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Indian Regional Navigational Satellite System



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The Indian Regional Navigational Satellite System (IRNSS) is an autonomous regional satellite navigation system being developed by Indian Space Research Organisation [1] which would be under total control of Indian government. The requirement of such a navigation system is driven by the fact that access to Global Navigation Satellite Systems, GPS, is not guaranteed in hostile situations.

Contents [hide]
1 Development
2 Description
3 See also
4 Footnotes
5 References
Development

The government approved the project in May 2006, with the intention of the system to be completed and implemented by 2014. The first satellite of the proposed constellation, developed at a cost of 1,600 crore (US$356.8 million), is expected to be launched in last quarter of 2011.[2]

A goal of complete Indian control has been stated, with the space segment, ground segment and user receivers all being built in India.

It is unclear if recent agreements with the Russian government to restore their GLONASS system will supersede the IRNSS project or feed additional technical support to enable its completion. However reports came in Apr 2010 that India plans to start launching satellites by end of 2011 and six months periodic launches take place. It means the IRNSS optimally functional by 2014.[3]. India also launched 3 new satellites in the space to supplement this. [4]

Description

The proposed system would consist of a constellation of seven satellites and a support ground segment. Three of the satellites in the constellation will be placed in geostationary orbit. These GEOs will be located at 34 East 83 East and 132 East longitude. The GSOs will be in orbits with a 24,000 km apogee and 250 km perigee inclined at 29 degrees. Two of the GSOs will cross the equator at 55 East and two at 111 East. [5] Such an arrangement would mean all seven satellites would have continuous radio visibility with Indian control stations. The satellite payloads would consist of atomic clocks and electronic equipment to generate the navigation signals.

According to a presentation by A Bhaskaranarayana to a meeting of COSPAR in Montreal on 15 July 2008, IRNSS signals will consist of a Special Positioning Service and a Precision Service. Both will be carried on L5 (1176.45 MHz) and S band (2492.08 MHz). The SPS signal will be modulated by a 1 MHz BPSK signal. The Precision Service will use BOC(5,2).

The navigation signals themselves would be transmitted in the S-band frequency (2–4 GHz) and broadcast through a phased array antenna to maintain required coverage and signal strength. The satellites would weigh approximately 1,330 kg and their solar panels generate 1,400 watts.

The System is intended to provide an absolute position accuracy of better than 20 meters throughout India and within a region extending approximately 2,000 km around it.
The ground segment of IRNSS constellation would consist of a Master Control Center (MCC), ground stations to track and estimate the satellites' orbits and ensure the integrity of the network (IRIM), and additional ground stations to monitor the health of the satellites with the capability of issuing radio commands to the satellites (TT&C stations). The MCC would estimate and predict the position of all IRNSS satellites, calculate integrity, makes necessary ionospheric and clock corrections and run the navigation software. In pursuit of a highly independent system, an Indian standard time infrastructure would also be established.

Indian Regional Navigational Satellite System - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
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The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) intends to launch the first in a constellation of seven satellites envisaged for the ambitious Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS) project, GPS' Indian counterpart, by the end of next year.

“The subsystems [of the satellite] are under various stages of fabrication at ISRO's centres. At least four such satellites [each with a life in excess of seven years] are required to make it operational. After launching the first satellite using a PSLV in the last quarter of 2011, periodic launches would take place every six months. Which means by 2014, we would have the IRNSS optimally functional,” said ISRO sources here.

Range of applications

IRNSS, which will have a range of applications including personal navigation, will be India's answer to the U.S.-operated GPS, Russia's Glonass, European Space Agency's under-development Galileo, and China's emerging constellation, Compass.

“The problem with the existing constellations is that they are controlled by defence agencies in those countries. While Galileo is a pay-to-use system, Compass is military-controlled. On completion, IRNSS will have all-weather, round-the-clock coverage over the Indian landmass with an extended coverage of about 1,500 km around it,” said the sources.

Meanwhile, the GPS-Aided Geo Augmented Navigation (GAGAN) payload in GSAT-4 which would be placed into the geosynchronous transfer orbit — before the satellite self-adjusts into its geostationary orbital home at 82 degree east longitude — by the eagerly-awaited April 15 flight of GSLV-D3 with indigenous cryogenic upper stage will provide a position accuracy of better than 7.6 metres required for precision landing of civilian aircraft.

The navigational payload, operating in C, L1 and L5 bands, will form the space segment of GAGAN Satellite-Based Augmentation System (SBAS). “We are planning the launch of GSAT-8, with another GAGAN payload, by this year-end. A third satellite, GSLV 8 or 9, with GAGAN payload would also be launched in succession,” the sources said.

