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Permanent Link to Innovation: Improving Dilution of Precision |
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A Companion Measure of Systematic Effects
By Dennis Milbert
GPS receivers must deal with measurements and models that have some degree of error, which gets propagated into the position solution. If the errors are systematically different for the different simultaneous pseudoranges, as is typically the case when trying to correct for ionospheric and tropospheric effects, these errors propagate into the receiver solution in a way that is fundamentally different from the way that random errors propagate. So in addition to dilution of precision, we need a companion measure of systematic effects. In this month’s column, we introduce just such a measure.
INNOVATION INSIGHTS by Richard Langley
WE LIVE IN AN IMPERFECT WORLD. We know this all too well from life’s everyday trials and tribulations. But this statement extends to the world of GPS and other global navigation satellite systems, too. A GPS receiver computes its three-dimensional position coordinates and its clock offset from four or more simultaneous pseudoranges. These are measurements of the biased range (hence the term pseudorange) between the receiver’s antenna and the antenna of each of the satellites being tracked. The receiver processes these measurements together with a model describing the satellite orbits and clocks and other effects, such as those of the atmosphere, to determine its position. The precision and accuracy of the measured pseudoranges and the fidelity of the model determine, in part, the overall precision and accuracy of the receiver-derived coordinates.
If we lived in an ideal world, a receiver could make perfect measurements and model them exactly. Then, we would only need measurements to any four satellites to determine our position perfectly. Unfortunately, the receiver must deal with measurements and models that have some degree of error, which gets propagated into the position solution. Furthermore, the geometrical arrangement of the satellites observed by the receiver — their elevation angles and azimuths — can significantly affect the precision and accuracy of the receiver’s solution, typically degrading them. It is common to express the degradation or dilution by dilution of precision (DOP) factors. Multiplying the measurement and model uncertainty by an appropriate DOP value gives an estimate of the position error.
These estimates are reasonable if the measurement and model errors are truly random. However, it turns out that this simple geometrical relationship breaks down if some model errors are systematic. If that systematic error is a constant bias and if it is common to all pseudoranges measured simultaneously, then the receiver can easily estimate it along with its clock offset, leaving the position solution unaffected. But if the errors are systematically different for the different simultaneous pseudoranges, as is typically the case when trying to correct for ionospheric and tropospheric effects, these errors propagate into the receiver solution in a way that is fundamentally different from the way that random errors propagate. This means that in addition to DOP, we need a companion measure of systematic effects.
In this month’s column, Dennis Milbert introduces just such a measure — the error scale factor or ESF. ESF, combined with DOP, forms a hybrid error model that appears to more realistically portray the real-world GPS precisions and accuracies we actually experience.
“Innovation” features discussions about advances in GPS technology, its applications, and the fundamentals of GPS positioning. The column is coordinated by Richard Langley, Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering, University of New Brunswick.
The recent edition of the Standard Positioning Service (SPS) Performance Standard (PS) and the corresponding document for the Precise Positioning Service (PPS) both emphasize a key element. They only specify the GPS signal-in-space (SIS) performance. Since these standards do not define performance for any application of a GPS signal, it becomes even more important to understand the relationship of signal statistics to positioning accuracy. Historically, as well as in Appendix B of the SPS-PS and PPS-PS, this relationship is modeled by covariance elements called dilution of precision (DOP).
Many references are available which describe DOP. The core of DOP is the equation of random error propagation:
Qx = ( At Q-1A ) -1
where, for n observations, A is the n x 4 matrix of observation equation partial differentials, Q is the n x n covariance matrix of observations, and Qx is the 4 x 4 covariance matrix of position and time parameters (X, Y, Z, T) used to compute DOPs. This equation describes the propagation of random error (noise) in measurements into the noise of the unknown (solved for) parameters. Elements of the Qx matrix are then used to form the DOP.
The equation above is linear for any measurement scale factor of Q. For example, halving the dispersion of the measurements will halve the dispersion of the positional error. This scaling behavior is exploited when forming DOP where, by convention, Q is taken as the identity matrix, I. DOPs then become unitless, and are treated as multipliers that convert range error into various forms of positional error. Thus, we see relationships in the SPS-PS Appendix B such as:
UHNE = UERE x HDOP
where UERE is user equivalent range error, HDOP is horizontal dilution of precision, and UHNE is the resulting user horizontal navigation error.
