• Title/Summary/Keyword: Oceanic payload

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Trend of Domestic and International Development of Multi-Purpose Satellites of Geosynchronous Orbit (정지궤도 복합위성 국내외 개발 동향)

  • Gong, Hyeon-Cheol;Song, Byung-Chul;Oh, Bum-Seok
    • Current Industrial and Technological Trends in Aerospace
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.116-124
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    • 2008
  • Korea Aerospace Research Institute(KARI) is developing COMS (Communication, Ocean and Meteorological Satellite) which is scheduled to take off in June, 2009. COMS is the first geosynchronous satellite developed in Korea which is able to perform three missions 24 hours a day. The oceanic payload was transferred from France to Korea in November, 2008 and made it possible to integrate all three payload together. After the integration COMS is planned to be transferred to Guiana Space Center (on French territory) to be launched. In this paper the trend of domestic and international development of the multi-purpose geosynchronous satellite considering the COMS is the first operational geosynchronous multipurpose satellite in the world.

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Construction of real-time remote ship monitoring system using Ka-band payload of COMS (천리안 위성통신을 이용한 실시간 원격 선박 모니터링 체계 구축)

  • Jeong, Jaehoon;Kim, Tae-Ho;Yang, Chan-Su
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.32 no.3
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    • pp.323-330
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    • 2016
  • Communication, Ocean and Meteorological Satellite (COMS) was launched in 2010 with three payloads that include Ka-band communication payload developed by Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning (MSIP) and Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI). This study introduces a real-time remote vessel monitoring system built in the Socheongcho Ocean Research Station using the Ka-band communication satellite. The system is composed of three steps; real-time data collection, transmission, and processing/visualization. We describe hardware (H/W) and software systems (S/W) installed to perform each step and the whole procedure that made the raw data become vessel information for a real-time ocean surveillance. In addition, we address functional requirements of H/W and S/W and the important considerations for successful operation of the system. The system is now successfully providing, in near real-time, ship information over a VHF range using AIS data collected in the station. The system is expected to support a rapid and effective surveillance over a huge oceanic area. We hope that the concept of the system can be fully used for real-time maritime surveillance using communication satellite in future.