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Timeline of
GPS Development
- Late 1960s, concept development.
- Early 1970s, program funding and establishment of a Joint
Program Office within the Department of Defense.
- December 1973, proposal for GPS approved by the Defense
System Acquisition and Review Council (DSARC).
- Mid-1970s, ground testing of the GPS concept.
- February 22, 1978, launch of the first GPS satellite.
- 1989, Magellan Corporation introduces the first hand-held
GPS receiver.
- 1991, detection and fix of a major a glitch that slowed
progress.
- January 1991, military use of GPS in Operation Desert
Storm in Iraq.
- December 1993, declaration of Initial Operational
Capability (IOC) by the U.S. Secretary of Defense.
- May 2, 2000, SA is turned off by presidential directive;
inexpensive civilian GPS receivers increase their horizontal
accuracy from "no worse than" 100 meters to 15-25 meters.
- Oct 1, 2005 First Modernized GPS Satellite with improved
accuracy
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How does the
Global Positioning System work.
The Navstar Global
Positioning System, or GPS for short, consists of three segments or
components. A constellation of satellites ( currently 27 satellites )
orbiting about 20,000 km above the earths surface which transmit
ranging signals on two frequencies in the microwave spectrum.
A control segment which maintains GPS through a system of
ground monitoring stations and satellite upload facilities.
The user receivers both civil and military.
Each satellite transmits a unique digital code sequence
precisely timed by an atomic clock which is picked up by a GPS
receivers antenna and matched with the same code sequence generated
inside the receiver. By matching the signals, the receiver
determines how long it takes the signals to travel from the
satellite to the receiver. These timing measurements are converted
to distances using the speed of light ( 300,000,000 meters per
second or 186 miles per second or 6.18 micro seconds per mile )
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Measuring distances to four or more satellites simultaneously
and knowing the exact locations of the satellites (included in the
signals transmitted by the satellites), the receiver can determine
its latitude, longitude, and height while at the same time
synchronizing its clock with the GPS time standard which also makes
the receiver a precise time piece.
Determining a position from measurements of distances is known
as triangulation (not triangulation, which involves
the measurement of angles) GPS receivers receive
satellite signals, they do not transmit or bounce signals off the
satellites. GPS Systems are a passive, receive-only system, GPS
Systems can support an unlimited number of users, both military and
civilian.
GPS system provides a 24 hour per day global coverage. GPS
systems are an all-weather system which is not affected by rain,
snow, fog, or sand storms.
GPS systems are a dual-use system being used by both civil and
military, and is controlled by a joint civilian / military executive
board of the U.S. government. The system is maintained by the U.S.
Air Force on behalf of all users.
Civil GPS receivers access the C/A-code (coarse / acquisition
code) transmitted on the L1 frequency (1575.42 MHz). Military
receivers, in addition, use the encrypted P-code (precise or
precision code) which is transmitted on both L1 and the L2 frequency
(1227.60 MHz). Some military receivers can access the P-code
directly rather than acquiring the C/A-code first and then
transferring to the P-code giving them a faster acquisition time and
a greater accuracy than civilian GPS receivers.
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