Due to the current gap in continued funding from the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), the NSF Unidata Program Center has temporarily paused most operations. See NSF Unidata Pause in Most Operations for details.
Guys, Got this from NPR (national public radio) today regarding a C band uplink I operate/maintain at a radio station using Galaxy 16.. Galaxy 15, still adrift in space - but with a potential crisis averted. Back in April, Intelsat lost control of its Galaxy 15 communications satellite, and ever since then the bird has been drifting slowly eastward, ignoring all attempts to communicate with it. Later this month, Galaxy 15 will drift into the orbital position of its sister satellite, Galaxy 16, which hosts the Public Radio Satellite Service (PRSS) feeds, among others. A few weeks ago, PRSS warned its customers (who include commercial stations as well as the nation's public broadcasters) that there would be a possibility of disruption to its services on or about December 26. But on Monday, PRSS passed along some good news: it says Intelsat has finally succeeded in powering down the transmitters on the rogue satellite. So when Galaxy 15 begins entering Galaxy 16's orbital position on Friday, it won't be transmitting any signals to interfere with PRSS and the other services that use the popular Galaxy 16 - and a whole bunch of engineers and operations directors can enjoy Christmas weekend without having this particular worry hanging 23,000 miles over their heads. This is good news, that rogue bird will not be affecting any other communication satellites. I know not 100% on topic, but given recent weeks, figured you would find this interesting. Regards, Dave Anderson KG4YZY www.aprsfl.net
ldm-users
archives: