PART0 » History » Version 19
COLIN, Tony, 03/13/2016 09:20 PM
1 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h1. PART 1 : An introduction to Navigation. |
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2 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | |
3 | 16 | COLIN, Tony | {{toc}} |
4 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | |
5 | 15 | COLIN, Tony | --- |
6 | 12 | COLIN, Tony | |
7 | 15 | COLIN, Tony | p((. Before anything else, it is necessary to tackle the origin of navigation and its applications, the creation of the current GNSS with a comparison of different systems and finally, describing the main principles of GPS. |
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9 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | --- |
10 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | |
11 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h2. 1 - History of Navigation. |
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13 | 17 | COLIN, Tony | _*Navigation* is defined as a field of study that focuses on the process of monitoring and controlling the movement of a craft or vehicle from one place to another.[1] The field of navigation includes four general categories: land navigation, marine navigation, aeronautic navigation, and space navigation._ |
14 | 17 | COLIN, Tony | A brief evolution of Navigation through history is suggested in the following. |
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16 | 1 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !33.jpg! !34.jpg! !35.jpg! !37.jpg! !36.jpg! |
17 | 17 | COLIN, Tony | *Figure 1* : Lighthouse __________________________ *Figure 2* : Magnetic compass ________________________ *Figure 3* : Sextant __________________ *Figure 4* : Chronometer _______________ *Figure 5* : TomTom GPS |
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19 | 1 | COLIN, Tony | h3. a- Visual navigation. |
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21 | 17 | COLIN, Tony | Seamark and landmark references *[Figure 1]* where among the first entities to help to find a direction. However, this system works with a limited range, a limited accuracy, a low availability of marks. |
22 | 17 | COLIN, Tony | Note that stars has been used for centuries, but are only available during night and clear sky. |
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24 | 17 | COLIN, Tony | h3. b- Navigation with classic instruments. |
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26 | 17 | COLIN, Tony | Then, come the Magnetic compass *[Figure 2]*, the Sextant *[Figure 3]* as navigation tools. |
27 | 17 | COLIN, Tony | The last one allows the measurement of the height of stars above the horizon providing longitude inaccurately i.e. it was the first use of ephemeris and time reference. |
28 | 17 | COLIN, Tony | Improvements has been done by combining it with Harrison's clock (Chronometer) *[Figure 4]* providing latitude and longitude with acceptable accuracy. |
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30 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | --- |
31 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | |
32 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h2. 2 - Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS). |
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34 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h3. a- History. |
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36 | 18 | COLIN, Tony | - *Sputnik* in 1957 : first satellite in the world, orbit estimated using the received signal frequency via Doppler effect. |
37 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | - *TRANSIT* from 1958 operational in 1964 : first satellite navigation system for the US Navy. |
38 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | - *GPS* program started at 1973 providing position anywhere at anytime. |
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40 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h3. b- Current definition. |
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42 | 19 | COLIN, Tony | _*Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS)* is defined as a system of satellites that provide autonomous spatial positioning on Earth with global coverage. |
43 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | It allows small electronic receivers to determine their location (longitude/latitude/altitude) to high precision (within a few meters) using time signals transmitted along a line of sight by radio from satellites. |
44 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | Global coverage for each system is generally achieved by a satellite constellation of 20–30 medium Earth orbit (MEO) satellites spread between several orbital planes. The actual systems vary, but use orbital inclinations of >50° and orbital periods of roughly 12 hours._ |
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46 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | --- |
47 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | |
48 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h2. 3 - Comparison of systems. |
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50 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !31-2.png! |
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52 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !30.png! |
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54 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | --- |
55 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | |
56 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h2. 4 - Our system : GPS details. |
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58 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | _http://www.gps.gov/systems/gps/space/ |
59 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Positioning_System_ |
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61 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h3. a- Space Segment. |
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63 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !26.png! |
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65 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !28-2.gif! |
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67 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h3. b- Ground Control Segment. |
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69 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | Continuously > Track GPS satellites, estimate clock and orbit, keep GPS time, upload data that describes clock & orbit for each satellite |
70 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | Infrequently > Command small maneuvers to maintain orbit, small clock corrections, major relocations to compensate any satellite failure |
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72 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h3. c- Delivery of Navigation messages. |
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74 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | Clock & Ephemeris sent by GS to SS, Spread Spectrum ranging signals & navigation data sent by SS to US & GS. |
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76 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h3. d- Signals. |
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78 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !2.png! |
79 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | |
80 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h3. e- Ranging. |
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82 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | Propagation time : Time of transmission - Time of reception |
83 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | Distance between satellite and receiver \approx Propagation time x Speed of light |
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85 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | How it works : attachment:"29.pdf" |
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87 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | _In geometry, *trilateration* is the process of determining absolute or relative locations of points by measurement of distances, using the geometry ofcircles, spheres or triangles. :_ |
88 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | 1 measurement : 1 sphere of radius D1 centered in Sat1 |
89 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | 2 measurements : intersection of 2 spheres (D1, Sat1) (D2, Sat2) = Circle |
90 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | 3 measurements : intersection of 3 spheres (D1, Sat1) (D2, Sat3) (D2, Sat3) = 2 points (1 often aberrant) |
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92 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !20.png! |
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94 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h3. f- GNSS Receivers. |
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96 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !21.png! |
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98 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !22.png! |
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100 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | h3. g- GNSS Measurements. |
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102 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !23.png! |
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104 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !25-2.png! |
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106 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !24.png! |
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108 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | p=. !25.png! |
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110 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | *References :* |
111 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | *[1]* M. Sahmoudi, Introduction to satellite positioning & multi-sensor navigation, 2016 |
112 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | *[2]* K. Borre, D. M. Akos, N. Bertelsen, P. Rinder, S. H. Jensen, A software-defined GPS and GALILEO receiver |
113 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | *[3]* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellite_navigation |
114 | 3 | COLIN, Tony | *[4]* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Positioning_System |
115 | 1 | COLIN, Tony | *[5]* http://www.gps.gov/systems/gps/ |