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why GPS?


Why GPS?
Trying to figure out where you are and where you're going is probably one of man's oldest pastimes.

Navigation and positioning are crucial to so many activities and yet the process has always been quite cumbersome.

Over the years all kinds of technologies have tried to simplify the task but every one has had some disadvantage.

Finally, the U.S. Department of Defense decided that the military had to have a super precise form of worldwide positioning. And fortunately they had the kind of money ($12 billion!) it took to build something really good.


Why Did the Department of Defense Develop GPS?

In the latter days of the arms race the targeting of ICBMs became such a fine art that they could be expected to land right on an enemy's missile silos. Such a direct hit would destroy the silo and any missile in it. The ability to take out your opponent's missiles had a profound effect on the balance of power.

But you could only expect to hit a silo if you knew exactly where you were launching from. That's not hard if your missiles are on land, as most of them were in the Soviet Union. But most of the U.S. nuclear arsenal was at sea on subs. To maintain the balance of power the U.S. had to come up with a way to allow those subs to surface and fix their exact position in a matter of minutes anywhere in the world Hello GPS!

The result is the Global Positioning System, a system that's changed navigation forever.



what is GPS?
What is GPS?

The Global Positioning System (GPS) is a worldwide radio-navigation system formed from a constellation of 24 satellites and their ground stations.

GPS uses these "man-made stars" as reference points to calculate positions accurate to a matter of meters. In fact, with advanced forms of GPSyou can make measurements to better than a centimeter!

In a sense it's like giving every square meter on the planet a unique address.

GPS receivers have been miniaturized to just a few integrated circuits and so are becoming very economical. And that makes the technology accessible to virtually everyone.

These days GPS is finding its way into cars, boats, planes, construction equipment, movie making gear, farm machinery, even laptop computers.

Soon GPS will become almost as basic as the telephone. Indeed, at Trimble, we think it just may become a universal utility.



how GPS?
How GPS works?

Here's how GPS works in five logical steps:

  1. The basis of GPS is "triangulation" from satellites.
    We're using the word "triangulation" very loosely here because it's a word most people can understand, but purists would not call what GPS does "triangulation" because no angles are involved. It's really "trilateration."
    Trilateration is a method of determining the relative positions of objects using the geometry of triangles.
  2. To "triangulate," a GPS receiver measures distance using the travel time of radio signals.
  3. To measure travel time, GPS needs very accurate timing which it achieves with some tricks.
  4. Along with distance, you need to know exactly where the satellites are in space. High orbits and careful monitoring are the secret.
  5. Finally you must correct for any delays the signal experiences as it travels through the atmosphere.


how GPS?
Triangulating from Satellites

Improbable as it may seem, the whole idea behind GPS is to use satellites in space as reference points for locations here on earth.

That's right, by very, very accurately measuring our distance from three satellites we can "triangulate" our position anywhere on earth.

Forget for a moment how our receiver measures this distance. We'll get to that later. First consider how distance measurements from three satellites can pinpoint you in space.

The Big Idea Geometrically:

Step One:

Suppose we measure our distance from a satellite and find it to be 11,000 miles.

Knowing that we're 11,000 miles from a particular satellite narrows down all the possible locations we could be in the whole universe to the surface of a sphere that is centered on this satellite and has a radius of 11,000 miles.

how GPS?
Step Two:

Next, say we measure our distance to a second satellite and find out that it's 12,000 miles away.

That tells us that we're not only on the first sphere but we're also on a sphere that's 12,000 miles from the second satellite. Or in other words, we're somewhere on the circle where these two spheres intersect.

how GPS?

Step Three:

If we then make a measurement from a third satellite and find that we're 13,000 miles from that one, that narrows our position down even further, to the two points where the 13,000 mile sphere cuts through the circle that's the intersection of the first two spheres.

So by ranging from three satellites we can narrow our position to just two points in space.

To decide which one is our true location we could make a fourth measurement. But usually one of the two points is a ridiculous answer (either too far from Earth or moving at an impossible velocity) and can be rejected without a measurement.

A fourth measurement does come in very handy for another reason however, but we'll tell you about that later.

Next we'll see how the system measures distances to satellites.


how GPS?
Measuring distance from a satellite

We saw in the last section that a position is calculated from distance measurements to at least three satellites.

how GPS?
The Big Idea Mathematically:

In a sense, the whole thing boils down to those "velocity times travel time" math problems we did in high school. Remember the old: "If a car goes 60 miles per hour for two hours, how far does it travel?"

