What is a positioning system?

·  Land-based Tri-Angulation.

·  Satellite based ranging.

·  Differential position (correction) – use of radio waves to correct GPS positions.

·  Use of dead reckoning.

Types of Positioning Systems:

¨  Land-based – use of radio towers and receivers.

What is GPS?

§  Navigational system that is satellite based and operated by the Department of Defense.

§  Became fully operational in 1995.

§  Designed for precise military navigation.

§  Consists of 3 segments – Space, Control, and User.

Space Segment:

24 NAVSTAR satellites. 21 are in use, 3 are spares.

Each satellite will orbit the earth every 12 hours.

There are 6 orbital paths, each with 4 satellites.

The arrangement of satellites is called a constellation.

Receivers can only use satellite signals that are above the horizon.

All satellites are rigged with transmitters, receivers, and atomic clocks.

q  Atomic clocks are powered by cesium and rubidium. (2 of each)

Control Segment:

v A network of monitoring stations makes up the control segment.

v There are 4 monitoring stations worldwide.

v  Master station is located in Colorado Springs at the Air Force Base.

User Segment:

Ø  Made up of GPS and receivers.

Ø  Civilians can only receive.

Satellite Ranging:

·  GPS determines its position by measuring its distance from several satellites.

·  Each satellite must transmit its position and accurate time signal.

·  Ranging is when a receiver uses the time delay to calculate its distance.

·  GPS is 3 dimensional, plus it incorporates time. It needs 4 satellites.

·  Small errors in the GPS receiver’s clock causes distance errors. This is called pseudoranging.

Signal Details:

·  GPS uses 2 radio signals on separate L bands.

·  Signals are coded.

·  L1 uses the C/A (course acquisition) and P (precision) code.

·  L2 uses only the P code and is encrypted to be used by the military. This becomes the Y code. This process is referred to as ‘anti-spoofing’.

·  Both L1 and L2 signals produce PPS or precise positioning service. Only the military and selected agencies have access to PPS.

·  Civilian access is called SPS or standard positioning service (L1).

Identifying satellites:

¨  Each satellites L1 signal C/A code consists of 3 items of data: location, time, and condition.

¨  Satellites are identified by their SVN (space vehicle number) or PRN (pseudorandom noise code).

¨  All satellites transmit an almanac of information in their constellation.

Accuracy:

§  There are a potential of 5 error sources: clocks, orbits, atmosphere, receivers, or multi-path errors.

§  Clock errors of 1/1000 of a second will produce an error of 186.3 miles.

§  The Department of Defense adjusts the clocks.

§  Satellite orbits are affected by: gravitational forces, solar radiation pressure, position, or speed.

§  Multiple path errors occur when signals bounce off of objects in their path.

Selective Availability:

q  Commonly called S/A. This is what the DoD does so that civilians can not gain precise positioning.

q  They will introduce digital noise into the satellite clocks. This is called dithering.

q  Dithering will limit the signal use by hostile forces. S/A errors will not affect the accuracy of the military receivers.

q  GPS accuracy is limited to within 100 meters horizontally and 60 meters vertically.

q  Differential correction or DGPS is commonly used to compensate for dithering.

q  Differential correction uses real-time correction. Four common sources of real time correction are; Coast Guard, FM signals, Base station equipment, or satellite based differential correction.

q  Coast Guard signals are limited. Are broadcast using radio beacons. Begin to fade after 300 miles.

GLONASS

v Glonass is the Russian government equivalent to NAVSTAR GPS. They also utilize 24 satellites. It is possible to access both systems with special receivers.

Accuracy Terms:

Ø  Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP) is the quality of satellite geometry and magnitude of error.

Ø  GDOP is affected by: Time (TDOP), Position (PDOP), horizon (HDOP), or vertical (VDOP).

Precision Ag Unit 2 Page # 1