Title: GIS 1710 The NAVSTAR GPS Segments
1GIS 1710The NAVSTAR GPS Segments
- Dr. Walter Goedecke
- Spring ? 2007
2Topics
- Description of the U.S. GPS system segments
- Space segment
- Spacecraft
- Orbit details
- Orbit anomalies
- Ground segment
- GPS Ground Control
- Ephemeris vs. Almanac
3The NAVSTAR GPS Segments GPS Description
- The Global Positioning System is divided into
three segments space, control, and user. - The space segment comprises the GPS satellite
constellation. - The control segment comprises ground stations
around the world that are responsible for
monitoring the flight paths of the GPS
satellites, synchronizing the satellites' onboard
atomic clocks, and uploading data for
transmission by the satellites. - The user segment consists of GPS receivers used
for both military and civilian applications.
4The NAVSTAR GPS Segments GPS Description
- The system cost is about 400 million / year.
- There are two levels of service
- Precise Positioning Service (PPS) for exclusive
military use - Accuracy within 95 probability is 16 meters for
horizontal component and 23 m for the vertical - Standard Positioning Service (SPS) for public use
- Accuracy 100 meters for horizontal component and
156 m for the vertical
5GPS Space SegmentSpacecraft
- Weight is 1,877 kg at launch
- The design lifetime is 10 years
- Some spares are in orbit, and some are ready to
launch - The older Block ? group are no longer operational
- As of July 2001 the constellation has
- 5 Block ?? satellites
- 18 Block ??A satellites
- 6 Block ??R satellites
- R designates replenishment, or replacement
- Block ??F will follow with enhanced capabilities.
6GPS Space SegmentGPS Orbital Details
- The system consists of 24 satellites in medium
Earth orbit (MEO) - This insures a ground station has access to at
least four satellites at any given time, but as
much as ten are possible. - Orbital characteristics
- Period is half a sidereal day, 11 hours and 58
minutes - Speed is 3.87 km/s
- 20,200 km nominal altitude in circular orbit
- 550 inclination from equatorial plane
- 6 orbital planes with a constellation of 4
satellites in each plane spaced 600 in orbital
longitude
7GPS Space SegmentGPS Orbits
8GPS Space Segment Orbital Anomalies
- Orbits are never perfect, or nominal, as
predicted - Orbital perturbational forces in the space
environment affect them, such as - Non-central gravitational potentials
- The upper atmosphere and ionosphere
- The solar wind in relation to the geomagnetic
field - Plasmas, radiation, and high energy particles
9GPS Space Segment Drag, Solar Radiation, and
Solar Wind
- Low ballistic coefficient objects are more
susceptible to radiation pressure, such as
satellites with large solar panels. - Above 800 km solar radiation pressure is a
greater factor than atmospheric drag. - Solar wind can perturb an orbit if the Earths
magnetic field is sufficiently compressed.
10GPS Space Segment The Space Environment -
Plasmas
- Website http//www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/Education/I
ntro.html
11GPS Ground Segment
- Spacecraft operated from the GPS master control
station (MCS) by the US Air Force at Schriever
Air Force Base (formerly Falcon AFB) near
Colorado Springs, Colorado, and four other
monitor stations, located in - Hawaii
- Ascension Island in the Atlantic Ocean
- Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean
- Kwajalein in the Pacific Ocean
- - Includes antenna for uploading to satellite
12GPS Ground SegmentGPS Up/Down Control
13GPS Ground Segment GPS Control Sites
14GPS Ground SegmentGPS Ground Control
- MCS and the additional ground control stations
monitor satellites determine orbits with
precise cesium clocks every 1.5 seconds. - The ground network calculates for each satellite
- Ephemeris
- Atomic clock error
- Other navigation message parameters
15GPS Space Segment Ephemeris vs. Almanac
- An almanac is a calendar of events, in this case
GPS almanacs are computed for mathematical
exercises to predict orbits. - An ephemeris is closer to actual reality, taking
into account new observations that deviate from
nominal orbits due to perturbations.
16References
- Ahmed El-Rabbany, Introductions to GPS The
Global Positioning System, Publisher Artech
House. - Wertz, James R., Wiley J. Larson, Space Mission
Analysis and Design, Publisher Microcosm Press. - Dana, Peter H., Department of Geography,
University of Texas at Austin, 1994http//www.col
orado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/gps/gps_f.html