Velocity (60 mph) x Time (2 hours) = Distance (120 miles)

In the case of GPS we're measuring a radio signal so the velocity is going to be the speed of light or roughly 186,000 miles per second.

The problem is measuring the travel time.

how GPS?
Timing is tricky

  • We need precise clocks to measure travel time
  • The travel time for a satellite right overhead is about 0.06 seconds
  • The difference in sync of the receiver time minus the satellite time is equal to the travel time

The timing problem is tricky. First, the times are going to be awfully short. If a satellite were right overhead the travel time would be something like 0.06 seconds. So we're going to need some really precise clocks. We'll talk about those soon.

But assuming we have precise clocks, how do we measure travel time? To explain it let's use a goofy analogy:

Suppose there was a way to get both the satellite and the receiver to start playing "The Star Spangled Banner" at precisely 12 noon. If sound could reach us from space (which, of course, is ridiculous) then standing at the receiver we'd hear two versions of the Star Spangled Banner, one from our receiver and one from the satellite.

These two versions would be out of sync. The version coming from the satellite would be a little delayed because it had to travel more than 11,000 miles.

If we wanted to see just how delayed the satellite's version was, we could start delaying the receiver's version until they fell into perfect sync.

The amount we have to shift back the receiver's version is equal to the travel time of the satellite's version. So we just multiply that time times the speed of light and BINGO! we've got our distance to the satellite.

That's basically how GPS works.

Only instead of the Star Spangled Banner the satellites and receivers use something called a "Pseudo Random Code" - which is probably easier to sing than the Star Spangled Banner.


Timing
Getting perfect timing

If measuring the travel time of a radio signal is the key to GPS, then our stop watches had better be darn good, because if their timing is off by just a thousandth of a second, at the speed of light, that translates into almost 200 miles of error!

On the satellite side, timing is almost perfect because they have incredibly precise Atomic Clocks

Atomic clocks don't run on atomic energy. They get the name because they use the oscillations of a particular atom as their "metronome." This form of timing is the most stable and accurate reference man has ever developed.

But what about our receivers here on the ground?

Remember that both the satellite and the receiver need to be able to precisely synchronize their pseudo-random codes to make the system work. (to review this point click here)

If our receivers needed atomic clocks (which cost upwards of $50K to $100K) GPS would be a lame duck technology. Nobody could afford it.

Luckily the designers of GPS came up with a brilliant little trick that lets us get by with much less accurate clocks in our receivers. This trick is one of the key elements of GPS and as an added side benefit it means that every GPS receiver is essentially an atomic-accuracy clock.

Timing

Using GPS for Timing

We generally think of GPS as a navigation or positioning resource but the fact that every GPS receiver is synchronized to universal time makes it the most widely available source of precise time.

This opens up a wide range of applications beyond positioning. GPS is being used to synchronize computer networks, calibrate other navigation systems, synchronize motion picture equipment and much more.

The secret to perfect timing is to make an extra satellite measurement.

That's right, if three perfect measurements can locate a point in 3-dimensional space, then four imperfect measurements can do the same thing.

This idea is so fundamental to the working of GPS .there is a separate illustrated section that shows how it works.

Extra Measurement Cures Timing Offset

If our receiver's clocks were perfect, then all our satellite ranges would intersect at a single point (which is our position). But with imperfect clocks, a fourth measurement, done as a cross-check, will NOT intersect with the first three.

So the receiver's computer says "Uh-oh! there is a discrepancy in my measurements. I must not be perfectly synced with universal time."

Since any offset from universal time will affect all of our measurements, the receiver looks for a single correction factor that it can subtract from all its timing measurements that would cause them all to intersect at a single point.

That correction brings the receiver's clock back into sync with universal time, and bingo! - you've got atomic accuracy time right in the palm of your hand.

Once it has that correction it applies to all the rest of its measurements and now we've got precise positioning.

One consequence of this principle is that any decent GPS receiver will need to have at least four channels so that it can make the four measurements simultaneously.

With the pseudo-random code as a rock solid timing sync pulse, and this extra measurement trick to get us perfectly synced to universal time, we have got everything we need to measure our distance to a satellite in space.

But for the triangulation to work we not only need to know distance, we also need to know exactly where the satellites are.

Positions
Satellite Positions

Knowing where a satellite is in space

In this tutorial we've been assuming that we know where the GPS satellites are so we can use them as reference points.

But how do we know exactly where they are? After all they're floating around 11,000 miles up in space.

A high satellite gathers no moss

That 11,000 mile altitude is actually a benefit in this case, because something that high is well clear of the atmosphere. And that means it will orbit according to very simple mathematics.

