Galileo Satnav - Europe’s Global satellite navigation system is all set to go live this Thursday. Seventeen years and more than 10 billion euros ($11 billion) later, Europe's Galileo satnav system promises to outperform US and Russian rivals while boosting regional self-reliance. Initial services will be free to use worldwide on smartphones and navigation boxes fitted with Galileo-compatible microchips. Some devices may only need a software update to start using the new technology, as several smartphone companies were already making chips compatible with it.
At first the signals might be a little weak but will be boosted with help from satellites in the US military-run GPS system, and grow stronger over time as orbiters are added to the now 18-strong Galileo network orbiting 23,222 kilometres (14,430 miles) above Earth.
According to the European Space Agency (ESA), Galileo should be fully operational by 2020, providing time and positioning data of unprecedented accuracy. Once complete, the system will consist of 24 operational satellites and ground infrastructure for the provision of positioning, navigation and timing services. The ESA (European Space Agency) has recently launched four additional Galileo satellites, accelerating deployment of the new satellite navigation system.
According to Jean-Yves Le Gall, president of France's CNES space agency, one of ESA's 22 country members - GPS allows a train to know which area it is in - Galileo will allow it to identify the track it is on. Such precision would also be invaluable for safer driverless cars and nuclear power plants, as well as better telecommunications.
The civil-controlled service is also of great strategic importance for Europe, which relies on two military-run services - GPS and Russia's GLONASS. Both these systems provide no guarantee of uninterrupted service. Galileo will be interoperable with these, but also completely autonomous.
Named after Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei, the project was first approved with an initial budget of around three billion euros and plans to be operational by 2008. But it suffered several technical and budgetary setbacks, including the launch of two satellites into the wrong orbit in 2014.
The European Commission expects the project to be an important commercial venture as almost 10 percent of Europe's gross domestic product is thought to depend on satellite navigation today (Indirectly) - a figure which is projected to grow to about 30 percent by 2030. The European Comission expects the global satnav market be valued at about 244 billion euros by 2020. With Galileo itself being able to add around 90 billion euros to the EU economy in its first 20 years.
The system's groundbreaking accuracy is the result of some of the most accurate atomic clocks ever to be used for a navigation system. There is one atomic clock in each satellite that is accurate to one second in three million years. A billionth-of-a-second clock error in a navigation system can result in a positioning error of up to 30 centimetres (12 inches).
Galileo also has more satellites than either GPS or GLONASS, with better signals that carry more information. With these features, Galileo's free Open Service will be able to track positions to within a metre (3.3 feet), compared to several metres for GPS and GLONASS. Its signal will eventually reach areas where which have not been possible soo far i.e. inside traffic tunnels and on roads where high buildings shield radio waves from some satellites. A paying service will allow clients to track locations even closer, to within centimetres, and governments will have access to an encrypted continued service for use in times of crisis.
Another important service using Galileo would be search and rescue. Currently, satnav technology can take up to three hours to track a person to within a 10-kilometre (six-mile) range. With Galileo's Search and Rescue Service, the detection time is reduced to 10 minutes and the localisation is reduced to less than five kilometres.
Satellite navigation works by using ultra-precise clocks in orbit broadcasting their time and position to Earth via radio waves travelling at the speed of light. Anyone with a receiver can combine data from at least three satellites to determine their position, speed and local time on Earth.
Europe's Galileo satnav system, first approved in 1999, had a difficult birth—taking 17 years and more than triple the original budget to get to the point of going live.
A look at the bumpy road to this week's expected launch of Galileo's initial services:
- December 1999: The European Commission formally approves Galileo, a joint project with the European Space Agency, with a budget of between 2.2 billion and 2.95 billion euros ($2.34 to 3.14 billion). The project "to safeguard European strategic needs" is set for completion in 2008.
- April 2008: After failing to raise private sector funding, the Commission - the European Union's executive - takes over the project with a new estimated budget, entirely taxpayer-funded, of 3.4 billion euros until 2013. A further 7 billion euros is budgeted for the 2014-2020 period, according to France's CNES space agency, an ESA member.
- October 2011: The two first Galileo satellites are launched into orbit, followed by two more in 2012.
- March 2013: The four satellites pinpoint the system's first-ever ground location, with an accuracy of between 10 and 15 metres (32 to 49 feet). One of the orbiters develops antenna problems, but can still transmit on one frequency.
- August 2014: After a more than year-long delay over "technical difficulties", satellites five and six are launched into a lopsided, elliptical orbit of little use for satellite navigation. Subsequent launches are delayed to investigate the cause - frozen fuel pipes onboard the Russian Soyuz rocket.
- December 2016: With 18 satellites in orbit, Galileo is set to go live with initial services on Thursday. The commission has already ordered eight more orbiters, for launch in 2017 and 2018, with the last four in the 30-satellite constellation yet to be confirmed.