Technical Research Ship Special COMMunications
TRSSCOMM (Technical Research Ship[1] Special COMMunications), an early U.S. Navy earth-moon-earth satellite communication system that relayed ("bounced") messages directly from intelligence-gathering ship to Washington DC by bouncing a microwave signal off the moon, used first on the USS Oxford (15 December 1961). This system consisted of a 16-foot, dish-shaped antenna mounted on a movable platform and capable of bouncing a 10,000 watt microwave signal off a particular spot on the moon and down either to the receiving station at the National Security Agency, Fort Meade, Maryland, or to one of the other Navy SIGINT ships. TRSSCOMM had the advantage of being able to transmit large quantities of intelligence information very rapidly without giving away the ship's location to hostile direction-finding equipment or interfering with incoming signals. Its major disadvantage is that it could only work if the moon was visible and the shipboard hydraulic stabilization system worked properly. This system was replaced by creation of a network of artificial military satellites.[2]
References
- ↑ "A Review of the Technical Research Ship Program 1961 – 1969" (PDF). governmentattic.org. pp. 16–28. Retrieved 20 August 2013. Section 4. History of USS Oxford, pp 16-28 pertain to the USS Oxford, 10 of 12 pages blank - redacted as classified Top Secret Umbra.
- ↑ "Military Satellite Systems" (PDF). US Air Force. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
External links
- Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Department of the Navy, Naval Historical Center
- Satellites for Strategic Defense, 1961-1970, 2.3.1 "Spy-ship" communications support (TRSCOM)
Further reading
- Radar Makes Round Trip To Moon 1946 Universal Newsreel Project Diana Earth-Moon-Earth
- USNS Private Jose F. Valdez (T-AG-169) Final deployments