By Mark John
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The United States and the European Union have
agreed on a common signal for use by their satellite navigation systems
to provide more accurate images and information, the two announced on
Thursday.
The European Union hopes the deal will help its yet-to-be-launched
Galileo system, struggling to plug funding gaps, establish itself in
the global market for satellite-based navigation and other applications.
"This should facilitate the rapid acceptance of Galileo in global
markets side by side with GPS," European Commission director general
for energy and transport Matthias Ruete said in a statement.
Both sides also said the accord would protect their common security
interests. While the pact covers civilian uses, the U.S. Global
Positioning System (GPS) is military-run and Galileo has been mooted
for defense uses as well.
Under the agreement, the EU and U.S. satellites will use the same radio
frequency, enabling receivers to get signals from both systems and
combine the data.
The United States has 30 satellites orbiting the earth, sending signals
that let users pinpoint their own and others' locations with devices
such as car satellite navigation systems.
The EU aims also to have 30 satellites up in space by around ... more »
|
|
||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Daily Updates
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Friday, July 27
by
Publisher
on Fri 27 Jul 2007 07:30 AM AKDT
|
|||
|
|
||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)