satellites had therefore to be designed to
ensure such an environment.
Using the time provided
by the clocks and taking into account the satellite’s own position in
orbit, an onboard navigation payload generates the signal that will be
broadcast.
IRNSS satellites transmit signals in two
microwave frequency bands known as L5 and S. The system will provide two
types of services, the ‘Standard Positioning Service’ that will be
accessible to anyone and an encrypted ‘Restricted Service’ that will be
available only to the military and other government-authorised users.
The
system “is expected to provide a position accuracy better than 20
metres in the primary service area,” according to an ISRO brochure.
However, the space agency’s technical personnel believe its actual
performance is likely to be better than that and match single-frequency
U.S. GPS receivers’ position accuracy of about 15 metres.
Those
who wish to use the IRNSS will need receivers equipped to pick up and
utilise the data transmitted by the Indian satellite system. A standard
GPS receiver will not do.
ISRO's Space Applications
Centre at Ahmedabad, along with industry, were in the process of
developing suitable receivers, said the space agency’s chairman.
Keywords: ISRO, PSLV, IRNSS, Sriharikota, K. Radhakrishnan, Regional Navigation Satellite System, Satish Dhawan Space Centre
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