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Featured Gps Articles

The benefit of a GPS system.
What benefit will you get from GPS? Global Positioning System is a navigational aid, funded and controlled by the U.S. Department of Defense. Since GPS systems utilize 24 satellites that orbit the earth in a grid pattern, there are always six to ...

Come Home With More Fish Than You Hoped For, With The Eagle Sea Charter GPS
The Eagle Sea Charter delivers a great quality view of the structures and the fish below in the water that you fish in. And you will never get lost. By packing it full of the best features, Eagle has provided you with all you need to have a successful ...

Gps And How It Works
GPS stands for Global Positioning System, a satellite navigation system with twenty-four satellites in orbit. These satellites were put in place by the United States Department of Defense for military uses, and were called NAVSTAR. The first satellite ...





Gps - How It Works
 

In this second of a three part series we're going to go over how GPS receivers actually measure distance. A lot of math and science goes into this stuff so sit back and get ready to strain your brain.

At any given time, let's choose midnight for this example, the satellite begins transmitting a digital pattern called a pseudo-random code. At that same time the GPS receiver begins running that same random pattern. When the satellite's signal reaches the receiver the pattern transmission will lag a little behind the receivers playing of the same pattern. The length of the delay is equal to the travel time of the signal. The receiver multiplies this time by the speed of light to measure how far the signal actually travelled. We assume the signal travelled in a straight line and this therefore is the distance from receiver to satellite.

In order for this measurement to be able to be made the receiver and the satellite both need clocks that can be synchronized to the nanosecond. In order to make this possible you need atomic clocks, not only in the receiver but in every satellite as well. Atomic clocks cost between $50,000 and $100,000. That makes them a little too expensive for everyday use.

To overcome this cost problem the GPS system has a very clever solution. Every satellite contains an expensive atomic clock but the receiver contains a regular quartz clock which the receiver itself constantly resets. The receiver looks at the incoming signals from four or more of the satellites and compensates for it's own inaccuracy. Once it calculates the correct time value this will cause all the signals that the receiver is getting from the satellites to align at a single point in space. That is the time value held by the atomic clocks in the satellites themselves. So the receiver sets it's clock to that time value and therefore has the same time value as all the satellites. Atomic clock accuracy for quartz clock prices. You can't beat that.

When you measure the distance to four satellites you can draw four spheres that all intersect at one point. Three spheres will intersect even if you're way off but four spheres will only intersect if you are exactly right. The receiver can calculate the time needed for the spheres to intersect at one point. Based on this it resets it's clock to match the atomic clocks of the satellites. The receiver does this constantly as long as it is on, which gives it the same accuracy as the atomic clocks in the satellites.

In order for this info to be of any use, the receiver also has to know where the satellites actually are. To do this, the receiver stores an almanac that tells where each satellite is at a given time. Any adjustments that need to be made because of gravitational pull are transmitted to the receivers by the department of the military.

In the last instalment of this series we'll go over problems with the system, how they can be compensated for and how to use the data itself.


-------------------------------------------------------
Michael Russell
Your Independent guide to Global Positioning Systems
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Written By: Michael Russell

Gps News



Washington Times

FAA bill passes, speeding switch to GPS for guiding planes
The Seattle Times
A bill to speed the nation's switch from radar to an air traffic control system based on GPS technology received final congressional approval Monday. By JOAN LOWY The Associated Press Postal official's travel: Days before the US Postal Service ...
Congress passes bill to speed air traffic control switch to GPS, open skies to ...Washington Post
Congress passes FAA bill that speeds switch to GPSBoston.com
Congressional bill aims to speeden FAA switch to GPSSlashGear
San Francisco Chronicle
all 435 news articles »

CNET

Canon announces SX260HS 20x superzoom with GPS and SX240HS without
Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)
The difference between the two is that the SX 240 IS doesn't include GPS and isn't being announced by Canon USA, so may not be widely available if it reaches North American shores. Beyond that, both are 20x compact superzooms with 25-500mm equivalent ...
Canon welcomes ELPH 530 HS / 320 HS, SX260 HS and D20 to PowerShot lineupEngadget
Canon Joins the Wi-Fi and 20X-Zoom Fray With New PowerShot CamerasPCWorld
Canon Announces SX260, Rugged D20, New Digital ELPH PowerShotsDigital Camera Review
PC Magazine -CNET -MarketWatch (press release)
all 48 news articles »

USA TODAY

FBI cuts back on GPS surveillance after Supreme Court ruling
USA TODAY
By Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY WASHINGTON – The FBI has begun cutting back GPS surveillance in an array of criminal and intelligence investigations following a Supreme Court ruling last month restricting its use, a federal law enforcement official said.

and more »

MassLive.com

Conservative PAC American Crossroads & Crossroads GPS boast big money to back ...
MassLive.com
... and candidates across the United States, conservative political action committee American Crossroads and its non-profit sister organization Crossroads GPS are poised to be among the most active political forces in the 2012 election cycle.
Today's Influence Ads: Crossroads GPS Goes After ObamaNational Journal
Secret money is funding more election adsWashington Post

all 3 news articles »

GPS Now Monitoring Foster Father Accused of Sodomy, Molestation
OzarksFirst.com
He was released on $100000 bond and is being monitored by a GPS device. According to court documents, one boy was allegedly molested when he was 8 and 9 years old, while living with O'Brien for a year from June, 2009 to June 2010.

and more »