Attachment Exhibit A

This document pretains to SAT-STA-20101129-00247 for Special Temporal Authority on a Satellite Space Stations filing.

IBFS_SATSTA2010112900247_854112

                                                                 Exhibit A

                                                                 Lockheed Martin Corp.
                                                                 Space Station STA
                                                                 LM-RPS1 (Call Sign S2372)
                                                                 November 2010

                                         Description

       Lockheed Martin Corporation (“Lockheed Martin”) hereby respectfully requests special
temporary authority (“STA”) to continue operating the LM-RPS1 satellite (Call Sign S2372) at
variance from station keeping tolerances set forth in the LM-RPS1 license, under a 30-day
extension of the Lockheed Martin STA now in force in File No. SAT-STA-20101028-00226
(“RPS1 STA”).

        The Galaxy-15 satellite, which is operated by PanAmSat Licensee Corp. (“PLC”) at the
133º W.L. orbital location and is the host platform for LM-RPS1, suffered an anomaly of
unknown origin in April 2010. Since the onset of the anomaly, Lockheed Martin has been able
to continue using the LM-RPS1 payload in its intended manner for the provision of
radionavigation-satellite service (“RNSS”). Lockheed Martin’s continued operation of the space
station outside its designated station-keeping box is under the authority granted in the RPS1
STA.

         PLC has apprised Lockheed Martin that it expects that utilization of the LM-RPS1
satellite by Lockheed Martin will continue to be viable after the RPS1 STA expires on
December 6, 2010. Lockheed Martin requests authority to continue operating LM-RPS1 under
the conditions authorized in the RPS1 STA for a period of 30 additional days – or until
January 5, 2011.

        Lockheed Martin has notified the GPS Wing (operators of the co-frequency GPS system)
of the status of the LM-RPS1 satellite, as required in the RPS1 STA. Lockheed Martin
recognizes and accepts that all operations at variance with the LM-RPS1 license are on a non-
harmful interference/non-protected basis.

       Continued use of a viable LM-RPS1 satellite by Lockheed Martin is unquestionably in
the public interest. The space station is part of a GPS augmentation system that provides the
Federal Aviation Administration (the sole customer of Lockheed Martin for LM-RPS1 capacity)
with enhanced navigation data that is used in managing the nation’s air traffic and control
systems. Any disruption in service that is otherwise viable would cause a serious prejudice to
the public and national interests. As long as Lockheed Martin can reliably communicate that
information over LM-RPS1 without harmfully interfering with any authorized users of the
spectrum, it should be allowed to do so.

       On the basis of the foregoing, Lockheed Martin respectfully requests that the
Commission act favorably on the instant STA request, and allow operations of LM-RPS1 to
continue for an additional 30 days (i.e., until January 5, 2011).



Document Created: 2010-11-29 11:41:30
Document Modified: 2010-11-29 11:41:30

© 2024 FCC.report
This site is not affiliated with or endorsed by the FCC