GPS full form Global Positioning System.
GPS is a network of orbiting satellites that send
precise details of their position in space back to earth. The signals are obtained
by GPS receivers, such as navigation devices and are used to calculate the
exact position, speed and time at the vehicles location.
GPS is well-known for its military uses and was
first developed by the US to aid in its global intelligence efforts at the
height of the Cold War.
Ever since the early 1980s, however, the GPS has
been freely available to anyone with a GPS receiver. Airlines, shipping
companies, trucking firms, and drivers everywhere use the GPS system to track
vehicles, follow the best route to get them from A to B in the shortest
possible time.
How does GPS work?
There are three parts to a GPS system: a
constellation of between 24 and 32 solar-powered satellites orbiting the earth
in orbits at an altitude of approximately 20000 kilometers, a master control
station and four control and monitoring stations (on Hawaii, Ascension Islands,
Diego Garcia and Kawajale) and GPS receivers such as the one in a car.
Each of the satellites is in an orbit that allows a
receiver to detect at least four of the operational satellites. The satellites
send out microwave signals to a receiver where the built-in computer uses these
signals to work out your precise distance from each of the four satellites and
then triangulates your exact position on the planet to the nearest few meters
based on these distances.
In fact, signals from just three satellites are
needed to carry out this trilateration process; the calculation of your
position on earth based on your distance from three satellites. The signal from
the fourth satellite is redundant and is used to confirm the results of the
initial calculation. If the position calculated from distances to satellites
“A-B-C” do not match the calculation based on “A-B-D” then other combinations
are tested until a consistent result is obtained.
The process of measuring the distance
from satellite to GPS receiver is based on timed signals. For example, at
16h45m precisely, the satellite may begin broadcasting its signal. The GPS
receiver will also begin running the same random sequence at 16h45m local time,
but does not broadcast the sequence. When the receiver picks up the signal from
the different satellites, there will be a time lag, because the microwaves take
a fraction of a second to travel from the satellite to the receiver. The time
lag is easily converted into distance to each satellite. The slight difference
between signals from each satellite is then used to calculate the receiver's
position.
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