Transcript
Page 1: Using Federally – Provided Systems to Meet State and Local Positioning Needs

Using Federally – Provided Systems to Meet State and Local Positioning Needs

Civil GPS Service Interface CommitteeU.S. States and Local Government Subcommittee

Regional MeetingCharleston, WVApril 14, 2010

Timothy A. KleinSenior Policy Advisor/RITA NDGPS Coordinator

[email protected]

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GPS is a Critical Component of the Global Information Infrastructure

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SatelliteOperations

Power Grids

Personal Navigation

Communications

Aviation

Fishing & BoatingOil Exploration

Trucking & Shipping

Surveying & Mapping

Precision Agriculture

Disease Control

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New Civil GPS Capabilities

• Ongoing modernization program is adding three new civil GPS signals– L2C, L5, L1C -- in addition to existing L1 C/A– Technical documentation available online, free

• Availability of new GPS capabilities will drive user equipment sales, upgrades

• New signal designs and signal combinations will spur new applications, markets

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New Civil GPS Capabilities:Second Civil Signal (L2C)

• Designed to meet commercial needs– Higher accuracy via ionospheric correction– Eliminates need for “semi-codeless” GPS

technology, which is being phased out by 2020• Expected to generate over $5 billion in user

productivity benefits• Currently available on 7 operational satellites

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Increases accuracyfor consumers

Supports miniaturization, possible indoor use

Benefits existing professional receivers

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New Civil GPS Capabilities:Third Civil Signal (L5)

• Designed to meet demanding requirements for transport safety– Uses highly protected Aeronautical

Radionavigation Service (ARNS) band– Will lead to new sales of dual-frequency

equipment for aircraft, other vehicles• Commercial innovation expected from

availability of triple-frequency GPS– Sub-meter, standalone positioning

• Opportunity for international interoperability

• Demo signal activated in April 2009– SVN 49 Anomaly– DOT seeking options

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New Civil GPS Capabilities:Fourth Civil Signal (L1C)

• Designed with international partners for interoperability– Galileo– Other nations TBD

• Intent: Modernized civil signal at L1 frequency– More robust navigation across a broad

range of user applications– Improved performance in challenged

tracking environments– Original signal retained for backward

compatibility• Launches with GPS IIIA

Under trees

Inside cities

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FAA’s WAAS Architecture

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WAAS Orbital Architecture

Telesat107W

Intelsat133W 4F3

98 W

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Nationwide Differential GPS

• Expansion of maritime differential GPS (DGPS) network to cover terrestrial United States• Built to international standard adopted in 50+ countries

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• Transportation operational requirements:– Federal Highway Administration (FHWA)

– on behalf of state and local DOT stakeholders– routine use in Federal-Aid Program– survey, construction, quality, asset management– roadside management– law enforcement

– Association of American Railroads– baseline reference

– National Governor’s Association– use by state DOTs, resource

management agencies

Terrestrial NDGPS Capabilities and Uses

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• Other federal, state/local and private operational requirements:– Department of Agriculture/Department of Interior (NPS, USFS,

BLM, etc.)– One meter real-time positioning and navigation– Fire management and safety

– Department of Commerce (NOAA)– Continuously Operating Reference Stations– Severe weather forecasting

– State, County and Local Governments– Departments of Transportation, Natural

Resources, Environmental Protection, Agriculture, Parks

– Private/Non-Profit Sector– U.S. GPS Industry Council– National Precision Farming Association– Professional Land Surveyors

Terrestrial NDGPS Capabilities and Uses (2)

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Cooperation with Canada

• 16 U.S. and 11 Canadian DGPS sites cooperate for increased coverage along the border

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NDGPS in Dredging

• Army Corps of Engineers uses include:– Aids to Navigation– Underwater Surveying– Dredging (2 meter accuracy requirement)

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Precision Agriculture

• Maximize use of resources– Optimized plowing of crop rows– Tailored applications of seeds, fertilizer, water, pesticides– Improved management of land, machinery, personnel, time– Greater crop yields

• Minimize environmental impacts– Localized identification and treatment of distressed crops

reduces chemical use– Precise leveling of fields prevents fluid runoff

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Severe Storm Forecasting

• NOAA’s Earth Systems Research Laboratory uses M/NDGPS data to estimate the amount of water vapor over the U.S. every 30 minutes

– Used by weather forecastersto monitor rapidly changingconditions

– This knowledge is critical for forecasting severe weather events such as tornados, hurricanes, thunderstorms, and snow storms

– Used in several operational NOAA weather models

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Monitoring Space Weather

• NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center uses NDGPS data to map the spatial distribution of free electrons in the ionosphere, once every 15 minutes

– The distribution of free electrons in the ionosphere affects HF radio communication and delays the arrival of GPS signals

– Delay is interpreted as position errors, which can be as large as 100 meters in extreme cases

– Solar storms proven to affect on-orbit satellite performance andtransmissions, including GPS

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• NOAA/National Geodetic Survey test-streaming NDGPS corrections to users over Internet

– Improved civil sector customer service– Enabling technology for commercial services

• DHS expects NDGPS to be part of GPS Interference Detection and Monitoring (IDM) capability

– Critical infrastructure protection beyond transportation– Could support a Nationwide Emergency Communications System

• DOT continuing to pursue potential high accuracy (HA-NDGPS) upgrade (1 cm accuracy)

– Joint documentation meetings (DOT/FHWA, Coast Guard)– Depends upon requirements definition

NDGPS Opportunities

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National Continuously Operating Reference Stations (CORS)• Enables highly accurate,

3-D positioning– Centimeter-level

precision– Tied to National Spatial

Reference System

• 1,200+ sites operated by 200+ public, private, academic organizations• NOAA’s Online Positioning User Service (OPUS) automatically processes coordinates submitted via the web from around the world

• OPUS-RS (Rapid Static) delivers results from user data sets as short as 15 minutes

• NOAA considering support for real-time networks

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National GIS/Mapping Data and Metadata• Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC)

– Geodata.gov• shares GIS data, maps and online services• Searches metadata in the National Spatial Data

Infrastructure (NSDI) Clearinghouse– Develops framework, NSDI standards and training, projects– Geospatial One-Stop Portal and Geospatial Line of Business

• National Map/National Atlas• State, County and Local Government Interest Pages

• RITA/Bureau of Transportation Statistics (RITA/BTS)– Transportation layers/FGDC Transportation Subcommittee– National Transportation Atlas Database (NTAD)

• National States Geographic Information Council (NSGIC)– Transportation For the Nation– Coordinate/develop nationally significant geospatial

transportation data


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