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Two satellites for Europe's rival to GPS were lifted into space on Friday to boost the Galileo constellation to six orbiters of a final 30, the European Space Agency (ESA) said. The launch of satellites Doresa and Milena, the first with full operational capability, brought the system a step closer to becoming fully functional. "The deployment of the constellation will now gather pace, with six to eight satellites launched per year," the ESA said in a statement.
"The final constellation will consist of 24 satellites expected to be ready in 2017 and complemented by six in-orbit spares." The pair of orbiters were launched on a Russian-built Soyuz rocket from Europe's Kourou space centre in French Guiana at 1227 GMT as scheduled, after a 24-hour bad weather delay.
Minutes later it shed its four boosters and faring - the nose cone that protects the craft in the early stages of flight. At three hours and 47 minutes after launch, the satellites separated from the mother ship to enter into free-flight orbit. "These two satellites are the first of a new type of satellite that are fully owned by the EU, a step towards a fully-fledged European-owned satellite navigation system," said the European Commission, which funds the project.
The 5.4-billion-euro ($7.2-billion) Galileo constellation is designed as an alternative to the existing US Global Positioning System (GPS) and Russia's Glonass, and will have search and rescue capabilities. Four Galileo satellites have been launched before Friday - the first pair in October 2011 and the second a year later. They are the nucleus of the constellation orbiting Earth at an altitude of 23,500 kilometres (14,600 miles), and will later be brought to full operational capability.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2014

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