Galileo Satellites Locate
Aircraft by GPS
The European Space Agency’s Galileo
satellites recently achieved their first successful in-flight tracking of a test
machine using aircraft-generated longitude, latitude and altitude. A pair of
Galileo test receivers was used aboard the aircraft, the same kind currently
employed for Galileo field-testing. The evaluations were scheduled during
periods in November when all four Galileo satellites were visible in the sky.
Positioning fixes require at least four satellites. The receivers fixed the
airplane’s position and determined key variables such as the position, velocity
and timing accuracy, time to first fix, signal-t- noise ratio, range error and
range-rate error. Test flights were also conducted during takeoff,
straight-and-level flight at a constant speed, circling maneuvers,
straight-and-level flight with alternating speeds, turns with a maximum bank
angle of 60 degrees, pull-ups and push-overs, as well as approaches and
landings. The satellites also allowed positioning to be carried out at speeds up
to 245 knots. The test took place over the Gilze-Rijen Air Force Base in the
Netherlands and was overseen by the ESA, the National Aerospace Laboratory of
the Netherlands with the support of Eurocontrol, the European Organization for
the Safety of Air Navigation, and Dutch air navigation service provider LVNL.
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