Tethered Balloon for Checkout of Computer-Controlled Antennas

International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 18-20, 1977 / Hyatt House Hotel, Los Angeles, California === During operational tests of the U.S. Navy's Poseidon missile, an instrumented ship tracks every test missile launched by the nuclear subs. The key sensor aboard this launch-a...

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Main Authors: Baggot, H. E., Wynn, J. B.
Other Authors: Interstate Electronics Corporation
Language:en_US
Published: International Foundation for Telemetering 1977
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/609688
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/609688
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6096882016-05-20T03:01:35Z Tethered Balloon for Checkout of Computer-Controlled Antennas Baggot, H. E. Wynn, J. B. Interstate Electronics Corporation Department of the Navy International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 18-20, 1977 / Hyatt House Hotel, Los Angeles, California During operational tests of the U.S. Navy's Poseidon missile, an instrumented ship tracks every test missile launched by the nuclear subs. The key sensor aboard this launch-area support ship, the USNS RANGE SENTINEL, is its antenna system. Onboard computers switch the ship's four independent, main S-band antennas (Fig. 1) to capture up to four missiles fired in succession and to expedite command action (e.g., continued flight or destruct). This multi-antenna control by computer leads to a complex testing problem for the computer software, constrained by the need for cost effectively proving the software's operational capability without penalizing hardware development. Rigid control of hardware-caused variables, and a near-operational test environment, are vital Software test prerequisites. To this end, using a stable RF pointing source at altitude above the antennas (i.e., to reduce parallax distortion and multipath effects) is a preferred approach in testing antenna-management software. This paper describes two experiments* to (1) initially establish the feasibility of using an airborne S-band telemetry transmitter as an RF signal source for checking out the USNS RANGE SENTINEL's antenna control, and then (2) demonstrate the effectiveness of this RF source in verifying the ship's antenna alignment and validating the operational antenna software. 1977-10 text Proceedings 0884-5123 0074-9079 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/609688 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/609688 International Telemetering Conference Proceedings en_US http://www.telemetry.org/ Copyright © International Foundation for Telemetering International Foundation for Telemetering
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 18-20, 1977 / Hyatt House Hotel, Los Angeles, California === During operational tests of the U.S. Navy's Poseidon missile, an instrumented ship tracks every test missile launched by the nuclear subs. The key sensor aboard this launch-area support ship, the USNS RANGE SENTINEL, is its antenna system. Onboard computers switch the ship's four independent, main S-band antennas (Fig. 1) to capture up to four missiles fired in succession and to expedite command action (e.g., continued flight or destruct). This multi-antenna control by computer leads to a complex testing problem for the computer software, constrained by the need for cost effectively proving the software's operational capability without penalizing hardware development. Rigid control of hardware-caused variables, and a near-operational test environment, are vital Software test prerequisites. To this end, using a stable RF pointing source at altitude above the antennas (i.e., to reduce parallax distortion and multipath effects) is a preferred approach in testing antenna-management software. This paper describes two experiments* to (1) initially establish the feasibility of using an airborne S-band telemetry transmitter as an RF signal source for checking out the USNS RANGE SENTINEL's antenna control, and then (2) demonstrate the effectiveness of this RF source in verifying the ship's antenna alignment and validating the operational antenna software.
author2 Interstate Electronics Corporation
author_facet Interstate Electronics Corporation
Baggot, H. E.
Wynn, J. B.
author Baggot, H. E.
Wynn, J. B.
spellingShingle Baggot, H. E.
Wynn, J. B.
Tethered Balloon for Checkout of Computer-Controlled Antennas
author_sort Baggot, H. E.
title Tethered Balloon for Checkout of Computer-Controlled Antennas
title_short Tethered Balloon for Checkout of Computer-Controlled Antennas
title_full Tethered Balloon for Checkout of Computer-Controlled Antennas
title_fullStr Tethered Balloon for Checkout of Computer-Controlled Antennas
title_full_unstemmed Tethered Balloon for Checkout of Computer-Controlled Antennas
title_sort tethered balloon for checkout of computer-controlled antennas
publisher International Foundation for Telemetering
publishDate 1977
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/609688
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/609688
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