Title: Global Positioning System
1Global Positioning System
Technology Overview
2Global Positioning System
- developed by the US Dept. of Defense
- satellite-based
- designed to provide positioning and timing
information - 24 hours/day, 7 days/week
- under any weather conditions
- anywhere in the world
3Main Components of GPS
- Space component
- Control component
- User component
4Space component
- 24 satellites in constellation
- orbit every 12 hours at 11,500 miles
- 4 satellites in each of 6 orbital planes
- transmit a uniquely coded radio signal
- equipped with onboard atomic clock
5Control component
- ground-based monitoring and upload stations
- control orbit and timing information
6User component
- military and civilian users
- navigation and positioning applications on land,
sea, in the air and in space
7How does GPS work?
- the receiver picks up the signals from the
satellites - uses signal travel time to calculate distance to
the satellites - triangulates to determine position of the receiver
8Speed of Light Measurement
- measure how long it takes GPS signal to get to us
- multiply elapsed time by 186,000 miles/sec
- time (sec) x 186,000 miles from satellite to
receiver
Trimble Navigation
9Triangulation
One measurement narrows down our position to the
surface of a sphere.
We are somewhere on the surface of this sphere.
11,000 miles
Trimble Navigation
10Triangulation
Second measurement narrows it down to the
intersection of two spheres.
11,000 miles
Intersection of two spheres is a circle.
12,000 miles
Trimble Navigation
11Triangulation
Third measurement narrows to just two points.
Intersection of three spheres is only two points.
11,000 miles
12,000 miles
13,000 miles
Trimble Navigation
12Triangulation
Fourth measurement will decide between the two
points.
Fourth measurement will go through only one of
the two points.
11,000 miles
14,000 miles
12,000 miles
13,000 miles
Trimble Navigation
133 Classes of GPS Receivers
143 Classes of GPS Receivers
153 Classes of GPS Receivers
16 IMPORTANT NOTE!
Handheld Receivers do NOT allow you to control
the quality of the data you are collecting. Data
quality control is important if you are creating
a GIS database.
17Factors Affecting GPS Accuracy
- satellite constellation geometry (GDOP)
- un-modeled atmospheric delays
18Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP)
Relative position of satellites can affect error
6 secs
4 secs
Idealized situation
Trimble Navigation
19Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP)
Real situation - fuzzy circles
6 secs
4 secs
uncertainty
uncertainty
Point representing position is really a box
Trimble Navigation
20Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP)
Even worse at some angles
Box gets bigger if satellites are closer together
Trimble Navigation
21Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP)
22 Atmospheric Delays
- Ionosphere (band of charged particles)
- Troposphere (our weather)
23 Multipath Error
24Accuracy 15m - typical handheld GPS accuracy
without corrections 3m - typical WAAS accuracy
25- Errors Corrected by WAAS
- Satellite clocks
- Orbit errors
- Ionosphere and troposphere (partially corrected)
- Errors NOT Corrected by WAAS
- Multipath error
- Receiver noise
26 Navigation
27Questions?
28This GPS presentation was prepared by Tom Luther,
USDA Forest Service. It includes slides from
Trimble Navigation.
29History of Geodesy
Sphere
Ellipse
Lumpy Potato
30Datum - Reference Model of the Earth
- Ellipsoid Size
- Ellipsoid Shape
- Location of ellipsoid
- (relative to Earth)
31Common Datums
32Coordinate Systems
Latitude / Longitude
NH State Plane (GRANIT) UTM
33Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM)
34When does this matter?
- When navigating to a waypoint, you need to make
sure that the receiver knows what datum that
waypoint is in. Datum errors can affect your
position by several hundred feet!
- The Garmin 76 will always export positions
using WGS84.
- The datum / coordinate system set on the GPS will
affect how your position is displayed on the GPS
receiver.
- Terrain Navigator will show coordinates in the
datum/coordinate system you set in Preferences.
35This Geodesy presentation was prepared by the
University of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension
and includes images from the US Defense Mapping
Agency, NH GRANIT, and Mentor Software Inc.