Independent function

GAGAN and IRNSS, once it comes into being, will function independent of each other. The ground segment of GAGAN comprises Indian Reference Stations (INRES) Indian Master Control Centre (INMCC) at Kundanhalli, near Bangalore, and Indian Land Uplink Stations (INLUS). ISRO has already set up eight such reference stations at eight Indian airports in collaboration with Airports Authority of India during the technology demonstration phase of GAGAN and 14 more are in the pipeline.

GAGAN's user segment consists of SBAS receivers capable of receiving GPS signals and corrections from geostationary satellite.

“Data from INRES is transmitted to INMCC. This data is processed by INMCC and sent to INLUS. INLUS transmits the corrected GPS information and time synchronisation signal to a geostationary satellite. It then transmits a GPS-like signal with an accuracy of the order of 3 metre horizontal and 4 metre vertical [which can be accessed by GPS SBAS receivers],” explained an ISRO media hand-out.
 
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GPS may not be there in hostile situations having our own navigation system is best choice China and Russia have they're own so why not we? :)
 
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GPS may not be there in hostile situations having our own navigation system is best choice China and Russia have they're own so why not we? :)

right. that's why we will have GAGAN and IRNSS.
 
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so in a few words could you explain GAGAN and IRNSS?

GAGAN> GPS Aided Geo Augmented Navigation or GPS and Geo Augmented Navigation system

IRNSS> Indian Regional Navigational Satellite System
 
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What sort of protective measures will be in place in case of an EMP bomb going off or a nuclear detonation ? I guess most of the ICs will get instantly fried due to electromagnetic burst ?
 
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It is important that IRNSS cover the entire South Asia from Middle East till Indonesia inclusive of entire China, simply because this region is in our security interests. In any conflict, the accuracy of our missiles will be judged by these and so will our effective ELINT "eye in the sky" be affected directly. All the best ISRO. You can do it.
 
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too early in 2014....or more secrecy??

No because everything is ready they just need to start launching. GSLV failures in 2010 must have delayed all projects but not this. This is one of the top priority project for Indian military. First satellite launch in early 2012 than one satellite in every six months and full seven satellites in 2014.



Indian Regional Navigational Satellite System (IRNSS)-1, the first of the seven satellites of the IRNSS constellation, carries a Navigation payload and a C-band ranging transponder. The spacecraft employs an optimised I-1K structure with a power handling capability of around 1600W and a lift off mass of 1380 kg, and is designed for a nominal mission life of 7 years. The first satellite of IRNSS constellation is planned to be launched onboard PSLV during 2012-13 while the full constellation is planned to be realised during 2014 time frame.


GAGAN coverage
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Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System
Correction Parameters for Timing Group Delays
Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System | Inside GNSS



India is developing a regional navigation satellite system that will broadcast GNSS signals — BPSK and BOC (5,2) — at L5 and S-band, with the first satellite scheduled for launch in the first half of 2012. As is common among GNSS services, the IRNSS signals will contain data to account for several sources of error, including a lesser-known source within a spacecraft itself: the hardware delay of the signal from its generation to radiation from the satellite antenna.
Parimal Majithiya, Kriti Khatri, and J.K. Hota, Space Applications Center, Indian Space Research Organization


In satellite navigation, a GNSS receiver must account for several sources of error such as relativistic effects, atmospheric propagation delay, offset of satellite clocks from system time and satellite ephemeris. In order to accurately compute user position, velocity, and time (PVT), these errors need to be predicted/estimated precisely.

The navigation signals transmitted on each carrier frequency are imperfectly synchronized due to different hardware paths corresponding to each signal. Each satellite’s navigation message contains parameters describing the timing bias. A user receiver uses these parameters to compute the clock correction for each observation.

Dual-frequency receivers directly employ such corrections. However, before a single frequency receiver can use the computed offset, it must be adjusted to account for the differential group delay between the principal signal and the signal on the other frequency. This timing group delay, annotated as TGD, results from hardware differences in the onboard signal paths and will vary among satellites.

The dual-frequency signal timing difference is used to infer the line-of-sight delay caused by the ionosphere, subject to the bias difference between the satellite transmissions at the two frequencies. Recently, the satellite navigation community has improved the inter-frequency/signal correction values contained in navigation messages.

This article will describe the timing group delays anticipated in the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS) and the inter-signal delay correction (ISC) parameters that will be included in the navigation messages in order to improve the system’s PVT accuracy.

GNSS Service Regions
In the future, GNSS systems will have two types of service regions: a terrestrial service volume (TSV) and a space service volume (SSV). The IRNSS ISCs will take into consideration signal differences as they appear in these service regions.

We can characterize the TSV as a shell that begins at the surface of the earth and extends up to an altitude of 3,000 kilometers. The transmitted position-determination parameters are valid for the entire region, ensuring similar performance for all users within it. Users operating in the TSV have coverage from the main beams of the satellites.

