Septentrio

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Septentrio Satellite Navigation N.V.
Private
Industry GNSS
Founded 2000 Leuven
Headquarters Leuven, Belgium
Key people
Antoon de Proft, CEO
Products GNSS Receivers
Number of employees
about 50
Website http://www.septentrio.com

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Septentrio (Latin for the "seven oxen" [stars] of the "Big Dipper" or simply "North") is a designer and manufacturer of high-end multi-frequency GNSS receivers. Its main target is to provide GNSS receiver boards for further system integration by Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs). Septentrio's core technology is being applied in various professional fields such as land and airborne surveying, machine control, precise agriculture, marine applications, construction, timing etc.

History

Septentrio Satellite Navigation N.V. was incorporated in Leuven, Belgium, in January 2000 to commercialize the Satellite Navigation know-how developed at the Interuniversity Micro Electronics Center, the largest independent microelectronics R&D lab in Belgium. In 2007 Septentrio received the Trends Gazelle award for the fastest rate of growth among Belgian start-up companies.

Location

Septentrio's headquarters are located in Leuven, Belgium. Operations for North and Latin American are based in Torrance, California and the Asian-Pacific operations are based in Hong Kong.

Activities

File:Cpsf.jpg
AsteRx1, first Galileo-compatible commercial receiver

Septentrio has an international team of experts, who cover all the fields of Satellite Navigation technology. The company designs its own chipsets, hardware, firmware and algorithms. Being a provider of high-end receivers for professional use, Septentrio prioritizes the reliability and precision of measurements as well as high degree of flexibility and user control. Septentrio’s products make use of APME, the company’s original multipath-mitigation technology, on-the-fly ambiguity fixing schemes based on the LAMBDA method, and advanced user-controlled RAIM algorithms. Septentrio is also known to first introduce single-board attitude determination systems based on the multi-antenna version of its GPS receivers.

Septentrio’s receivers were used to track experimental Galileo signals transmitted by the GIOVE-A satellite and were also the first to track the signals of the first experimental satellite of the future Chinese Compass navigation system. In the line of user products the company keeps its focus on multi-system receivers that make use of all the navigation signals available in the sky.

External links