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GPS Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar

Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview Basic Concepts History Structure Applications Communication Typical Sources of Error

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Page 1: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

GPS

Patrick Caldwell

Chris Kellar

Page 2: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Overview

Basic Concepts History Structure Applications Communication Typical Sources of Error

Page 3: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Basic Concepts Global Positioning

System (GPS) is satellite radio navigation system.

Constellation of 27 satellites

Satellites orbit at 12,000 miles

Provides positioning, navigation, and timing information.

Artist's conception of GPS Block II-F satellite in Earth orbit [1]

Page 4: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Brief History Development of GPS

started in 1973 Built on the work previous

radio navigation projects (notably TRANSIT)

First satellite launched in 1978

System was completed in 1995

Official logo for NAVSTAR GPS [2]

Page 5: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Space Segment Constellation 27

Satellites Medium Earth orbit

(MEO) at 20200 km Arranged into six

equally-spaced orbital planes surrounding the Earth Simulation of Satellite Position [3]

Page 6: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Space Segment Cont. GPS Block III

Next generation Satellite under development

Advanced anti-jam capabilities

Three times more accurate than current GPS

Three times more power for military signals

Summary of GPS Satellites [4]

Page 7: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Control Segment

GPS control segment consists of a global network of ground facilities that track the GPS satellites [5]

Page 8: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Control Segment Cont. Master Control Station (MCS)

Provides command and control of the GPS constellation.

Calculates satellite position from received navigation information from the monitor stations.

Monitor Stations Collects atmospheric data,

range/carrier measurements, and navigation signals

Ground Antennas Used to communicate with the GPS

satellites for command and control purposes

Console at Monitoring Station [5]

GPS Ground Antenna [5]

Page 9: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

User Segment Civilian GPS Applications

AviationMarineRailSurveying & MappingTimingConsumer Electronics

GPS Receiver Module [6]

Page 10: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

User Segment Cont. Military GPS Applications

NavigationTarget TrackingMissile GuidanceSearch and RescueReconnaissanceNuclear Detonation

Detection

JDAMs loaded onto a Multiple Ejector Rack [7]

Page 11: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Military vs. Civilian GPS The accuracy of the GPS signal in space is

actually the same for both the civilian GPS service (SPS) and the military GPS service (PPS) [8]. 

PPS broadcast on two frequency allowing for ionospheric correction leading to better accuracy.

SPS provides accuracy of 7.8 meters at a 95% confidence level.

Page 12: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Communication

Transmission – BPSK LOSPublic encoding (CDMA)

○ Course/acquisition (C/A)Military encrypted encoding (CDMA)

○ Precise (P)

Carrier FrequenciesL1 = 1575.42 MHzL2 = 1227.60 MHzL3 = 1381.05 MHz (NUDET)

Page 13: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Transmission

Peter H. Dana, The Geographer's Craft Project, Department of Geography, The University of Colorado at Boulder [9]

Page 14: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Pseudorandom Noise (PRN) code

C/A – 1023 bit deterministic sequenceUnique to each satelliteRepeats every 1 ms

P – 6.1871x10^12 bit deterministic sequenceRepeat every weekPart of larger master code 2.35x10^14 bitsMaster segments unique to each satellite

P(Y) – encrypted precise codeMilitary use only

Page 15: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Message Format

Navigation Message Content and Format Overview [10]

Page 16: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Message Breakdown

Single sub-frame data format breakdown [10]

Page 17: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Telemetry and Handover Word

Individual TLM and HOW word format breakdown [10]

Page 18: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Almanac Contains information and status

about the satellite Assists in determining what

satellite to be tracked Corrects for ionospheric errors

Page 19: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) Synchronized time

signal among all satellites.

Provided during the HOW

Page 20: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Decoding

Modulo-2 addition with Gold Code 1,025 different Gold codes (1023 bits)Highly mutually orthogonal

○ Same frequency transmissionsUsed often in CDMA encoding schemes

Page 21: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

GPS Signal Errors Ionosphere and troposphere delays Signal multipath Clock errors Orbit errors Limited satellites in area Satellite geometry/shading

Sources of common errors [12]

Page 22: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

Questions?

Page 23: Patrick Caldwell Chris Kellar. Overview  Basic Concepts  History  Structure  Applications  Communication  Typical Sources of Error

References [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:GPS_Satellite_NASA_art-iif.jpg

[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:NAVSTAR_GPS_logo_shield-official.jpg

[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:ConstellationGPS.gif

[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gps

[5] http://www.gps.gov/systems/gps/control/

[6] https://www.sparkfun.com/products/8291

[7] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:JDAM_GBU30_MER.jpg

[8] http://www.gps.gov/systems/gps/performance/accuracy/

[9] http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/gps/gps_f.html

[10] http://www.gps.gov/technical/ps/2008-SPS-performance-standard.pdf

[11] http://wireless.ictp.trieste.it/school_2003/lectures/carlo/GPS/DECODING.HTM

[12] http://www8.garmin.com/aboutGPS/