CONSOLIDATED SPACE OPERATIONS CENTER
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 13-15, 1981 / Bahia Hotel, San Diego, California === The Consolidated Space Operations Center (CSOC) is being designed by the Air Force Systems Command Space Division to centralize all Department of Defense Space Shuttle and satellite ope...
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Language: | en_US |
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International Foundation for Telemetering
1981
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10150/613749 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/613749 |
Summary: | International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 13-15, 1981 / Bahia Hotel, San Diego, California === The Consolidated Space Operations Center (CSOC) is being designed by the Air Force
Systems Command Space Division to centralize all Department of Defense Space Shuttle
and satellite operations within a single secure facility. CSOC will be located near Colorado
Springs, Colorado. It will provide DOD with enhanced space command and control
capabilities in the late 1980s and 1990s. It will include a Satellite Operations Complex
(SOC), a Shuttle Operations and Planning Complex (SOPC), and communications,
facilities, and support segments. An initial operational capability is planned for mid-1986
that will include appropriately selected portions of SOC, SOPC, and the integrated
segments. These early limited capabilities will be expanded in the late 1980s to satisfy the
requirements of the DOD mission model.
SOC will share command and control of space satellite missions with the Satellite Test
Center (STC) in Sunnyvale, California. The STC is part of the Air Force Satellite Control
Facility (AFSCF). Both the STC and SOC will control assigned satellite missions using the
AFSCF remote tracking stations located at seven sites around the world. SOC will be
functionally equivalent to a portion of the STC as improved by the data systems
modernization program. SOC and STC will be interoperable to permit mutual backup in
the event of an extended failure at either center.
SOPC will be functionally equivalent to portions of the Shuttle operations complex at the
NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC). It will provide for flight planning, flight readiness,
and flight control of DOD Shuttle flights. As with SOC and STC, SOPC and JSC flight
control facilities will be able to provide critical backup support to each other in the event
of an extended failure at either center.
External wideband communications circuits at CSOC will interface with both NASA and
Air Force space facilities, such as the eastern and western launch sites, JSC, and the
AFSCF remote tracking stations. Satellite relay techniques using both Defense Satellite
Communication System (DSCS) satellites and Domestic Communications Satellites
(DOMSAT) will be the basic method of network communication. Dedicated narrowband
circuits, provided by leased lines accommodating both voice and data, will interface
mostly with other Air Force space facilities.
This paper discusses the CSOC program background, configuration, operations concept,
external interfaces, and acquisition status. |
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