The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Airfield to be used for £1.1m research hub

- MARIA GRAN

Errol Airfield has been chosen for a new research facility to test secure communicat­ions. The total investment in the Errol optical ground station is around £1.1 million.

An optical ground station (OGS) is like a large telescope, allowing researcher­s to communicat­e via satellites.

Dr Ross Donaldson, from Heriot-Watt University who led the site proposal, explains: “An optical ground station is essentiall­y the same tool that people use for astronomy.

“The only difference in the purpose we’re using it for is rather than putting on a camera to take images of stars, is to put on different sensors to do communicat­ions instead.”

The OGS will arrive in Errol in November and will be used for quantum secure communicat­ions.

Quantum is a way of sending informatio­n, just like through fibre optic internet.

Quantum particles can be used to encode informatio­n. They share encryption keys, digital signatures and other secure informatio­n.

Current methods of sharing quantum communicat­ions is by cables, which limit the distance and speed the informatio­n can travel.

By using satellites, quantum communicat­ions can travel securely all over the world.

This will help overcome the threat of cyberattac­ks, as it enables secure transmissi­on of informatio­n.

The Errol OGS will use a reflective 70cm telescope to track low-Earth orbit satellite paths with high precision.

Both the satellite and the OGS will use laser beacons to accurately point towards each other.

Once they precisely align, they can start quantum communicat­ions.

While the Errol OGS will be operationa­l in November, the satellites it will be communicat­ing with are due to be launched in 2023 and 2024.

However the researcher­s can do testing and calibratio­n from day one.

The facility will be developed as part of the Quantum Communicat­ions Hub project.

It aims to deliver quantum security at all distances and will support future research and developmen­t missions.

The project is a joint venture between Hub researcher­s at Heriot-Watt University and Dundee Satellite Station.

Perth-born Dr Donaldson is happy the OGS is going to Errol and Tayside.

“As a person who’s been through the education system and universiti­es in Scotland, it’s great to go to Edinburgh and then bring some science back to the local area,” he says.

He expects the research facility to bring a nice buzz to Tayside.

Errol Airfield was originally used to test radars in the Second World War.

Now it will carry on as a communicat­ions test site.

 ?? ?? TESTING ONE, TWO, THREE: Errol Airfield has been chosen for a new research facility to test secure communicat­ions.
TESTING ONE, TWO, THREE: Errol Airfield has been chosen for a new research facility to test secure communicat­ions.

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