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BeiDou Future and Evolutions

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COMPASSCOMPASS
Title BeiDou Future and Evolutions
Edited by GMV
Level Basic
Year of Publication 2011

The Compass Navigation Satellite System (CNSS), also named BeiDou-2,[1] is China’s second-generation satellite navigation system that will be capable of providing positioning, navigation, and timing services to users on a continuous worldwide basis[1][2] and it is expected to reach full operational capability by 2020.


COMPASS Roadmap

The COMPASS system is planned to be developed and deployed in three phases[3]:

  • Phase 1 (2003+)

Phase 1 consists of an experimental regional navigation system, BeiDou-1, which provided active navigation service.

  • Phase 2 (2012+)

BeiDou-2 consists of a reduced satellite constellation and provides open service over China. This phase aims at deploying a system with passive positioning and timing capability over a regional area.

  • Phase 3 (2020+)

By 2020, COMPASS would reach full operational capability with a Walker constellation of 27 MEOs plus 5 GEOs and the existing 3 IGSOs satellites of the regional system[4][5]. COMPASS would provide global navigation services, similarly to the GPS, GLONASS or Galileo systems.[1]


By December 2011, the COMPASS system went into operation on a trial basis providing initial passive positioning navigation and timing services for the whole Asia-Pacific region with a constellation of 10 satellites (5 GEO satellites and 5 IGSO satellites)[6][7] and the Initial Operational Service was declared officially available.

During 2012, the system is going to launch another 6 satellites[4][6][8][9].


COMPASS Services

The future COMPASS is expected to support two different kind of services: RDSS and RNSS.

In the Radio Determination Satellite Service (RDSS) , the user position is computed by a ground station using the round trip time of signals exchanged via GEO satellite. The RDSS Long term feature further includes[10]:

  • Short message communication (guaranteeing backward compatibility with BeiDou-1)
  • Large volume message communication
  • Information connection
  • Extended coverage

The Radio Navigation Satellite Service (RNSS) is very similar to that provided by GPS and Galileo and is designed to achieve similar performances.

International Collaboration

The Chinese Government considers satellite navigation as strategic in the new generation information technology, and encourages international cooperation to ensure compatibility and interoperability with other navigation systems.[4]


Notes

References

  1. ^ a b c Compass Satellite Navigation System (Beidou), on Sinodefence.com, updated on August 6th, 2011.
  2. ^ COMPASS Navigation system in Wikipedia
  3. ^ BeiDou web site
  4. ^ a b c China Satellite Navigation Office, Development of BeiDou Navigation Satellite System, Munich Satellite Navigation Summit, 2011.
  5. ^ Jun Shen, COMPASS/Beidou-China’s GNSS, BNStarNavigation Technology & System, Inc., Rome, June 11th, 2009
  6. ^ a b Satellite navigation system launched, China Daily Europe, December 2011.
  7. ^ Compass Navigation System in Wikipedia
  8. ^ Long March 3C launches fifth Compass-G satellite into orbit, NASA Spaceflight
  9. ^ [1], GPS World: BeiDou-2/Compass G5 Satellite Transitions to GEO.
  10. ^ "Preliminary Results of GPS/Compass Integrated Positioning and Navigation", presented in the COMPASS Workshop held during the ION GNSS 2011 Conference.