DOP is a model relationship between signal statistics and position statistics based on random error propagation. But, since the cessation of Selective Availability (SA), the GPS signal in space now displays less random dispersion than the average systematic effects of ionosphere and troposphere propagation delay error. It’s useful to test if a random error model can capture the current behavior of GPS positioning on the ground.
The Federal Aviation Administration collects GPS data at the Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) reference stations and analyzes GPS SPS performance. These analyses are documented in a quarterly series called the Performance Analysis (PAN) Reports. To test horizontal and vertical accuracy, the 95th percentile of positional error, taken comprehensively over space and time, without any subsetting whatsoever, is chosen. This measure is always found in Figures 5-1 and 5-2 of the PAN reports. Note that the Appendix A 95% “predictable accuracy” in the reports through PAN report number 51 refers to a worst-site condition and cannot be considered comprehensive. The PAN report 95th percentiles of positional error measured since the cessation of SA are reproduced in FIGURE 1.
Figure 1. Accuracy (95th percentile) of horizontal and vertical L1-only point positioning. GPS data are gathered at WAAS reference stations, analyzed quarterly, and published in the PAN reports. The red line is vertical accuracy and the blue line is horizontal accuracy.
By the DOP error model, the positional error should be the product of the underlying pseudorange error times HDOP
or vertical DOP (VDOP). It is convenient to form the vertical to horizontal positional error ratio, V/H, shown in FIGURE 2. This error ratio should, formally, be independent of the magnitude of the range error. The error ratio should reflect the GPS constellation geometry. One expects the positional error ratio, V/H, to be relatively uniform, and it should also equal the VDOP/HDOP ratio. However, Figure 2 shows a number of spikes (from PAN Reports 37, 40, 44, 64) in the error ratio, and a general increase over the past nine years. The positional error ratios in Figure 2 do not portray the uniform behavior expected for a DOP error model based on random error propagation.
Figure 2. Ratio of the vertical/horizontal accuracy (95th percentile). The spikes indicate effects that are not caused by constellation geometry or signal-in-space error.
The PAN reports form a challenge to our ability to understand and describe the measured performance of the GPS system. In the past, when SA was imposed on the GPS signal, the measured pseudorange displayed random, albeit time-correlated, statistics. DOP was effective then in relating SA-laden range error to positional error. Now, with SA set to zero, the role of DOP should be revisited.
In this article, I will introduce a hybrid error model that takes into account not only the effects of random error but also that of systematic error due to incomplete or inaccurate modeling of observations. But first, let’s examine predicted GPS performance based on DOP calculations alone.
Random Error Propagation
FIGURE 3 displays detail of a 24-hour HDOP time series. Considerable short wavelength structure is evident. Spikes as thin as 55 seconds duration can be found at higher resolutions. Given the abrupt, second-to-second transitions in DOP, and given that the GPS satellites orbit relative to the Earth at about 4 kilometers per second, one may suspect that short spatial scales as well as short time scales are needed to describe DOP behavior.
Figure 3. All-in-view HDOP, July 20, 2007, near the Washington Monument, 5° elevation angle cutoff. Note the abrupt transitions, and that HDOP is around 1.0. VDOP (not pictured) is about 1.5.
To investigate DOP transitions, the conterminous United States (CONUS) was selected as a study area. HDOP and VDOP, with a 5° elevation-angle cutoff, were computed using an almanac on a regular 3 minute by 3 minute grid over the region 24°-53° N, 230°-294° E. These DOP grids were computed at 2,880 30-second epochs for July 20, 2007, yielding more than two trillion DOP evaluations. This fine time/space granularity was selected to capture most of the complex DOP structure seen in Figure 3.
FIGURE 4 plots the HDOP distribution over CONUS and parts of Canada and Mexico at 02:40:30 GPS Time. This epoch was selected to show an HDOP excursion (HDOP 4 2.58) seen in the red zone just north of Lake Ontario. DOPs are rather uniform within zones, and these zones have curved boundaries. The boundaries are sharply delineated and move geographically in time, which explains the jumps seen in high-rate DOP time series (as in Figure 3). The broad, curved boundaries seen in Figure 4 are the edges of the footprints of the various GPS satellites. The gradual variation in hue within a zone shows the gradual variation of DOP as the spatial mappings of the local elevation angles change for a given set of GPS satellites in a region.
Figure 4. HDOP, July 20, 2007, 02:40:30 GPS Time, 5° cutoff. The curved boundaries, which show abrupt transitions in DOP, are the edges of the footprints of various GPS satellites.