The Air Force has injected each GPS satellite into a very precise orbit, according to the GPS master plan.

Positions

GPS Master Plan

The launch of the 24th block II satellite in March of 1994 completed the GPS constellation.

Four additional satellites are in reserve to be launched "on need."

The spacings of the satellites are arranged so that a minimum of five satellites are in view from every point on the globe.

On the ground all GPS receivers have an almanac programmed into their computers that tells them where in the sky each satellite is, moment by moment.

The basic orbits are quite exact but just to make things perfect the GPS satellites are constantly monitored by the Department of Defense.

They use very precise radar to check each satellite's exact altitude, position and speed.

The errors they're checking for are called "ephemeris errors" because they affect the satellite's orbit or "ephemeris." These errors are caused by gravitational pulls from the moon and sun and by the pressure of solar radiation on the satellites.

Once the DoD has measured a satellite's exact position, they relay that information back up to the satellite itself. The satellite then includes this new corrected position information in the timing signals it's broadcasting.

So a GPS signal is more than just pseudo-random code for timing purposes. It also contains a navigation message with ephemeris information as well.

With perfect timing and the satellite's exact position you'd think we'd be ready to make perfect position calculations.


Why we need Differential GPS?

Basic GPS is the most accurate radio-based navigation system ever developed. And for many applications it's plenty accurate. But it's human nature to want MORE!

So some crafty engineers came up with "Differential GPS," a way to correct the various inaccuracies in the GPS system, pushing its accuracy even farther.

Differential GPS or "DGPS" can yield measurements good to a couple of meters in moving applications and even better in stationary situations.

That improved accuracy has a profound effect on the importance of GPS as a resource. With it, GPS becomes more than just a system for navigating boats and planes around the world. It becomes a universal measurement system capable of positioning things on a very precise scale.



DGPS?

Putting GPS to work

GPS technology has matured into a resource that goes far beyond its original design goals. These days scientists, sportsmen, farmers, soldiers, pilots, surveyors, hikers, delivery drivers, sailors, dispatchers, lumberjacks, fire-fighters, and people from many other walks of life are using GPS in ways that make their work more productive, safer, and sometimes even easier.

In this section you will see a few examples of real-world applications of GPS. These applications fall into five broad categories.

Location - determining a basic position
Navigation - getting from one location to another
Tracking - monitoring the movement of people and things
Mapping - creating maps of the world
Timing - bringing precise timing to the world

DGPS?
Location

"Where am I?"

The first and most obvious application of GPS is the simple determination of a "position" or location. GPS is the first positioning system to offer highly precise location data for any point on the planet, in any weather. That alone would be enough to qualify it as a major utility, but the accuracy of GPS and the creativity of its users is pushing it into some surprising realms.

Knowing the precise location of something, or someone, is especially critical when the consequences of inaccurate data are measured in human terms. For example, when a stranded motorist was lost in a South Dakota blizzard for 2 days, GPS helped rescuers find her.

GPS is also being applied in Italy to create exact location points for their nationwide geodetic network which will be used for surveying projects. Once in place it will support the first implementation of a nationally created location survey linked to the WGS-84 global grid.

The Italian Grid

Using Trimble SSE GPS receivers, the Italian Military Geographic Institute is creating what is reputed to be the first nationwide geodetic network . This grid is based on the WGS-84 global grid, a mathematically created grid that surrounds the earth. While this global grid is accurate enough for geodetic research and measurements, it lacks the precision for local and regional projects.

With the addition of GPS location data collected using Trimble systems, surveyors will no longer have to perform preliminary surveys to calculate differences between WGS and local survey data. This is the first case of a national survey organization creating data that's linked to WGS-84. This project is paving the way for similar networks in Europe and possibly around the world.

Sometimes an exact reference locator is needed for extremely precise scientific work. Just getting to the world's tallest mountain was tricky, but GPS made measuring the growth of Mt. Everest easy. The data collected strengthened past work, but also revealed that as the Khumbu glacier moves toward Everest's Base Camp, the mountain itself is getting taller.


DGPS?
Navigation

"Where am I going?"

GPS helps you determine exactly where you are, but sometimes important to know how to get somewhere else. GPS was originally designed to provide navigation information for ships and planes. So it's no surprise that while this technology is appropriate for navigating on water, it's also very useful in the air and on the land.

On the Water

It's interesting that the sea, one of our oldest channels of transportation, has been revolutionized by GPS, the newest navigation technology. Trimble introduced the world's first GPS receiver for marine navigation in 1985. And as you would expect, navigating the world's oceans and waterways is more precise than ever.

