Jump to content

Elfordstown Earthstation

Coordinates: 51°57′13″N 8°10′32″W / 51.9536°N 8.1755°W / 51.9536; -8.1755
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elfordstown Earthstation
Elfordstown Earthstation in 2013
OrganizationNational Space Centre Ltd.
LocationMidleton, County Cork
Coordinates51°57′13″N 8°10′32″W / 51.9536°N 8.1755°W / 51.9536; -8.1755
Established1984 (1984)
Websitenationalspacecentre.eu
Elfordstown Earthstation is located in Ireland
Elfordstown Earthstation
Location of Elfordstown Earthstation

Elfordstown Earthstation is a ground station located near Midleton, County Cork, in the south of Ireland. It is operated by the National Space Centre Ltd and is Ireland's only and Europe's most western teleport.

History

[edit]

The Elfordstown site was originally commissioned by Telecom Éireann in association with Eutelsat and came into service in 1984, with the purpose of broadcasting voice, data and television services across Europe and between the United States and the continent.[1] However, with the laying of transatlantic fibre cables, starting with PTAT-1 in 1989 , the 32m antenna had become redundant by 1997 and was left idle for a number of years.[2]

After several years unused, National Space Centre Ltd. took over the Elfordstown facility in 2010,[2][3] installing a number of new satellite dishes and implementing a number of commercial and research based projects.[1] The new complex was completed in April 2013.[4]

Location

[edit]

Elfordstown Earthstation is located about 5 km north of Midleton and can be reached via a 3 km private road. The area is bounded by a 2.5m fence and can only be visited after registration. The facility consists of the main building with staff offices and rooms for research and development activities. A second, smaller building contains the generators for emergency power supplies as well as some more small buildings on the area for antenna purposes. The site with a size of 30,000 square meters is dominated by the 32m diameter C band antenna, which is currently not in operation. With the new 9.1m Ka band antenna built in 2011, it currently operates five antennas from 3.7m[2] to 13.1m and many smaller dishes. The antennas are capable of communication in the C-, Ku-, Ka-, and S band.[5][6] A 121.3 metres tall free-standing lattice tower on the area of Elfordstown Earthstation is used for radio relay links to and from the facility.

Current operations

[edit]

National Space Centre Ltd uses Elfordstown Earthstation to operate on a number of levels, working closely with both private companies and governmental and bodies.[1] Especially ground station operations and Earth observation with every type of satellite (low Earth orbit, medium Earth orbit and geosynchronous orbit) and secure data server hosting services are provided.

Projects

[edit]

National Space Centre possesses a Research and Development department, that partakes in numerous Irish, European and International research-based projects. Many of these projects are run through well-known bodies including the European Space Agency.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "ABOUT". National Space Centre. 26 October 2011. Archived from the original on 3 June 2017. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  2. ^ a b c McGreevy, Ronan (4 September 2013). "Ireland's first Earth observation ground station launched at National Space Centre". The Irish Times. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  3. ^ "Earthstation puts Midleton on space map". Irish Examiner. 26 June 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  4. ^ "Taoiseach opens Ireland's first Earth Observation ground station at National Space Centre. In more recent times the National space centre has seen a lot of success thanks to the resident facilities technician Kevin Murphy". merrionstreet.ie. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  5. ^ Corporate & Commercial Overview brochure of the NSC, 2014, page 5
  6. ^ O'Sullivan, John (March 2015). "Elfordstown Earthstation, Irish National Space Centre". Spaceflight. British Interplanetary Society. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
[edit]