1 / 44

Navigation & Positioning Systems

Navigation & Positioning Systems. Lecturer: Michael O'Grady Course: MSc Ubiquitous & Multimedia Systems Unit: Context Sensitive Service Delivery Lecture: GPS. Objectives. Introduce some principles of electronic navigation Describe state-of-the-art in satellite navigation

myra
Télécharger la présentation

Navigation & Positioning Systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Navigation & Positioning Systems Lecturer: Michael O'Grady Course: MSc Ubiquitous & Multimedia Systems Unit: Context Sensitive Service Delivery Lecture: GPS

  2. Objectives • Introduce some principles of electronic navigation • Describe state-of-the-art in satellite navigation • Introduce techniques based on cellular telephony • Outlined current developments in Satellite Based Augmentation Systems

  3. Why the sudden interest? • Location-aware services • also called proximity services • Examples include: • personal locator services • asset tracking • Emergency services provision • E-911 • E112 Exercise: Find some research reports and see what they say regarding market projections and types of services required

  4. Classification • Terrestrial Radio • Satellite • Cellular Network • Hybrid

  5. Terrestrial Radio - Techniques • Radio Direction Finding • directional antenna • Tune into radio station with known coordinates • Determine bearing • Repeat with a second station • Construct two lines using appropriate bearing • Intersection indicates position • Hyperbolic Technique • Tune into two stations at known positions • Calculate time difference between signals • Repeat with a second station • Construct hyperbola • Intersection indicates position

  6. Terrestrial Radio - Examples • DECCA • 1937 in USA • Problems • short range signal • large number of transmitters • expensive to implement and maintain • LORAN-C • Successor to DECCA • 1950 in USA • Deployed worldwide • Civilian use since early 1990 • Now operated by North West Europe LORAN-C System (NELS)

  7. Satellite - History • 1950s • Russian space program • Doppler Shift Measurements of the Doppler Shift in the signals broadcast by a satellite following a known and well defined orbit could be used to estimate position • Example: Transit • Navy Navigational Satellite System • 5 satellites following low altitude (1100km) polar obits • Decommissioned in 1996 ( due to GPS!)

  8. Satellite - GPS • Global Positioning System (GPS) • Navstar GPS • US Department of Defense (DoD) • Military ownership and control • History • Initial tests in 1973 using ground transmitters • First satellites launched in 1978 • 10 satellites launched by 1989 • 24 satellites in operation • 1995 - Full operational capacity • Services • Navigation (accuracy variable but 20m is realistic) • Time

  9. GPS - Architecture • GPS comprises of three segments • Space Segment • Control Segment • User Segment

  10. GPS - Space Segment (I) • GPS Satellites • Space Vehicles (SVs) • 24 SVs in constellation • 3 spares • Orbit every 12 hours • Altitude of 20,200 km • Space Vehicle Characteristics • 2 solar panels • I small rocket • 4 types (Block I, II etc) • 4 atomic clocks (2 caesium & 2 rubidium)

  11. GPS - Space Segment (II) • Constellation structure • 6 equally spaced (60 degrees) orbital planes • 4 SVs per plane • Each plane inclined at 55 degrees with respect to the equatorial plane • Objective • Ensure that between 5 and 8 SVs are visible from any point on earth at any given time

  12. GPS - Space Segment (III)

  13. GPS - Control Segment (I) • Network of 5 monitoring stations • Function • Track SVs • relay satellite time and ranging information to master control station in Colorado • At the master control station • orbit and timing parameters calculated for each SV • information then uploaded to the appropriate SVs Note: All SVs tracked 92% of time due to the geographic spread of the monitoring stations

  14. GPS - Control Segment (I)

  15. GPS - User Segment • Two groups of users • Military • standard military applications • Civilian • Commercial • Surveying • Vehicle monitoring • Precision agriculture • Recreational • Geocaching

  16. GPS - Theory (I) • Trilateration a basic geometric principle that allows the position of an object be determined if its distance from three objects is known In brief…. if distance to one object is known I am on a sphere with that object is centre. if distance to a second object is known I am on a circle that denotes the intersection of the two spheres. if distance to a third object is known I am on either of two points where the three spheres intersect.

  17. GPS - Theory (II) But clock on receiver NOT synchronised with those on the satellites! • So fourth satellite required to eliminate clock bias • 4 equation- 4 unknowns • 3D fix (longitude, latitude, altitude), time bias eliminated • Extra satellites can be used to improve calculation • World geodetic System 1984 (WGS84) • If altitude assumed fixed - three satellites adequate for a reading (2D fix) Note: distance to satellite referred to technically as a pseudorange

  18. GPS - Signals • Each satellite broadcasts at 2 frequencies • L1 • 1575.42 MHz • Civilian users • L2 • 1227.6 MHz • Military users • Encrypted

  19. GPS - Sources of Error • clock and ephemeris errors • ionospheric & tropospheric delays • multipath & shading • satellite geometry or Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP) • receiver noise & delay Note: Selective availability has been removed since May 2000 Note: One nanosecond of inaccuracy results in 30 centimeters error approximately

  20. GPS - DOP • Dilution of Precision (DOP) • Measurement of the geometry of the visible satellite constellation • satellites spread across sky gives good (small) DOP values • clustered satellites give poor DOP values ( • Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP) -position, time • Horizontal Dilution of Precision (HDOP)- Latitude, longitude • Vertical Dilution of Precision (VDOP) - altitude • Positional Dilution of Precision (PDOP) - position • Time Dilution of Precision (TDOP) - time • Examples: • 1 indicates perfection • if HDOP greater than 5, reading is rejected! • PDOP of 8 is acceptable provided HDOP less than 5

