GeoSat Follow-On (GFO)
The Navy launched its newest
meteorological/oceanographic GeoSat Follow-On (GFO)
satellite recently from Vandenberg Air Force Base,
Calif.
GFO is the first operational real-time, radar
altimeter satellite built for the Navy's Space and Naval
Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR). It also provides the
Navy with a direct altimeter data link to ships at sea
and to Navy facilities on shore stations. The data is
intended to enhance the effectiveness of Navy weapons
and sensor systems. The data from
GeoSat will help keep warfighters safe and ensure
their effectiveness. This satellite will allow us to characterize the
oceans with a high degree of fidelity.
In addition to transmitting the data directly to
Navy ships, the GFO satellite stores global data and
passes it via remote receiving stations to the Naval
Oceanographic Office.
The 800-pound satellite, about the size of a
Volkswagen Beetle, measures sea surface topography and
significant wave heights. Navy meteorologists and
oceanographers use the data to depict ocean waves,
currents, fronts, eddies and tides to support forward-
deployed warfighter.
It is the first low-cost, access to space
initiative, costing less than $85 million, and making
use of commercial launch services. It was designed and
built by Ball Aerospace & Technology Corp., in Boulder,
Colo., under contract to SPAWAR.
Sources and Methods
http://www.fas.org/spp/military/program/geodetic/gfo.htm
Implemented by Charles P. Vick, Sara D. Berman, and
Christina Lindborg, 1997 Scoville Fellow
Maintained by Robert Sherman
Originally created by John Pike
Updated Sunday, February 22, 1998 7:48:15 AM