One hundredth satellite earth station installed in IMS
      
            The Provisional Technical Secretariat of the Preparatory          Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization          is marking the installation of the 100th satellite earth station (VSAT)          this week. VSATs - Very Small Aperture Terminals - are a key element in          the Global Communications Infrastructure, which transmits data from the          facilities of the International Monitoring System to the International          Data Centre in Vienna.
      
        The Global Communications Infrastructure (GCI) is the          first global satellite communications network to be based on VSAT technology.          Monitoring facilities and Member States in all areas of the world can          exchange data via their local VSAT earthstations through one of three          geosynchronous satellites. The satellites route the transmissions to hubs          on the ground, and the data are then sent to the International Data Centre          by terrestrial links. The GCI uses two additional satellites for more          economical coverage of North America and Europe. The GCI is designed to          be cost-effective, to operate with 99.5% availability, and to provide          data within seconds from origin to final destination. As well as transmitting          data from IMS facilities, the GCI is also used to distribute data and          reports relevant to Treaty verification to States Signatories, in accordance          with the Treaty provisions.
      
        The first VSAT was installed at the Vienna International          Centre in 1998, and the first VSAT installed at an IMS facility was at          the primary seismic station at Sonseca, Spain, also in 1998. Today, there          are VSAT installations in every region of the world. The 100th installation          is located in Namibia at the site of an infrasound and auxiliary seismic          station.
      
        15 Apr 2008