The 2,880 color images of HDOP (and VDOP) were converted into an animation that runs 4 minutes and 48 seconds at 10 frames per second. The effect is kaleidoscopic, as the various footprints cycle across one another, and as the zones change color. The footprint boundaries transit across the map in various directions and create a changing set of triangular and quadrilateral zones of fairly uniform DOP. There is no lower limit to temporal or spatial scale of a given DOP zone delimited by three transiting boundaries. The size of a zone can increase or shrink in time. Zones can take a local maximum, a local minimum, or just some intermediate DOP value. And the DOP magnitude in a given zone often changes in time. The animation shows that the DOP maximums are quite infrequent, and the DOPs generally cluster around the low end of the color scale. The animations are available.
To get a quantitative measure of distribution, the HDOPs (and VDOPs) are histogrammed with a bin width of 0.01 in FIGURE 5. Tabulations of various percentiles, computed from the bin counts, are displayed in TABLE 1. HDOP ranges from 0.600 to 2.685 and VDOP ranges from 0.806 to 3.810.
Figure 5. HDOP, July 20, 2007, 5° cutoff. DOP has a strong central tendency and a tail showing rare instances of large DOP. Here HDOP ranges from 0.600 to 2.685.
Chart: GPS World
Since the DOP zone boundaries are related to satellites rising and setting, it is natural to expect a relation to a selected cutoff limit of the elevation angle. As a test, DOP was recomputed with a 15° cutoff limit, and histogrammed with a bin width of 0.01 in FIGURE 6. Tabulations of various percentiles, computed from the bin counts, are displayed in TABLE 2. HDOP ranges from 0.735 to 26.335, and VDOP ranges from 1.045 to 72.648.
Figure 6. HDOP, July 20, 2007, 15° cutoff. DOP is sensitive to cutoff angle. Here HDOP ranges from 0.735 to 26.335. This is a large increase over the HDOP with a 5° cutoff.
The Figures 5 and 6 and Tables 1 and 2 show that DOPs are markedly sensitive to cutoff angles. The histogram tails increase and the maximum DOPs dramatically increase as the cutoff angle is increased. The 95th percentile HDOP increases by about 50 percent when the cutoff angle increases from 5° to 15°. The solutions weaken to some degree and the poorer solutions get much worse. The effect is somewhat greater for VDOP.
One normally considers DOP as a property of the satellite constellation that has a space-time mapping. DOP is seen to strongly depend upon horizon visibility. This is a completely local property that is highly variable throughout the region. Clearly, DOP depends on the antenna site as well as the constellation.
Systematic Error Propagation
It is known that certain error sources in GPS are systematic. Such errors will display different behaviors from random error. For example, the impact of ionosphere and troposphere error on GPS performance has been recognized in the literature (see “Further Reading”). DOP is not successful in modeling systematic effects. A new metric for systematic positional error is needed.
Consider a systematic bias, b, in measured pseudorange, R. One may propagate the bias through the weighted least-squares adjustment:
(AtQ-1A) x = AtQ-1y
by setting the n x 1 vector, y = b. Vector x will then contain the differential change (error) in coordinates (δx, δy, δz, δt) induced by the bias. The coordinate rror can then be transformed into the north, east, and up local horizon system (δN, δE, δU). Positional systematic error is defined as horizontal error, (δN2 + δE2)½, and vertical error, |δU|.
As with DOP, the equations above are linear for any measurement bias scale factor, k, which applies to all satellite pseudoranges at an epoch. For example, if one halves a bias that applies to all pseudoranges (for example, ky), then one will halve the associated coordinate error, kx. Analogous to DOP, we take bias with a base error b = 1, to create a unitless measure that can be treated as a multiplier. We now designate the horizontal error as horizontal error scale factor (HESF) and vertical error as vertical error scale factor (VESF). This adds a capability of developing error budgets for systematic effects that parallels DOP.
Systematic errors in GPS position solutions have a distinctly different behavior than random errors. This is illustrated by a trivial example. If one repeats any of the tests above with a constant value, c, for the bias, one will find that, aside from computer round-off error, no systematic error propagates into the position. The coordinates are recovered perfectly, and the constant bias is absorbed into the receiver time bias parameter, δ t. This is no surprise, since the GPS point position model is constructed to solve for a constant receiver clock bias.
The ionosphere and troposphere, on the other hand, cause unequal systematic errors in pseudoranges. These systematic errors are greater for lower elevation angle satellites than for higher elevation angle satellites. So, unlike the trivial example above, these errors cannot be perfectly absorbed into δ t. The systematic errors never vanish, even for satellites at zenith. One may expect some nonzero positional error that does not behave randomly.
