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Moscow to suspend American GPS sites on Russian territory from June

Beidou2020

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Russia is going to suspend the operation of all American GPS sites on its territory, starting from June 1, said Russia’s deputy PM, Dmitry Rogozin, who is in charge of space and defense industries.

"Starting June 1, we will halt the work of those stations on Russian territory,” Rogozin said.

Rogozin pointed out that American GPS ground stations are located in Russia under an agreement that dates back to 1993 and 2001.

“Under this agreement there are 11 GPS stations on the territories of 10 [Russian federal] subjects,”he said.

He stressed that Moscow and Washington have until May 31 to agree on the issue of setting Russian GLONASS stations on US territory.

“We’re starting negotiations which will last for three months. We hope that by the end of summer, these talks will bring a solution that will allow our cooperation to be restored on the basis of parity and proportionality,” Rogozin said.

But if the negotiations turn out to be fruitless, operation of the 11 American GPS stations in Russia will“be permanently terminated” from September 1, he warned.

Dmitry Rogozin also said that Moscow is banning Washington from using Russian-made rocket engines, which the US has used to deliver its military satellites into orbit.

“We proceed from the fact that without guarantees that our engines are used for non-military spacecraft launches only, we won’t be able to supply them to the US,”Rogozin is cited as saying by Interfax news agency.

If such guarantees aren’t provided the Russian side will also be unable to perform routine maintenance for the engines, which have been previously delivered to the US, he added.

The US relies on Russian-made RD-180 and NK-33 engines to launch military and civilian satellites into space, with NASA saying it’s unlikely to produce a fully operational rocket engine of its own before 2020.

According to Rogozin, Moscow also isn’t planning to agree to the US offer of prolonging operation of the International Space Station (ISS).

“We currently project that we’ll require the ISS until 2020,” he said. “We need to understand how much profit we’re making by using the station, calculate all the expenses and depending on the results decide what to do next.”

“A completely new concept for further space exploration” is currently being developed by the relevant Russian agencies, the official explained.

Previously, the US space agency, NASA, had asked Russia’s Roscosmos to keep the ISS in orbit till 2024.

Relations between Moscow and Washington have seriously deteriorated after the accession into Russia of the Ukrainian Republic of Crimea, which refused to recognize the new coup-imposed authority in Kiev.

The US and its EU partners have introduced several waves of sanctions against Russia, which have seen assets frozen and travel bans imposed on dozens of the country’s politicians and businessman, as well as the cessation of joint projects in different areas, including space.

However, Rogozin stressed that Russia will apply restrictive measures of its own only as a response to sanctions imposed by the West.

“We won’t be first to adopt sanctions, especially in the high-tech area. For us it is a matter of employment of our specialists,” he said.
 
What impact would losing those GPS Ground Stations have on the US GPS System.

Anyone specializing in this area , please let us know. May be @gambit ....
 
Ground stations are required to correct the sats (or synchronize). It probably won't affect civilians. But military/high precision services using GPS will definitely get affected...


That was my fear. Thanks for clarifying, Mate...
 
But losing those ground Stations will not affect the functionality of the US GPS System as a whole ?

Not for users outside Russia. GPS base station is a station in a known location. Nearby portable GPS users require the satellite data and the base station data to accurately determine it position. Otherwise you will only have satellite data and signal attenuation will cause the location to have large errors. By removing the base stations in Russia, you effectively remove GPS from Russia market and maybe nearby regions if they use signals from stations located in Russia, but the rest of the system is not affected.
 
Ground stations are required to correct the sats (or synchronize). It probably won't affect civilians. But military/high precision services using GPS will definitely get affected...

It will, without a doubt. And will affect all regional users; albeit to slightly varying degrees.
The Ground uplink/injection stations are important to maintaining the accuracy/integrity of the system.
 
China should take a leaf out of Russia's book in this regard。

China must limit the use of GPS now that the Beidou system is maturing fast and in the midst of a drive to expand its market share(perhaps with similar tactics that have won Chinese internet majors the domestic market?:enjoy:)。

Apart from technological and commercial considerations, continuing broad use of GPS is a threat to national security
 
Russia moves to prohibit the U.S. from using the ISS in 2020 - The Week

Russia's ongoing feud with the United States has hit new heights — literally. In retaliation for the sanctions the U.S. imposed on Russia during the Ukraine crisis, the country said it won't allow the U.S. use the International Space Station after 2020.

