|
Globalstar is a low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellation for satellite phone and low-speed data communications, somewhat similar to the Iridium and Orbcomm satellite systems.
HistoryThe Globalstar project was launched in 1991 as a joint venture of Loral Corp. and Qualcomm. On March 24, 1994, the two sponsors announced formation of Globalstar L.P. (a limited partnership incorporated in the U.S.) with financial participation from eight other companies, including Alcatel, AirTouch, Deutsche Aerospace, Hyundai and Vodafone. At that time, the company predicted the system would launch in 1998 based on an investment of $1.8 billion. Globalstar received its U.S. spectrum allocation from the FCC in January 1995, and continued to negotiate with various other sovereign nations for rights to use the same radio frequencies in their countries. The first satellites were launched in February 1998, but system deployment was delayed through a series of embarrassing and costly launch failures, notably the September 1998 loss of 12 satellites in a launch by the Russian Space Agency. In February 2000, it launched the last of 52 satellites: 48 satellites and four spares (reduced from the original plan of eight spares). The first call on the Globalstar system was placed on November 1, 1998, from Irwin Jacobs (chairman of Qualcomm) in San Diego to Bernard Schwartz (CEO and chairman of Loral Space and Communications) in New York. In October 1999, the system began "friendly user" trials with 44 of 48 planned satellites. In December 1999, the system began limited commercial service (200 users) with the full 48 satellites (no spares in orbit). In February 2000, it began full commercial service with its 48 satellites and 4 spares in North America, Europe and Brazil. Initial prices were $1.79/minute. System architecture
Most Globalstar providers have roaming agreements with local cellular operators, enabling the use of a cellular SIM card with a Globalstar handset and vice versa. Satellites
In 2005, some of the satellites began to reach the limit of their operational lifetime of 7.5 years. In December of 2005, Globalstar began to move some of its satellites into a graveyard orbit above LEO. [1] Recent satellite problemsAccording to documents filed with the SEC on January 30, 2007, Globalstar's previously identified problems with its S-band amplifiers used on its satellites for two-way communications are occurring at a rate faster than previously believed, possibly eventually leading to total loss of service in 2008. In the filing, Globalstar made the following statements:
Industry analysts speculate the problem is caused by radiation exposure the satellites receive when they pass through the South Atlantic Anomaly in their 876 mile (1414 km) altitude orbits.[2]
Globalstar's Interim SolutionOn 18 April 2007 Globalstar announced they would launch eight spare satellites to augment the company’s existing first-generation LEO satellite constellation.[4] On 29 May 2007 the first four of these satellites were launched by Starsem from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan atop a Soyuz-FG/Fregat rocket. The second launch, also aboard a Soyuz-FG/Fregat from Baikonur, was launched on 2007-10-20.[5] However, it is still not clear when the new satellites will improve phone communications. The Globalstar website is mute on this issue. Most current users in summer 2007 report difficulty using the phones, with very short communication windows of 1–2 minutes and frequently dropped calls[citation needed]. In addition, an offshore fishing magazine (Big Game Fishing Journal) wrote an editorial in their July 2007 issue on the poor service of Globalstar [6]. Globalstar's Second-GenerationIn December 2006, Globalstar announced that Alcatel Alenia Space, now Thales Alenia Space, has been awarded a EUR 661 million contract for the second-generation 48 satellite constellation. [7] The satellites are being designed with a life expectancy of 15 years, which is significantly longer than the design life of Globalstar’s first generation constellation. In addition, Globalstar announced on April, 03, 2007 that it has signed a EUR 9 million (approximately US$ 12 million) agreement with Alcatel Alenia Space to upgrade the Globalstar satellite constellation, including necessary hardware and software upgrades to Globalstar’s satellite control network facilities. [8] This second-generation of satellites are expected to provide service to Globalstar customers with satellite voice and data services until at least 2025. Business operationsCorporate structure and financingIn February 1995, Globalstar Telecommunications Ltd. raised $200 million from its initial public offering in the NASDAQ market. The IPO price of $20 per share was equivalent to $5 per share after two stock splits. The stock price peaked at (post split) $50 per share in January 2000, but institutional investors began predicting bankruptcy as early as June 2000. The stock price eventually fell below $1 per share, and the stock was delisted by NASDAQ in June 2001. After the IPO, the publicly traded Globalstar Telecommunications (NASDAQ symbol GSTRF) owned part of system operator Globalstar LP. From that point on, the primary financing for Globastar LP was vendor financing from its suppliers (including Loral and Qualcomm), supplemented by junk bonds. After a total debt and equity investment of $4.3 billion, on February 15, 2002 Globalstar Telecommunications filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, listing assets of $570 million and liabilities of $3.3 billion. The assets were later bought for $43 million by Thermo Capital Partners LLC. When the new Globalstar emerged from bankruptcy in April 2004, it was owned by Thermo Capital Partners (81.25%) and the original creditors of Globalstar L.P. (18.75%). SPOT Inc.In August 2007, Globalstar announced the introduction of the SPOT Satellite Messenger product, to be marketed through its latest subsidiary SPOT Inc. [3] The SPOT Messenger is manufactured by Globalstar partner Axonn LLC [4] and combines the company's simplex data technology with a Nemerix GPS chipset. SPOT is intended to leverage Globalstar's still adequate L-Band uplink, which is used by simplex modems. The product was launched early November 2007. EmployeesThe first five employees of Globalstar were transferred from the founding companies in 1991. Although few figures were publicly disclosed, the company apparently reached a peak of about 350 employees until layoffs in March 2001. However, this figure was misleading as most of the development, operations and sales employees were employed by the company’s strategic partners. Loral’s chairman Bernard Schwartz served as Globalstar’s chairman and CEO until May 2001. The company then appointed satellite telecommunications veteran Olof Lundberg to lead a turnaround at the company to serve as chairman and CEO. After beginning his career with Swedish Telecom, Lundberg had been founding Director General (later CEO) of Inmarsat from 1979–1995. He served as founding CEO and later CEO and Chairman ICO Global Communications from 1995–1999. Lundberg resigned from the company (then in bankruptcy) as of June 30, 2003. References
Bibliography
See alsoExternal links |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Mercedes Car
This site monitored by SitePinger.net