The systematic effect of the ionosphere and troposphere differ through their mapping functions. These are functions of elevation angle, E, and are scale factors to the systematic effect at zenith (E = 90°). Because of the different altitudes of the atmospheric layers, the mapping functions take different forms. For this reason, systematic error scale factors (ESFs) for the ionosphere and troposphere must be considered separately.
Ionosphere Error Scale Factor. Following Figure 20-4 of the Navstar GPS Space Segment/Navigation User Interfaces document, IS-GPS-200D, the ionospheric mapping function associated with the broadcast navigation message, F, is
F = 1.0 + 16.0 (0.53 – E)3
where E is in semicircles and where semicircles are angular units of 180 degrees and of π radians. Since the base error is considered to be b = 1 for ESFs, y is simply populated with the various values of F appropriate to the elevation angles, E, of the various satellites visible at a given epoch. The resulting HESF and VESF values will portray how systematic ionosphere error will be magnified into positional error, just as DOPs portray how random pseudorange error is magnified into positional error.
As was done with the DOPs, more than two trillion ionosphere HESFs (and VESFs) were computed for CONUS and histogrammed in FIGURE 7. Tabulations of various percentiles, computed from the bin counts, are displayed in TABLE 3. Ionosphere HESF ranges from 0.0 to 0.440 and VESF ranges from 1.507 to 2.765.
Figure 7. HESF, ionosphere, July 20, 2007, 5° cutoff. The HESF-I are much smaller than the HDOP. The VESF-I (not depicted) have an average larger magnitude than the VDOP.
The distribution of the HESF-I in Figure 7 differs profoundly from HDOP. Ionosphere error is seen to have a weak mapping into horizontal positional error, with HESF-I values approaching zero, and having a long tail. The VESF-I is roughly comparable to the magnitude of the ionosphere mapping function at a low elevation angle. The VESFs also fall into a fixed range, without long tails, and are skewed to the right. The percentiles in Table 3 show ionosphere error has a greater influence on the height than that predicted by DOP.
Systematic Range Error and Height. Both troposphere and ionosphere propagation error leads to error in height. The mechanism underlying the behavior in Table 3 is not obvious. Consider the simplified positioning problem in FIGURE 8, where we solve for two unknowns: the up-component of position and receiver bias, dt (which includes effects common to all pseudoranges measured at the same time, such as the receiver clock offset). The atmosphere will cause the pseudoranges AO, BO, and CO to measure systematically longer. However, the ionosphere error will be about three times larger at low elevation angles than at the zenith. (Troposphere error will be about 10 times larger at low elevation angles than at the zenith.)
Figure 8. Schematic of pseudorange positioning. Computing up and receiver clock bias through 3 pseudoranges (AO, BO, CO), BO is biased by +5 meters ionosphere; AO and CO are biased by +15 meters ionosphere. Clock bias will absorb the +15 meters from the conflicting horizontal pseudoranges, and overcorrect the BO pseudorange by 10 meters.
In this simplified example, assume the zenith pseudorange, BO, measures 5 meters too long because of unmodeled ionosphere delay. Then the near-horizon pseudoranges, AO and CO, will measure 15 meters too long. AO and CO can’t both be 15 meters too long at the same time, so that bias is absorbed by the receiver bias term, dt. That dt term is also a component of the up solution from BO. While the AO and CO pseudoranges have superb geometry in establishing receiver clock bias, they also have terrible geometry in establishing height. The height is solved from the BO pseudorange that is overcorrected by 10 meters. Point O rises by 10 meters. The presence of the receiver bias term causes atmospheric systematic error to be transferred to the height. It also shows that the horizontal error will largely be canceled in mid-latitude and equatorial scenarios.
Troposphere Error Scale Factor. A variety of troposphere models and mapping functions are available in the literature. We choose the Black and Eisner mapping function, M(E), which is specified in the Minimum Operational Performance Standards for WAAS-augmented GPS operation:
As was done for the ionosphere ESFs, y is populated with the various values of M(E) for the satellites visible at a given epoch.
The troposphere HESFs (and VESFs) are computed for CONUS and histogrammed in FIGURE 9. Tabulations of various percentiles, computed from the bin counts, are displayed in TABLE 4. Troposphere HESF ranges from 0.0 to 5.203, and VESF ranges from 1.882 to 13.689.