The measures, which were announced today by Russia's deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, also prohibit the U.S. from using the ISS's rocket engines to launch new satellites. Although the space station is manned by a Russian and American crew, the only way to reach it is by using Russia's Soyuz spaceships.

The U.S. had hoped to keep the aging ISS floating until 2024. Rogozin said after 2020, Russia will likely pull its money from the space station and move it to a "project with more prospects." Rogozin also slammed NASA for drastically scaling back its space exploration projects in recent years. "The Russian segment can exist independently from the American one," he said. "The U.S. one cannot."
 
Russia moves to prohibit the U.S. from using the ISS in 2020 - The Week

Russia's ongoing feud with the United States has hit new heights — literally. In retaliation for the sanctions the U.S. imposed on Russia during the Ukraine crisis, the country said it won't allow the U.S. use the International Space Station after 2020.

The measures, which were announced today by Russia's deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, also prohibit the U.S. from using the ISS's rocket engines to launch new satellites. Although the space station is manned by a Russian and American crew, the only way to reach it is by using Russia's Soyuz spaceships.

The U.S. had hoped to keep the aging ISS floating until 2024. Rogozin said after 2020, Russia will likely pull its money from the space station and move it to a "project with more prospects." Rogozin also slammed NASA for drastically scaling back its space exploration projects in recent years. "The Russian segment can exist independently from the American one," he said. "The U.S. one cannot."

Sure we can. Who do you think builds rockets for NASA in the first place?

Dragon (spacecraft) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
663px-COTS2Dragon.6.jpg


NASA Commercial Crew Development program
SpaceX was not awarded funding during the first phase of NASA's Commercial Crew Development (CCDev) milestone-based program. However, the company was selected on 18 April 2011, during the second phase of the program, to receive an award valued at $75 million to help develop its crew system.[65][66]

Their CCDev2 milestones involve the further advancement of the Falcon 9/Dragon crew transportation design, the advancement of the Launch Abort System propulsion design, completion of two crew accommodations demos, full-duration test firings of the launch abort engines, and demonstrations of their throttle capability.[67]

SpaceX's launch abort system received preliminary design approval from NASA in October 2011.[68] In December 2011, SpaceX performed its first crew accommodations test; the second such test is expected to involve spacesuit simulators and a higher-fidelity crewed Dragon mock-up.[69][70] In January 2012, SpaceX successfully conducted full-duration tests of its SuperDraco landing/escape rocket engine at its Rocket Development Facility in McGregor, Texas.[71]

On 3 August 2012, NASA announced the award of $440 million to SpaceX for the continuation of work on the Dragon under CCiCap.[72] On 20 December 2013, SpaceX completed a parachute drop test in order to validate the new parachute design.[73] This involved carrying a 12,000 pounds (5,400 kg) Dragon test article by helicopter to an altitude of 8,000 feet (2,400 m) above the Pacific ocean.[74] The test article was released and intentionally forced into a tumble.[74] Dragon then released its two drogue parachutes, followed by its three main parachutes and splashed down into the ocean.[74] The test article was then retrieved by helicopter and returned to shore.[74]

In July 2013, SpaceX stated that a pad abort test is planned to occur no sooner than December 2013.[75] During this test, the Dragon capsule will use its abort engines to launch away from a test stand at Launch Complex 40.[76][77] It will travel to an altitude of 5,000 feet (1,500 m), deploy its parachutes, splashdown into the ocean and be recovered.[76][77] An in-flight abort is planned for no sooner than April 2014, which would see Dragon using its launch abort engines to escape from a Falcon 9 that is already in flight.[76][78] This test would occur at the point of worst-case dynamic loads, which is also when Dragon has the smallest performance margin for separation from its launch vehicle.[78]

What impact would losing those GPS Ground Stations have on the US GPS System.

Anyone specializing in this area , please let us know. May be @gambit ....

It just prevents people in the region like Russia and other parts of the area from using the GPS. But doesn't affect the U.S. military at all.
 
China should ban GPS too. GPS holds 95% of the Chinese navigation market. Give Beidou the full domestic market. This must be done in all sectors of the economy that China is self-sufficient in.
 
The lack of usage data matters mate. Especially to snooping Joe like NSA.
 
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