Losing GPS could cost billions, so the Space Force is having companies like Astranis build a backup network

  • 📰 NBCPhiladelphia
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 41 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 20%
  • Publisher: 51%

News Nyheter

Sverige Senaste nytt,Sverige Rubriker

The U.S. Air Force began deploying the Global Positioning System (GPS) nearly 50 years ago, critical infrastructure to both the military and economy.

An outage or loss of GPS satellites is estimated to cost the U.S. military and economy upward of $1 billion a day.

" vitally important to everything we do day-to-day, from the stock market, for timing of every transaction, to the crops we field," Lt. Col. Justin Deifel, leader of R-GPS at the Space Force's Space Systems Command, told CNBC. "We've started to see a huge push towards proliferation in higher orbits by the U.S. national security community," Astranis CEO John Gedmark told CNBC."Now the Department of Defense has recognized all of the fantastic things that we can do in high orbits with a next-generation small satellite approach."

"We knew pretty early on that this platform that we developed could be used for other missions than broadband telecommunications and the Resilient GPS program has just come along as a perfect example of that," Gedmark said.

 

Tack för din kommentar. Din kommentar kommer att publiceras efter att ha granskats.
Vi har sammanfattat den här nyheten så att du kan läsa den snabbt. Om du är intresserad av nyheterna kan du läsa hela texten här. Läs mer:

 /  🏆 569. in SE

Sverige Senaste nytt, Sverige Rubriker