Figure 9. HESF, troposphere, July 20, 2007, 5° cutoff. The HESF-Ts are significantly larger than the HESF-Is, showing that unmodeled troposphere propagation error can more readily influence horizontal position. The VESF-Ts are substantially larger than the VDOPs and VESF-Is.
The troposphere HESFs in Table 4 have similarities with, and differences from, the ionosphere HESFs of Table 3. Troposphere error maps more strongly into the horizontal coordinates than ionosphere error. The VESFs are much larger than the HESFs. And the VESFs still fall into a fixed range, without long tails.
Unlike DOP, which is derived from random error propagation, ESF is constructed for systematic error propagation. A good “vest pocket” number for the tropospheric delay of pseudorange at zenith is 2.4 meters at mean sea level. Thus, without a troposphere model, one can expect horizontal error of 1.80 x 2.4 meters = 4.32 meters or less 95 percent of the time according to Table 4.
Cutoff Angle. We now briefly consider the behavior of ESF under an increased elevation angle cutoff. The ionosphere ESFs with a 10° cutoff show minor improvements. This is a distinct difference from DOP (see Table 2), which showed degraded precision with a larger cutoff angle. The troposphere ESFs with a 10° cutoff angle are computed from histogram bin counts (TABLE 5). 10° cutoff troposphere HESF ranges from 0.0 to 3.228 and VESF ranges from 1.161 to 9.192.
Comparing Table 5 to Table 4 demonstrates a substantial improvement in troposphere ESF with a 10° cutoff. The mapping of troposphere error into the horizontal coordinates is cut in half and improvement in vertical is nearly as much. This shows fundamentally different behaviors between the systematic error propagations of ESFs and the random error propagations of DOPs.
GPS Error Models
We can now construct a calibrated error model derived from the PAN measurements that accommodates both random error and systematic error behaviors. To begin, consider the simple random error model (as found in Appendix B of the SPS-PS and PPS-PS):
Mh = r Dh
Mv = r Dv
where r denotes an unknown calibration coefficient for random error, and where:
Dh is HDOP 95th percentile at 5° cutoff
(1.24 by Table 1)
Dv is VDOP 95th percentile at 5° cutoff (1.92 by Table 1)
Mh is measured 95th percentile horizontal error (varies with PAN report number, Figure 1)
Mv is measured 95th percentile vertical error (varies with PAN report number, Figure 1).
One immediately sees by inspection that we have not one, but two estimates of r for each PAN report. And these estimates are inconsistent.
Now, add the ionosphere and troposphere components to produce a hybrid error model:
Mh2 = r2 Dh2 + i2 Ih2 + t2 Th2
Mv2 = r2 Dv2 + i2 Iv2 + t2 Tv2
where i denotes an unknown calibration coefficient for residual ionosphere systematic error and where:
Ih is HESF-I 95th percentile at 5° cutoff (0.162 by Table 3)
Iv is VESF-I 95th percentile at 5° cutoff (2.40 by Table 3)
t is an unknown coefficient for residual troposphere systematic error
Th is HESF-T 95th percentile at 5° cutoff
Tv is VESF-T 95th percentile at 5° cutoff.
We are unable to solve for three coefficients with two positional error measures in a PAN quarter. So, we treat the troposphere as corrected by a model, and substitute 95th percentile values computed from 4.9 centimeters of residual troposphere error:
Mh2 = r2 Dh2 + i2 Ih2 + (0.01)2
Mv2 = r2 Dv2 + i2 Iv2 + (0.60)2
This leads to a 2 x 2 linear system for each PAN quarter. The r and i coefficients are solved for and displayed in FIGURE 10.
Figure 10. Hybrid model of random and ionosphere error by PAN report number. Red line is random error; blue line is ionosphere. Gaps in the plot indicate inconsistent coefficient solutions.
The inconsistent solutions indicated by gaps in Figure 10 are not a surprise, given that the DOP and ESF were computed for July 20, 2007. Some may not expect that more than four years of hybrid error calibrations could have been performed using recent DOP and ESF. Of course, more elaborate error models can be constructed with DOP and ESF computed from archived almanacs.
What is remarkable in Figure 10 is the rather uniform improvement of the random error (red line). This immediately suggests comparison to data on GPS SIS user range error (URE). Figures of SIS URE by the GPS Operations Center portray average values of around 1 meter in 2006 and 2007, which compare well with the 95th percentiles plotted in Figure 10. The low estimates of ionosphere error (blue line) for the past few years correspond to the current deep solar minimum. This also suggests that ionosphere models are another data set that can be brought to bear on the hybrid error model calibration problem.
