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Satnews Daily
July 8th, 2019

The Second Lockheed Martin-Built GPS III Satellite is Now Ready for a July 25 Liftoff


The GPS satellite constellation is about to get its next healthy dose of new technology and more advanced capabilities — the second next-generation, Lockheed Martin (NYSE:LMT)-built, GPS III satellite — nick-named "Magellan" by the U.S. Air Force (USAF) — is sealed up and ready for a planned July 25 launch.


Photo of GPS III SV03 post-integration, courtesy of the company.

On June 26, Lockheed Martin Space and United Launch Alliance (ULA) technicians completed encapsulating GPS III Space Vehicle 02 (GPS III SV02) in its launch fairings at the company's Astrotech Space Operations facility, where the satellite has undergone pre-launch processing and fueling since its March 19 arrival in Florida. This final step enclosed GPS III SV02 in a protective, aerodynamic, nose-cone shell.

In the coming days, the enclosed GPS III SV02 satellite will be mounted to a ULA Delta IV rocket for launch. The current window for launch on July 25 opens at 10:55 a.m. ET. GPS III satellite production and launch cadence is picking up. On May 27, the USAF declared the next GPS III satellite — GPS III SV03 — "Available for Launch," pending an official launch date.

Lockheed Martin is under contract to develop and build up to 32 GPS III/IIIF satellites for the Air Force. GPS III will deliver three times better accuracy and provide up to eight times improved anti-jamming capabilities. GPS III's new L1C civil signal will make it the first GPS satellite to be interoperable with other international global navigation satellite systems, like Galileo.


Eight additional contracted GPS III satellites move through production at Lockheed Martin’s nearly 40,000 sq. ft., state-of-the-art GPS III Processing Facility (GPF) near Denver, Colorado. Photo is courtesy of the company.

Additional GPS "IIIF" capabilities will begin being added at the 11th satellite. These will include a fully-digital navigation payload, a Regional Military Protection capability, an accuracy-enhancing laser retroreflector array, and a Search & Rescue payload.

Johnathon Caldwell, Lockheed Martin's VP for Navigation Systems, said GPS III SV02 is launching just a brisk seven months after the nation's first GPS III satellite lifted off back in December. The first satellite's performance during on-orbit testing has exceeded expectations. The company is excited to deploy more GPS III satellites so this new technology and capabilities can be distributed constellation-wide. More GPS III satellites are coming. If you looked at the company's production line back in Denver today, you would see GPS III space vehicles 04, 05 and 06 already fully-assembled and in various stages of testing. Plus, space vehicles 07 and 08 are being built up at the component assembly level now — this is a smooth, efficient, methodical process.