Today you will find Trimble receivers on vessels the world over, from hardworking fishing boats and long-haul container ships, to elegant luxury cruise ships and recreational boaters.A New Zealand commercial fishing company uses GPS so they can return to their best fishing holes without wandering into the wrong waters in the process.

DGPS?
Navigation

Flying a single-engine Piper Cub or a commercial jumbo jet requires the same precise navigation information, and GPS puts it all at the pilot's fingertips as safely as possible.

By providing more precise navigation tools and accurate landing systems, GPS not only makes flying safer, but also more efficient. With precise point-to-point navigation, GPS saves fuel and extends an aircraft's range by ensuring pilots don't stray from the most direct routes to their destinations.

GPS accuracy will also allow closer aircraft separations on more direct routes, which in turn means more planes can occupy our limited airspace. This is especially helpful when you're landing a plane in the middle of mountains. And small medical evac helicopters benefit from the extra minutes saved by the accuracy of GPS navigation.



DGPS?
Tracking

If navigation is the process of getting something from one location to another, then tracking is the process of monitoring it as it moves along.

Commerce relies on fleets of vehicles to deliver goods and services either across a crowded city or through nationwide corridors. So, effective fleet management has direct bottom-line implications, such as telling a customer when a package will arrive, spacing buses for the best scheduled service, directing the nearest ambulance to an accident, or helping tankers avoid hazards.

GPS used in conjunction with communication links and computers can provide the backbone for systems tailored to applications in agriculture, mass transit, urban delivery, public safety, and vessel and vehicle tracking. So it's no surprise that police, ambulance, and fire departments are adopting systems like Trimble's GPS-based AVL (Automatic Vehicle Location) Manager to pinpoint both the location of the emergency and the location of the nearest response vehicle on a computer map. With this kind of clear visual picture of the situation, dispatchers can react immediately and confidently.

Chicago developed a GPS tracking system to monitor emergency vehicles through their streets, saving precious time responding to 911 calls. And on the commercial front, two taxi companies in Australia track their cabs for better profit and improved safety.


DGPS?
Mapping

"Where is everything else?"

It's a big world out there, and using GPS to survey and map it precisely saves time and money in this most stringent of all applications. Today, Trimble GPS makes it possible for a single surveyor to accomplish in a day what used to take weeks with an entire team. And they can do their work with a higher level of accuracy than ever before.

Trimble pioneered the technology which is now the method of choice for performing control surveys, and the effect on surveying in general has been considerable. You've seen how GPS pinpoints a position, a route, and a fleet of vehicles. Mapping is the art and science of using GPS to locate items, then create maps and models of everything in the world. And we do mean everything. Mountains, rivers, forests and other landforms. Roads, routes, and city streets. Endangered animals, precious minerals and all sorts of resources. Damage and disasters, trash and archeological treasures. GPS is mapping the world.

For example, Trimble GPS helped fire fighters respond with speed and efficiency during the 1991 Oakland/Berkeley fire to plot the extent of the blaze and to evaluate damage. In a less urgent yet equally important situation, the city of Modesto, California improved their efficiency and job performance by using GPS and mountain bikes to create a precise map of its network of water resources and utilities.



DGPS?
Timing

"When will it all happen?"

Although GPS is well-known for navigation, tracking, and mapping, it's also used to disseminate precise time, time intervals, and frequency. Time is a powerful commodity, and exact time is more powerful still. Knowing that a group of timed events is perfectly synchronized is often very important. GPS makes the job of "synchronizing our watches" easy and reliable.

There are three fundamental ways we use time. As a universal marker, time tells us when things happened or when they will. As a way to synchronize people, events, even other types of signals, time helps keep the world on schedule. And as a way to tell how long things last, time provides and accurate, unambiguous sense of duration.

GPS satellites carry highly accurate atomic clocks. And in order for the system to work, our GPS receivers here on the ground synchronize themselves to these clocks. That means that every GPS receiver is, in essence, an atomic accuracy clock.

Astronomers, power companies, computer networks, communications systems, banks, and radio and television stations can benefit from this precise timing.One investment banking firm uses GPS to guarantee their transactions are recorded simultaneously at all offices around the world. And a major Pacific Northwest utility company makes sure their power is distributed at just the right time along their 14,797 miles of transmission lines.


1 comments

  1. asha  

    da ne allu kollallo.kollam katta this one.study time ethanalle pani.any way fantastic !!!!!!!!!!!!!

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