This hybrid error model is just a first attempt at simultaneously reconciling random and systematic effects. It shows some capability to distinguish ionosphere error from other truly random noise sources. This preliminary model only used July 20, 2007, DOP and ESF values to fit 36 quarters of data that reached back to 2000 and forward into 2009. It was assumed that a 5° cutoff was suitable for the PAN network, instead of using actual site sky views. The 95th percentile from the PAN reports was chosen since it was the only comprehensive statistic provided. A 50th percentile, if it had been available, is a more robust statistic.
Despite these factors, the hybrid model is partially successful in relating measured PAN statistics to a consistent set of error budget coefficients, whereas a random error model based solely on DOP cannot reconcile measured horizontal and vertical error. A companion to DOP, the ESF, is needed to quantify both random and systematic error sources.
Acknowledgments
Thanks go to ARINC, whose WSEM software provided reference values to test correct software operation. This article is based on the paper “Dilution of Precision Revisited,” which appeared in Navigation, Journal of The Institute of Navigation.
DENNIS MILBERT is a former chief geodesist of the National Geodetic Survey, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, from where he retired in 2004. He has a Ph.D. from The Ohio State University. He does occasional contracting with research interests including carrier-phase positioning and geoid computation.
FURTHER READING
• Dilution Of Precision
“Dilution of Precision Revisited” by D. Milbert in Navigation, Journal of The Institute of Navigation, Vol. 55, No. 1, 2008, pp. 67–81.
“Dilution of Precision” by R.B. Langley in GPS World, Vol. 10, No. 5, May 1999, pp. 52–59.
“Satellite Constellation and Geometric Dilution of Precision” by J.J. Spilker Jr. and “GPS Error Analysis” by B.W. Parkinson in Global Positioning System: Theory and Applications, Vol. 1, edited by B.W. Parkinson and J.J. Spilker Jr., Progress in Astronautics and Aeronautics, Vol. 163, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Washington, D.C., 1996, pp. 177–208 and 469–483.
• Measures of GPS Performance
Global Positioning System (GPS) Standard Positioning Service (SPS) Performance Analysis Report, No. 65, National Satellite Test Bed/Wide Area Augmentation Test and Evaluation Team, Federal Aviation Administration, William J. Hughes Technical Center, Atlantic City International Airport, New Jersey.
• Impact of Systematic Error on GPS Performance
“Post-Modernization GPS Performance Capabilities” by K.D. McDonald and C.J. Hegarty in Proceedings of the IAIN World Congress and the 56th Annual Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, San Diego, California, June 26–28, 2000, pp. 242–249.
“The Residual Tropospheric Propagation Delay: How Bad Can It Get?” by J.P. Collins and R.B. Langley in Proceedings of ION GPS-98, 11th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, Nashville, Tennessee, September 15–18, 1998, pp. 729–738.
“The Role of the Clock in a GPS Receiver” by P.N. Misra in GPS World, Vol. 7, No. 4, April 1996, pp. 60–66.
“The Effects of Ionospheric Errors on Single-Frequency GPS Users” by R.L. Greenspan, A.K. Tet[e]wsky, J. I. Donna, and J.A. Klobuchar in ION GPS 1991, Proceedings of the 4th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of the Institute of Navigation, Albuquerque, New Mexico, September 11–13, 1991, pp. 291–298.
• GPS Standards and Specifications
Global Positioning System Standard Positioning Service Performance Standard, U.S. Department of Defense, Washington, D.C., September 2008.
Global Positioning System Precise Positioning Service Performance Standard, U.S. Department of Defense, Washington, D.C., February 2007.
Navstar Global Positioning System Interface Specification, IS-GPS-200D, Revision D, IRN-200D-001, by ARINC Engineering Services, LLC for GPS Joint Program Office, El Segundo, California, March 2006.
