A disaster response team in Florida calls for emergency aid using a
mobile phone, even though cell antennas and networks in the area have
been destroyed by a hurricane. On the same day, a soldier in a Mid-East
war zone picks up a mobile phone and talks to her daughter about her
first day of school. Mobile communications in remote areas beyond
cellular and landline service take place around the world every day at
petroleum companies, mining operations, commercial fishing boats,
construction sites, utilities, forestry services, government, military
and individual users hiking, mountain climbing or otherwise moving about
in extremely remote locations.
Such voice calls – as well as
Internet data connections –are made on mobile telephones that connect to
orbiting satellites instead of terrestrial cell towers. A leader in
this rapidly evolving telecommunications field is Globalstar – the
world’s largest provider of mobile satellite voice and data services
with over 375,000 subscribers in 120 countries around the world. The
company uses a constellation of 48 low-Earth-orbit satellites circling
the globe about every 90 minutes at an altitude of 1,414 km. Each
satellite has a set of solar panels for electrical power and two
earth-facing antenna arrays for two-way communications.
Like
small relay stations in the sky, the satellites receive signals, then
amplify and transmit them back to gateway ground stations that process
voice or data calls and distribute them to local telephone networks or
the Internet. Several satellites pickup the same signal, preventing call
interruption by handing off communication to one another through the
Globalstar network when phone signals are blocked by buildings or
terrain. The constellation and ground network currently provide coverage
to most inhabited places of the Earth, excluding only south-central
Asia and central and southern Africa. Globalstar has plans to extend
service to these areas in the coming years.
Nearing the end of
their operational life, the original Globalstar satellites are scheduled
to be replaced starting in the third quarter of 2010, when a
three-stage Soyuz rocket will lift the first six second-generation
satellites into orbit.
These new satellites are designed with
greater reliability, increased power and a life expectancy of 15 years –
double that of the first-generation hardware. The new constellation and
the upgraded ground network that will follow are intended to provide
more reliable service and faster data speeds required to support
next-generation Internet-protocol-based services.
Satellite assembly, integration and test
Prime
contractor for this huge project is Thales Alenia Space, Europe’s
largest satellite manufacturer. Being at the forefront of orbital
infrastructures, Thales Alenia Space is a joint venture between Thales
(67 percent) and Finmeccanica (33 persent) and forms with Telespazio a
Space Alliance. Thales Alenia Space is a worldwide reference in telecom,
radar and optical earth observation, defense and security as well as
navigation and science. Thales Alenia Space has 11industrial sites in 4
European countries (France, Italy, Spain and Belgium) with over 7,200
employees worldwide.
Thales Alenia Space has primary
responsibility for the design, manufacture, test and delivery of 48
second-generation satellites for the Globalstar constellation. The
company is also upgrading the Globalstar Satellite Operations and
Control Center as well as Telemetry and Command Units and In-Orbit Test
hardware and software located in Globalstar gateway ground stations
around the world.
Technicians
work on the assembly line of second-generation Globalstar satellites at
the Thales Alenia Space offices in Rome. Globalstar is a low Earth orbit
(LEO) satellite constellation for satellite phone and low-speed data
communications.
With Europe’s only integrated manufacturing and test center for
satellite assembly and integration, Thales Alenia’s three Assembly,
Integration and Test (AIT) Centers are located in Rome, Italy, and in
Cannes and Toulouse, France. The multi-site capability is particularly
well-suited for handling large satellite constellation projects, with
specialized capabilities for transporting sensitive hardware between
facilities and for delivering assembled satellites and related data
acquisition systems directly to launch sites.
One of the critical
roles of these facilities is testing satellites to ensure that highly
sensitive components can withstand the thunderous acoustics and jarring
vibrations of vehicle launch. Engineers focus on the thousands of
individual parts and subsystems that absolutely must remain intact,
connected and fully operational – delicate structural components
deploying solar arrays and antennas, for example, as well as highly
sensitive and complex on-board electronic systems with interconnected
circuit boards, semiconductor chips, signal processors, and other
components. Such testing is critical in the satellite business, since
failure of anyone of these parts can jeopardize an entire mission.
All
three AIT Centers perform various phases of these environmental tests.
For the Globalstar project, sine vibration and acoustic qualification
tests are done in Cannes. Acoustic flight model tests performed just
prior to satellite assembly and delivery to the launch pad are done in
Rome. Verification testing on the antennas is done in Toulouse, France
and L’Aquila, Italy.