SECOR

SECOR (Sequential Collation of Ranges)[1] was a series of small United States Armed Forces satellites launched in the 1960s for geodesy measurements that precisely determined the locations of points on the Earth's surface, particularly of isolated islands in the Pacific Ocean. This data allowed for improved global mapping and precise positioning of ground stations for other satellites.[2]

Any SECOR satellite could be linked to four mobile ground stations: three were placed in accurately determined known locations, and a fourth one was placed in an unknown location. By measuring a satellite's distance from the three known stations, its position in space was determined. Then, the distance between the unknown ground station and the previously determined satellite's position was used to compute the unknown ground station's coordinates. This process was repeated many times, to enhance the accuracy of the measurement. Once the unknown station's position was accurately determined, it became a known station. Then one of the four stations was moved to a new unknown point, and the process began again.

SECOR was a predecessor to navigational satellite systems such as Timation and Navstar-GPS (Global Positioning System).

  1. ^ Seeber, Günter (22 August 2008). Satellite Geodesy. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9783110200089.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).