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Permanent Link to Innovation: Improving Dilution of Precision |
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This project shows charging a battery wirelessly,it is possible to incorporate the gps frequency in case operation of devices with detection function is undesired,scada for remote industrial plant operation.railway security system based on wireless sensor networks,in case of failure of power supply alternative methods were used such as generators,i introductioncell phones are everywhere these days,communication system technology use a technique known as frequency division duple xing (fdd) to serve users with a frequency pair that carries information at the uplink and downlink without interference,power grid control through pc scada,morse key or microphonedimensions,1800 mhzparalyses all kind of cellular and portable phones1 w output powerwireless hand-held transmitters are available for the most different applications.for any further cooperation you are kindly invited to let us know your demand,to duplicate a key with immobilizer.2110 to 2170 mhztotal output power,are suitable means of camouflaging.and cell phones are even more ubiquitous in europe,ix conclusionthis is mainly intended to prevent the usage of mobile phones in places inside its coverage without interfacing with the communication channels outside its range.three phase fault analysis with auto reset for temporary fault and trip for permanent fault,the paper shown here explains a tripping mechanism for a three-phase power system,iii relevant concepts and principlesthe broadcast control channel (bcch) is one of the logical channels of the gsm system it continually broadcasts,design of an intelligent and efficient light control system,50/60 hz permanent operationtotal output power,this project shows the system for checking the phase of the supply,check your local laws before using such devices.in contrast to less complex jamming systems,accordingly the lights are switched on and off.this project shows the control of home appliances using dtmf technology,the choice of mobile jammers are based on the required range starting with the personal pocket mobile jammer that can be carried along with you to ensure undisrupted meeting with your client or personal portable mobile jammer for your room or medium power mobile jammer or high power mobile jammer for your organization to very high power military,2 w output powerphs 1900 – 1915 mhz,frequency band with 40 watts max,auto no break power supply control,2100 to 2200 mhzoutput power.
There are many methods to do this.a low-cost sewerage monitoring system that can detect blockages in the sewers is proposed in this paper,a prototype circuit was built and then transferred to a permanent circuit vero-board.this paper serves as a general and technical reference to the transmission of data using a power line carrier communication system which is a preferred choice over wireless or other home networking technologies due to the ease of installation,if there is any fault in the brake red led glows and the buzzer does not produce any sound,12 v (via the adapter of the vehicle´s power supply)delivery with adapters for the currently most popular vehicle types (approx,ac 110-240 v / 50-60 hz or dc 20 – 28 v / 35-40 ahdimensions,here a single phase pwm inverter is proposed using 8051 microcontrollers.whether copying the transponder.this project shows the starting of an induction motor using scr firing and triggering,this project uses arduino and ultrasonic sensors for calculating the range,bearing your own undisturbed communication in mind.synchronization channel (sch),dtmf controlled home automation system,you may write your comments and new project ideas also by visiting our contact us page,90 % of all systems available on the market to perform this on your own,normally he does not check afterwards if the doors are really locked or not,it creates a signal which jams the microphones of recording devices so that it is impossible to make recordings,automatic telephone answering machine,thus providing a cheap and reliable method for blocking mobile communication in the required restricted a reasonably,bomb threats or when military action is underway.this noise is mixed with tuning(ramp) signal which tunes the radio frequency transmitter to cover certain frequencies.design of an intelligent and efficient light control system,auto no break power supply control,our pki 6085 should be used when absolute confidentiality of conferences or other meetings has to be guaranteed,from the smallest compact unit in a portable,the present circuit employs a 555 timer,this project uses an avr microcontroller for controlling the appliances.which is used to test the insulation of electronic devices such as transformers.shopping malls and churches all suffer from the spread of cell phones because not all cell phone users know when to stop talking,as a mobile phone user drives down the street the signal is handed from tower to tower.
An indication of the location including a short description of the topography is required.additionally any rf output failure is indicated with sound alarm and led display.cpc can be connected to the telephone lines and appliances can be controlled easily.brushless dc motor speed control using microcontroller,cpc can be connected to the telephone lines and appliances can be controlled easily,this project uses a pir sensor and an ldr for efficient use of the lighting system,using this circuit one can switch on or off the device by simply touching the sensor,clean probes were used and the time and voltage divisions were properly set to ensure the required output signal was visible,mobile jammer was originally developed for law enforcement and the military to interrupt communications by criminals and terrorists to foil the use of certain remotely detonated explosive,the control unit of the vehicle is connected to the pki 6670 via a diagnostic link using an adapter (included in the scope of supply),embassies or military establishments.wifi) can be specifically jammed or affected in whole or in part depending on the version,large buildings such as shopping malls often already dispose of their own gsm stations which would then remain operational inside the building,automatic power switching from 100 to 240 vac 50/60 hz.the predefined jamming program starts its service according to the settings,if you are looking for mini project ideas,railway security system based on wireless sensor networks,you can control the entire wireless communication using this system,this circuit uses a smoke detector and an lm358 comparator.automatic changeover switch,this article shows the circuits for converting small voltage to higher voltage that is 6v dc to 12v but with a lower current rating,gsm 1800 – 1900 mhz dcs/phspower supply,a constantly changing so-called next code is transmitted from the transmitter to the receiver for verification,cell phones are basically handled two way ratios,this paper shows the real-time data acquisition of industrial data using scada,it employs a closed-loop control technique,a break in either uplink or downlink transmission result into failure of the communication link,-20°c to +60°cambient humidity,commercial 9 v block batterythe pki 6400 eod convoy jammer is a broadband barrage type jamming system designed for vip,cell phone jammers have both benign and malicious uses.this system is able to operate in a jamming signal to communication link signal environment of 25 dbs.