  21. Differential GPS (DGPS) 1. if the position of a GPS receiver is known, the error in the pseudoranges can be calculated 2. These “corrections” may be broadcast to nearby users thus improving their position readings accordingly DGPS demands • network of reference stations • Allocated FM frequency • specialist receiver • Readings of up to 5 meters may be obtained easily • sub-meter accuracy may also be obtained subject to cost and quality of the equipment

  22. DGPS

  23. Satellite - GLONASS • Soviet equivalent of GPS • Initial satellite launched in 1992 • Last satellite deployed in 1996 • Working constellation of 24 satellites • Architecturally similar to GPS • Control segment within borders of former Soviet Union

  24. Satellite - Galileo • Conceived in 1999 • Initial satellites scheduled for launch in 2004 • Initial services scheduled for 2006 • Full operational capacity by 2008 • Objectives • state-of-the-art positioning and timing services • guarantees regarding accuracy & availability • designed for civilian requirements

  25. Galileo - Architecture • 30 satellites in circular orbits • Orbit planes inclined at 55-60 degrees to equatorial plane • increase coverage in Northern Europe • Ground segment consists of 14 ground stations spread around the globe • Interoperable with GPS and GLONASS

  26. Cellular Techniques • Recall E-911 directive E-911 focused attention on how a cellular network’s features and topology might be used to ascertain a subscriber’s position

  27. Cell-ID • Also called Cell of Origin (COO) • Networks knows position of subscriber to cell level • Map geographic coordinates to Base Station • Advantages include: • speed & cost • Minimum modifications to network infrastructure • Disadvantages include • variable accuracy (as cell sizes vary) • Propagation effects may mean serving cell is not actually the nearest cell

  28. Timing Advance (TA) • GSM Timing Advance parameter • used for synchronising time slots • may be defined as the time delay (distance!) between handset and Base Station • 6 bits in length • precision of about 550 meters • Requires augmentation • other positioning mechanism • directional antenna

  29. Angle of Arrival (AOA) • Triangulation • Measure angles of signal at Base Station using sophisticated antenna • Repeat for second Base Station • Intersection of lines projecting outwards will indicate subscriber’s position • Disadvantages • Susceptible to interference and fading • Line-of-Sight (LOS) conditions essential • Will not work well in city • Advantage • may work very well in rural area

  30. Time of Arrival (TOA) • Similar to GPS • Measure distance between handset and Base Station • Repeat for two more Base Stations • if time is synchronized this is adequate • if not, a further reading is required • Advantages • easy to implement • Disadvantages • Accurate clocks required at each station • Susceptible to errors in urban environments • May not access enough base stations in rural areas

  31. Time Difference of Arrival (TDOA) • Uses Time Difference as distinct from absolute time • Hyperbolic curves must be constructed for at least two Base Stations • Intersection indicates position

  32. Enhanced Observed Time Difference (E-OTD) • Also called • Observed Time Difference (OTD) • Observed Time Difference of Arrival (O-TDOA) • Identical to TDOA except • Calculations are performed on the handset • Disadvantages • Significant modifications required on the handset

  33. Advanced Forward Link Trilateration (A-FLT) • In principle, identical to TDOA or E-OTD • Can be implemented on handset or network • Implemented only on CDMA networks • Recall: CDMA is time synchronized so time differences are easier to measure

  34. Location Fingerprinting • Combines signal features such that a unique signature (fingerprint) for a given location is created • Database is assembled by driving a vehicle through the area which transmits signals to the Base Station • Signature is generated by analyzing the incoming signal • By comparing the subscriber’s signal with the signatures in the database, a location estimate can be obtained

  35. Assisted GPS (A-GPS) • Utilizes GPS and topology of cellular network • GPS receivers are placed throughout the PLMN • These “advise” the handset on which satellites to observe • Information is then sent back to the server for position calculation • Advantages • quick & accurate • easy to incorporate DGPS • can track weak signals • Disadvantages • expensive

  36. Assisted GPS - Schematic

  37. Hybrid Positioning Systems • No technique capable of delivering accurate positions under all circumstances • But • Pragmatic combination may lead to better results sometimes • Example • A-GPS • TDOA • Each system has complementary strengths and weakness

  38. Standardization - Satellite Navigation • Recall: GPS and GLONASS remain under the control of their respective militaries • International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) • active but limited in its effectiveness • Galileo • SAGA (Standardization Activities for Galileo) • work is currently ongoing

  39. Standardization - 2G Cellular Networks

  40. Standardization - 3G Cellular Networks

  41. Product: Garmin NavTalk

  42. Product: Benefon Esc!

  43. References • E-911 • http://www.fcc.gov/911/enhanced/ • GPS • http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/gpsinfo.html • http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/gps/gps_f.html • GLONASS • http://www.glonass-center.ru/ • Galileo • http://www.esa.int/export/esaSA/GGGMX650NDC_navigation_0.html • EGNOS • http://www.esa.int/export/esaSA/GGG63950NDC_navigation_0.htm • SISNet • http://esamultimedia.esa.int/docs/egnos/estb/sisnet/sisnet.html

  44. The End

More Related