Title: Introduction to GPS
1Introduction to GPS
2Global Positioning System
- A military based system designed to provide the
information necessary to determine locations
accurately, anywhere in the world
3U. S. GPS
- NAVigation System Timing And Ranging (NAVSTAR)
Russian GPS
GLObalnaya NAvigatsionnaya Sputnikovaya Sistema
(GLONASS)
4GPS replaces LORANTRANSIT
LORAN Triangulation method with continuous
position fixes, accurate to 300
meters, Limited coverage,
Lat/Lon
TRANSIT Doppler shift, 16 or less fixes/day,
Sub-meter accuracy in about 3
days, World Wide coverage,
Lat/Lon/Height
5Global PositioningSystem (GPS)
- Continuous Position Fixes
- Worldwide Coverage
- Lat/Lon/Height
- Centimeter to 5-meter accuracy in seconds
6GPS System has 3 Segments
- Control Segment
- Space Segment
- User Segment
7Navstar Control
8Space Segment Description
24 Satellites 6 planes with 55o orbit Each plane
4 SVs 20,200 km orbit 1 revolution / 12 hrs
Very high orbit for Accuracy Survivability Coverag
e
9Status of Space Segment
- In development since 1973
- Block I (1978-1986)
- No signal degredation
- Block II/IIA (1989-1995)
- Signal degredation until spring 2000
- SA turned off May 1, 2000
- Block II
- Launched from 1996 to 2008
- Block IIIA satellites expected to begin launch in
2014
10Space Segment Satellites
Operational Satellites
11User Segment (nearly everyone you can think of)
12Trilateration
A position is calculated by knowing The
location of, and calculating the distance to, a
group of satellites (SVs)
The SVs act as precise reference points
13Trilateration
One measurement narrows down our position to the
surface of a sphere
14Trilateration
A second SV narrows our location to the elipse
created by the intersection of two spheres
15Trilateration
The third SV narrows our location to just two
possible points
The fourth SV will determine which of those two
points is correct
16A train leaves the station at 9 a.m. traveling 5
miles per hour.
How far from the station is it at 11 a.m.?
10 miles
17A signal leaves a satellite at 90000.000 a.m.
traveling at 186,000 miles per second.
How far is it from the satellite at 90000.065
12,090 miles.
18How Do We Know when Signal Left SV?
- Receivers SVs use same Code
- Receiver SV syncronized
- Receiver uses code to determine time since
transmission
19GPS Position Solution
(X1-Ux)2(Y1-Uy)2(Z1-Uz)2(SL(T1-Cb))2 (X2-Ux)2(
Y2-Uy)2(Z2-Uz)2(SL(T2-Cb))2 (X3-Ux)2(Y3-Uy)2(Z
3-Uz)2(SL(T3-Cb))2 (X4-Ux)2(Y4-Uy)2(Z4-Uz)2(SL
(T4-Cb))2
Xi, Yi, Zi are coordinates for the ith
satellite Ux, Uy, Uz are rover coordinates to be
determined SL is the speed of light (186,000
miles per second) Ti is the time necessary to
receive a signal from the ith satellite Cb is
the clock bias of the rover
20Three Methods of Positioning
- Autonomous
- Differential
- Phase Differential
21Autonomous Positioning
- Receiver is used to collect real-time locations
- No corrections are applied to locations
- Locations may be off by as much as 100 meters if
SA is active - Depends on Selective Availability
- How much is Falcon AFB distorting the signals?
22Differential Positioning
- Corrections are applied to positions after
returning from field - Uses data collected simultaneously by a base
station - Gives sub-meter to 5 meter accuracy
23Phase-Differential
- Correction is applied while still in field
- Makes use of additional signals being broadcast
by a known ground station - 10-100 centimeters Phase Processing
- 5 millimeters Wave processing
24Need to Know SV Location
- SV location is transmitted to SV by ground
control - SV then relays its location to your receiver
- If a SV fails to maintain proper orbit,
adjustments are uploaded - If problem exists, control segment deems the SV
unhealthy
25Almanac Messages
- Almanac is a set of parameters used to calculate
the rough location of each SV - Almanacs are used for
- Rapid SV acquisitioin
- Pre-mission planning
26Ephemeris Messages
- Ephemeris is a set of parameters used to
determine exact location of SV - Ephemeris used for
- Calculating a GPS position
27Selective Availability (SA)
- Errors introduced to reduce accuracy
- Discourages hostile use
- Largest source of error
- Sum of two effects
- Epsilon - ephemeris fibbing
- Dither - clock variations
28How Accurate Is It?
- That Depends on some variables
- Time spent at a geographic Location
- Design of receiver
- Relative position of satellites
- Rover configuration settings
- Correction methods
29More on Accuracy Later
- Will discuss
- DOPs Dilution of Precision measures
- UERE User Equivalent Ranging Error