Health Care Systems Oncology, Imaging and Pharmacology, particularly for Prostate Cancer.
Technology that interests me: Sensors (Radar, Sonar, EO/IR,Fusion) Communications, Satellites, Unmanned Vehicles (UAV), Information Technology, Intelligent Transportation
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
O3b Networks connects in U.S. Navy 7th Fleet Trident Warrior 2015 Exercises
ST. HELIER, Jersey--(Business Wire)--O3b Networks today announced the successful testing of its Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) satellite connectivity with the U.S. Navy’s 7th Fleet during a Limited Objective Experiment (LOE) during Trident Warrior 2015. Together with lead integrator Oceus Networks and partner TrustComm, Inc., O3b demonstrated, and the Navy officially evaluated, the advantages the O3b satellite constellation provides.
O3b’s MEO satellites are in a unique orbit significantly closer to earth than Geostationary (GEO) satellites, vastly reducing network latency. The high throughput O3b satellites also offer much greater capacity, supporting up to 1.6 Gbps in a single 700km/450NM wide beam, enabling true broadband speeds even at sea.
The “Trident Warrior” experiments are designed to identify new and
innovative technologies, which will enable more effective naval
operational capabilities. A primary goal is to realize Network Centric
Warfare capabilities; achieving a military advantage based on providing
more usable information directly to operations in theater. This is
enabled through robust technology amongst dispersed units, coupled with
seamless communications that allow those forces to interact and share
information as soon as it becomes available in an asymmetrical
warfighting environment.
O3b is a unique enabler of Network Centric Warfare capabilities, which
was demonstrated during “Trident Warrior.” For the exercises, O3b 1.2m
maritime tracking antennas were placed on the USS Fort Worth Littoral
Combat Ship (LCS-3), which achieved connectivity speeds of approximately
600Mbps (200Mbps uplink, 400Mbps downlink).
O3b, Oceus, and TrustComm were able to prove they could provide much
higher broadband connectivity than Navy vessels currently receive, to a
ship while in theater. This enables applications and technologies never
available to the U.S. Navy including 4G/LTE, WiFi, HD video streaming
and telemedicine—all of which were accomplished during “Trident Warrior.”
To watch a video tour of the USS Fort Worth (LCS-3) streamed live during
“Trident Warrior” via the O3b satellite service, please visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=svlf9_BM1fg
“O3b Networks is delighted to be allowed to participate in Commander, 7th
Fleet’s Trident Warrior 2015 exercises,” said “D” D’Ambrosio, EVP
Government Solutions for O3b Networks. “We’ve been actively testing O3b
with the Navy at SPAWAR’s SSC PACIFIC Common Optical Distribution
Architecture (CODA) lab, where 7th Fleet first saw the service, but it’s
great to see it deployed on a naval vessel and perform as advertised at
sea.”
“Providing Maritime LTE services has been a major focus for Oceus
Networks, and our partnership with O3b combines two robust
technologies,” said Randy Fuerst, President and CEO of Oceus Networks.
“The U.S. Navy, through Trident Warrior, was able to see first-hand how
to achieve a high data rate with low latency and at an affordable cost
in an operational environment.”
“TrustComm prides itself on delivering the most innovative,
state-of-the-art capabilities to our customers,” said Bob Roe, CEO of
TrustComm, Inc. “During Trident Warrior, the O3b service performed
impressively, facilitating multiple bandwidth hungry operations
simultaneously and exceeding expectations."
First O3b Satellites Launched from Guiana - O3b stands for “Other 3 billion”, and is aimed at the other 3 billion
humans on planet Earth who do not have regular access to the internet.
The satellites were built by Thales Alenia Space, and will finally be
positioned in a Medium Earth orbit of approximately 8,000 km. Due to the
lower orbit of O3b, the operators will manage to avoid some of the
latency issues associated with satellites in GEO. “The network was
designed to avoid much of the difficulty that satellite connectivity
provides today which is this delay,” said O3b CEO Steve Collar. “We
wanted to fix those problems and the only way to fix them is to bring
the satellites closer to Earth.”
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