The SSV is a shell extending from 3,000-kilometers to approximately the geostationary altitude, that is, around 36,000 kilometers. The SSV is further subdivided into two regions: from 3,000 to 8000 kilometers, and from 8,000 to 36,000 kilometers.

Space users (SU) will have varying levels of performance depending on the altitude. Within the SSV, nearly all navigation signals emanate from satellites across the limb of the Earth. Users within this region may experience periods during which no navigation satellite signals are available and, when they are, received power levels will be weaker than for the terrestrial users (TU). Timing correction for space users need to be provided. Figure 1 (above right) shows the shells of the various service regions.

IRNSS
The Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System envisages establishment of a constellation made up of a combination of geostationary Earth orbit (GEO) and geosynchronous orbit (GSO) spacecraft over the Indian region.

The IRNSS constellation will consist of seven satellites —three in GEO orbit (at 34º E, 83º E and 131.5º E) and four in GSO orbit inclined at 29 degrees to the equatorial plane with their longitude crossings at 55º E and 111.5º E (two in each plane) as shown in Figure 2. All the satellites will be continuously visible in the Indian region for 24 hours a day.



The IRNSS is expected to provide position accuracy (two sigma) of better than 20 meters over India and a region extending outside the landmass to about 1,500 kilometers. The system will provide two types of services, a Standard Positioning Service hereafter referred to as SPS, and a Restricted/Authorized Service or RS. Both of these services will be provided at two frequencies, one in the L5 band and the other in S-band.

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Timing Group Delay
The time of radiation of the navigation signals on each carrier frequency and among frequencies is not synchronized due to the different digital and analog signal paths that each signal must travel from the IRNSS satellite signal generator to the transmit antenna. This hardware group delay is defined as a time difference between the transmitted RF signal (measured at the phase center of a transmitting antenna) and the signal at the output of the onboard frequency source.

Three different parameters comprise this group delay: a fixed/bias group delay, a differential group delay and a group delay uncertainty in bias and differential value.

. . .

IRNSS Group Delay Parameters
The uploaded data and the onboard-generated data will be formatted in a specific IRNSS format. As code, data, sub-frames, and main frame are synchronized to the space vehicle (SV) time (tSV), the principal code (RS) epoch is used to generate SV time.

The SV time is measured relative to the leading edge of the first chip of the first code sequence of the first frame symbol and represents the time of transmission of the signal from the satellite. The reference of transmission of signals is the antenna phase center. But, as mentioned earlier, a time delay occurs in the navigation payload between the time of signal generation and its actual time of transmission from the antenna array…

* Estimated Differential Group Delay.

* Group Delay Differential Correction.

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IRNSS Group Delay Correction Algorithm
GNSS receivers designed to process IRNSS signals should account for the group delays, depending on the specific signals used and the service region in which they will operate.

* Single Frequency S-RS and L5-RS Users.

* Single Frequency S-SPS and L5-SPS Users.

* Corrected Pseudo Range For Dual Frequency Users.

. . .

Conclusion
The IRNSS signal structure has one group delay differential correction parameter (TGD). TGD is to correct for S- and L5- band RS signal group delays. To obtain better position accuracy, other single-frequency users require inter-signal group delay correction parameters (ISCL5-SPS, ISCS-SPS). For space navigation users with off-nadir angles greater than 8.4 degrees with respect to an IRNSS satellite, an SUD correction is required. The SUD bias will provide additional improvement on the order of three nanoseconds to space users. These will be transmitted in navigation data in the future.

For the complete story, including figures, graphs, and images, please download the PDF of the article, above.

Acknowledgments
The authors would like to express their sincere gratitude to Dr K.S. Dasgupta, deputy director of the SATCOM and Navigation Payload Area, Space Applications Centre‑ Indian Space Research Organization (SAC-ISRO), for his valuable guidance and encouragement during this study.

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Applications of IRNSS for Indian armed forces






# Navigation: IRNSS to allow soldiers to find objectives, even in the dark or in unfamiliar territory, and to coordinate troop and supply movement.


# Target tracking: Various military weapons systems to use IRNSS to track potential ground and air targets before flagging them as hostile. These weapon systems pass target coordinates to precision-guided munitions to allow them to engage targets accurately. Military aircraft, particularly in air-to-ground roles, use IRNSS to find targets


# Missile and projectile guidance: IRNSS to allow accurate targeting of various military weapons including ICBMs, cruise missiles and precision-guided munitions. Artillery projectiles.


# Search and Rescue: Downed pilots can be located faster if their position is known.


# Reconnaissance: Patrol movement can be managed more closely.
 
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