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GALILEO Public Regulated Service: Difference between revisions
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The Public Regulated Service access will be controlled by the authorities to be defined at European level, through the encryption of the signals and the appropriate key distribution. Member States will maintain control of distribution of receivers. | The Public Regulated Service access will be controlled by the authorities to be defined at European level, through the encryption of the signals and the appropriate key distribution. Member States will maintain control of distribution of receivers. | ||
The performance objectives in terms of position accuracy and availability are described in next table: <ref name="GALHLD"> [http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/energy_transport/galileo/doc/galileo_hld_v3_23_09_02.pdf Galileo Mission High Level Definition], v3, September 2002.</ref> | The performance objectives in terms of position accuracy and availability are described in next table: <ref name="GALHLD"> [http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/energy_transport/galileo/doc/galileo_hld_v3_23_09_02.pdf Galileo Mission High Level Definition], v3, September 2002.</ref> |
Revision as of 13:48, 12 April 2011
GALILEO | |
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Title | GALILEO Public Regulated Service |
Author(s) | GMV |
Level | Basic |
Year of Publication | 2011 |
The GALILEO System will be an independent, global, European-controlled, satellite-based navigation system and will provide a number of guaranteed services to users equipped with Galileo-compatible receivers. The GALILEO Public Regulated Service (PRS) provides position and timing restricted to government-authorised users, for sensitive applications which require a high level of service continuity. It will be encrypted and designed to be more robust, with anti-jamming mechanisms and reliable problem detection. This service is intended for security and strategic infrastructure (e.g. energy, telecommunications and finance).[1] [2]
PRS is one of the important features of Galileo that adds value compared to other satellite navigation systems. The access to PRS will be limited to authorised governmental bodies.
Purpose
Galileo is a civil system that also includes a robust and access-controlled service for government-authorised applications. The Public Regulated Service (PRS) will be used by groups such as police, coast-guards and customs. Civil institutions will control the access to the encrypted PRS. Access by region or user group will follow the security policy rules applicable in Europe.
The PRS is operational at all times and in all circumstances, including during periods of crisis. A major PRS driver is the robustness of its signal, which protects it against jamming and spoofing.[3]
The PRS will provide a higher level of protection against the threats to Galileo Signals in Space than is available for the Open Services (OS, CS and SoL) through the use of appropriate interference mitigation technologies. The need for the Public Regulated Service (PRS) results from the analysis of threats to the Galileo system and the identification of infrastructure applications where disruption to the Signal in Space (SiS) by economic terrorists, malcontents, subversives or hostile agencies could result in damaging reductions in national security, law enforcement, safety or economic activity within a significant geographic area.
The objective of the PRS is to improve the probability of continuous availability of the SIS, in the presence of interfering threats, to those users with such a need. The introduction of interference mitigation technologies carries with it a responsibility to ensure that access to these technologies is adequately controlled to prevent misuse of the technologies against the interests of Member States.
Performance and features
The Galileo Public Regulated Service is realized by two signals, one in the 1575.42 MHz band and the other in the 1278.75 MHz band,permanently broadcast with respect to open Galileo satellite-only. They are wide band signals so as to be resistant to involuntary interference or malicious jamming and therefore offer a better continuity of service. These signals are encrypted, allowing the implementation of an access control scheme.[3].[4]
The Public Regulated Service access will be controlled by the authorities to be defined at European level, through the encryption of the signals and the appropriate key distribution. Member States will maintain control of distribution of receivers.
The performance objectives in terms of position accuracy and availability are described in next table: [5]
Galileo Open Service (positioning & timing) | ||
---|---|---|
Single Frequency (SF) | Dual Frequency (DF) | |
Coverage | Global | |
Accuracy (95%) | Horizontal: 15 m | Horizontal: 4m |
Vertical: 35 m | Vertical: 8m | |
Availability | 99.8 % | |
Timing Accuracy wrt UTC/TAI | 30 ns | |
Ionospheric Correction | Based on SF Model | Based on DF Measurements |
Integrity | No |
To know more information about Performances of each Galileo Service see the article Galileo Performances.
Implementation and PRS Aplications
During the Initial Operational Capability (IOC) phase, the GALILEO open service, the search and rescue service and the PRS will be provided. At this stage, however, accuracy and availability will not yet have reached their optimum levels.[1]
Each Member State wishing to use PRS will set up a "Responsible PRS Authority". This authority will manage and control end-users as well as the manufacture of PRS receivers. It will also ensure adherence to clearly-defined security standards. Coordination on a European level will guarantee consistency and conformity with the high level of security required. The legislative proposal will be forwarded to the European Parliament and the Council for approval as part of the ordinary legislative procedure. As approved, the PRS will be available in 2014, when Galileo is expected to become initially operational, together with two other initial Galileo services, the Open Service and the Search-And-Rescue Service.[6] [1]
PRS applications will be used by emergency services, critical transportation, energy or telecom and defence purposes: even if Galileo is the first civilian GNSS in the world, nothing prevents the Member States to use it for military purposes. In this context, the PRS can have important impacts on the Europe's Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) and on the European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP).[7] Typical applications include:[5]
- Trans-European level
- Law Enforcement (EUROPOL, Customs, European Anti-Fraud Office - OLAF);
- Security Services (Maritime Safety Agency) or Emergency Services (peace keeping forces or humanitarian interventions);
- Member States levels
- Law enforcement;
- Customs;
- Intelligence Services.
Notes
References
- ^ a b c Mid-term review of the European satellite radio navigation programmes
- ^ Regulation (EC) No 683/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 9 July 2008 on the further implementation of the European satellite navigation programmes (EGNOS and Galileo).
- ^ a b ESA Galileo web page
- ^ Galileo OS SIS ICD Issue 1 Revision 1 September 2010e
- ^ a b Galileo Mission High Level Definition, v3, September 2002.
- ^ Press release 8th October 2010 on the Public Regulated Service
- ^ EC Galileo website