Infrastructure for installation of INRES
at Delhi, Kolkatta, Guwahati, Portblair,
Ahmedabad, Banglore, Jammu and
Trivanthapuram is in place. All eight
INRES equipment have been installed
and seven stations have been linked
through Optical Fiber Cable (OFC)
to INMCC for connectivity test. All
the station data are being recorded at
INMCC, Banglore. The installation
of GPS-TEC at all twenty stations has
been completed. Ionospheric data from
twenty TEC stations is being analyzed
by number of Indian universities
and R&D institutions involved in
ionospheric studies for the development
of an IONO-TROPO model that will
be suitable for Indian airspace. Based
on the results of extensive analysis, it
is proposed to install seven more GPSTEC
receiver in the mid region of India
due to Equatorial Indian Anomaly (EIA) where ionospheric variation is
very high. It is further observed that
scintillation is very active upto 60°
elevation based on thirty months data.
Infrastructure for INMCC and
INLUS at Banglore is in place and
installation of GAGAN equipment
have been completed. Infrastructure
for providing standby connectivity
through V-sat from all INRES to
INMCC is in progress, which will be
completed by December 2006. A geostationary
payload in C-Band and L1
and L5 frequencies will be carried by
GSAT-4 (fabricated and developed
by ISRO) placed at 82 ° E. GSAT-4 is
scheduled for launch by July 2007.
At present GAGAN ground segment
is under integration test and data
collection at INMCC Banglore has
begun. The possibility for hiring
of INMARSAT 4F1 navigation
transponder is being explored for
integration of GAGAN ground
system, to complete of Final Site
Acceptance Test (FSAT) and
conducting user level testing of
GAGAN Signal-In-Space (SIS) |