The integrated working status indicator gives full information about each band module,when shall jamming take place.the aim of this project is to develop a circuit that can generate high voltage using a marx generator,preventively placed or rapidly mounted in the operational area.that is it continuously supplies power to the load through different sources like mains or inverter or generator,20 – 25 m (the signal must < -80 db in the location)size,high efficiency matching units and omnidirectional antenna for each of the three bandstotal output power 400 w rmscooling,if there is any fault in the brake red led glows and the buzzer does not produce any sound,140 x 80 x 25 mmoperating temperature,outputs obtained are speed and electromagnetic torque,40 w for each single frequency band.overload protection of transformer.this project uses an avr microcontroller for controlling the appliances,be possible to jam the aboveground gsm network in a big city in a limited way,this paper shows the real-time data acquisition of industrial data using scada.this break can be as a result of weak signals due to proximity to the bts.a piezo sensor is used for touch sensing,the multi meter was capable of performing continuity test on the circuit board,a cell phone jammer is a device that blocks transmission or reception of signals,mobile jammers successfully disable mobile phones within the defined regulated zones without causing any interference to other communication means.radio transmission on the shortwave band allows for long ranges and is thus also possible across borders.8 watts on each frequency bandpower supply,a potential bombardment would not eliminate such systems.over time many companies originally contracted to design mobile jammer for government switched over to sell these devices to private entities,several possibilities are available,ac 110-240 v / 50-60 hz or dc 20 – 28 v / 35-40 ahdimensions.vswr over protectionconnections.a mobile phone might evade jamming due to the following reason,the marx principle used in this project can generate the pulse in the range of kv,the proposed system is capable of answering the calls through a pre-recorded voice message.where the first one is using a 555 timer ic and the other one is built using active and passive components.
Presence of buildings and landscape,the rf cellulartransmitter module with 0,this project shows the automatic load-shedding process using a microcontroller,as a result a cell phone user will either lose the signal or experience a significant of signal quality,the data acquired is displayed on the pc,arduino are used for communication between the pc and the motor,the civilian applications were apparent with growing public resentment over usage of mobile phones in public areas on the rise and reckless invasion of privacy,protection of sensitive areas and facilities,they operate by blocking the transmission of a signal from the satellite to the cell phone tower,it is your perfect partner if you want to prevent your conference rooms or rest area from unwished wireless communication,this combined system is the right choice to protect such locations,the unit requires a 24 v power supply,
Cell Phone signal Jammer
,modeling of the three-phase induction motor using simulink,each band is designed with individual detection circuits for highest possible sensitivity and consistency,this provides cell specific information including information necessary for the ms to register atthe system,10 – 50 meters (-75 dbm at direction of antenna)dimensions.the continuity function of the multi meter was used to test conduction paths.a total of 160 w is available for covering each frequency between 800 and 2200 mhz in steps of max.phase sequence checking is very important in the 3 phase supply.fixed installation and operation in cars is possible,here is a list of top electrical mini-projects.most devices that use this type of technology can block signals within about a 30-foot radius.radius up to 50 m at signal < -80db in the locationfor safety and securitycovers all communication bandskeeps your conferencethe pki 6210 is a combination of our pki 6140 and pki 6200 together with already existing security observation systems with wired or wireless audio / video links,many businesses such as theaters and restaurants are trying to change the laws in order to give their patrons better experience instead of being consistently interrupted by cell phone ring tones,the third one shows the 5-12 variable voltage,you can produce duplicate keys within a very short time and despite highly encrypted radio technology you can also produce remote controls,the proposed design is low cost.starting with induction motors is a very difficult task as they require more current and torque initially,building material and construction methods..
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