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GPS. Global Positioning System. Diana Cooksey, Montana State University, LRES Department. Overview. What is GPS & how does it work? Satellites Radio signals Almanacs Timing. What is GPS?. Satellites orbiting the earth Positioning, navigation and timing Operates 24 hrs/day
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GPS Global Positioning System Diana Cooksey, Montana State University, LRES Department
Overview • What is GPS & how does it work? • Satellites • Radio signals • Almanacs • Timing
What is GPS? • Satellites orbiting the earth • Positioning, navigation and timing • Operates 24 hrs/day • Used for any application requiring location information
GPS Constellations • United States • NAVSTAR GPS (Navigation Satellite Timing & Ranging system); 28 satellites • European Union • Galileo; 30 satellites • Russia • Global Navigation Satellite System (GLONASS); 24 satellites (10 healthy)
GPS Segments Space Control User
Space Segment: GPS Satellites • Power • Sun-seeking solar panels • Nicad batteries • Timing • 4 atomic clocks
Satellite Orbits • Orbit the earth at approx. 20,200 km (11,000 nautical miles) • Satellites complete an orbit in approximately 12 hours
Satellite Signals • Radio signals, 2 frequencies • Two levels of service • Standard Positioning Service (SPS) • Precise Positioning Service (PPS)
Satellite Signals • Radio signals contain • Unique pseudorandom code • Ephemeris • Clock behavior and clock corrections • System time • Status messages • Almanac
Satellite Signals • Require a direct line to GPS receivers • Cannot penetrate water, soil, walls or other obstacles
Satellite Almanac • Sent along with position and timing messages • Prediction of all satellite orbits • Needed to run satellite availability software • Valid for about 30 days
Control Segment: US DoD Monitoring Colorado Springs Hawaii Kwajalein Ascension Diego Garcia Orbits precisely measured Discrepancies between predicted orbits (almanac) and actual orbits transmitted back to the satellites
How Does GPS Work? Calculating a Position • GPS receiver calculates its position by measuring the distance to satellites (satellite ranging)
Measuring Distance to Satellites • 1. Measure time for signal to travel from satellite to receiver • 2. Speed of light x travel time = distance • Distance measurements to 4 satellites are required to compute a 3-D position (latitude, longitude and altitude)
Measuring Satellite Signal Travel Time • How do we find the exact time the signal left the satellite? • Synchronized codes
One measurement narrows down our position to the surface of a sphere
A second measurement narrows down our position to the intersection of two spheres
A third measurement narrows down our position to just two points
Correcting for Timing Offset • The first three measurements narrow down our position • A fourth measurement is needed to correct for timing offset (difference in synchronization between satellite and receiver clocks) • Satellites use highly accurate atomic clocks • Receivers use accurate quartz clocks
5 Things to Take Away • 3 GPS segments • Satellites transmit radio signals containing • Unique pseudorandom code • Ephemeris • Clock behavior and clock corrections • System time • Status messages • Almanac • Formula for satellite ranging (D = t ∙ v) • 4 satellites to compute an accurate 3-D position (the 4th measurement is needed to correct for timing offset) • We are not the only country with a GPS system
Overview • How accurate is GPS? • Error sources • Differential correction • Accuracy levels
GPS Error • Atmospheric effects • Multipath • Satellite geometry • Measurement noise (receiver error) • Ephemeris data • Satellite clock drift • Selective availability (SA)
Satellite GeometryGeometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP) • GDOP can magnify or lessen other GPS errors • Wider angles better measurements • Components of GDOP • HDOP; H=horizontal lat/long • VDOP; V=vertical altitude • TDOP; T=time clock offset PDOP values <=4 excellent 5-8 acceptable >=9 poor
Ephemeris Data • A satellite’s positions as a function of time • Each satellite broadcasts its individual ephemeris • Can contain orbital position errors
Selective Availability (SA) • The accuracy of GPS signals was intentionally degraded by the DoD • SA was the largest component of GPS error • SA was turned off on May 1, 2000
GPS Error Budget • Ionosphere..................................5.0 meters (0.4) • Troposphere................................0.5 meters (0.2) • Ephemeris data..............................2.5 meters (0) • Satellite clock drift........................1.5 meters (0) • Multipath....................................0.6 meters (0.6) • Measurement noise.......... ..........0.3 meters (0.3) • Selective availability.....................30-100 meters • Total.................................................~ 10 meters
Differential Correction • GPS receiver on the ground in a known location (base station) • Acts as a static reference point • Transmits error correction messages to other GPS receivers in the local area (real-time) • Differential correction can be done on computer after GPS data are collected (post-processed)
How accurate is GPS? • Recreational and mapping grade.........................10-15 m • C/A code • Autonomous • Recreational and mapping grade.............................1-5 m • C/A code • With differential correction • Submeter mapping grade.............................10 cm to 1 m • C/A code & carrier • With differential correction • Survey grade.............................................................1 cm • Dual frequency • Advanced survey methods
Six Main Sources of GPS Error • Atmospheric effects • Multipath effects • Satellite geometry • Measurement noise • Ephemeris data • Satellite clock drift
Things to Take Away • 6 major sources of error affect the accuracy of GPS positions • Atmospheric error largest source • Previously SA • Almanac and ephemeris data are different • Differential correction increases accuracy