RE: GPS and security
This is a bit off list topics. Press D now if you don't like it.... In message Tue, 28 Dec 93 14:01:15 CST, m5@vail.tivoli.com (Mike McNally) writes:
* Shut down normal transmission and begin strongly encrypted transmission. No mention of this; apparently, the satellites were originally designed with some sort of weak system that made the data difficult to use for high-accuracy purposes, but that's been defeated (by the FAA or someone contracted thereto).
The GPS system was designed to have two modes, one highly acurate for military use, and a low accuracy version for commerce. Since initially no one had receivers, the whole system used military grade for the first few years. Before the Gulf war started, the military needed zillions of GPS units, so they bought commercial marine navigrtion units. After the war, there was talk of turning on the division, but that was made impractical with 'differential' calibration. To get military accuracy, all you have to do is take the commercial GPS to known places. Such as the surveying marks at the US Naval Acadamy, or "ground zero" in the Pentagon. Get your "imprecise" reading, calculate the difference between it at the known value, and use it for subsequent calculations. I expect that triangulation with a few known sites is better than a single one. Last I hear from the Sailing trade press was that the Gov still talked about going to the split setup, but there was little belief that they would. BTW, two satellites is enuff for a general location fix. Three identifies a place on the globe, four adds altitude (handy for planes, bombs, and missles) Pat Pat Farrell Grad Student pfarrell@netcom.com Department of Computer Science George Mason University, Fairfax, VA Public key availble via finger #include <standard.disclaimer>
Before the Gulf war started, the military needed zillions of GPS units, so they bought commercial marine navigrtion units. After the war, there was talk of turning on the division, but that was made impractical with 'differential' calibration.
You appear to be referring to Selective Availability. It was indeed turned off during the Gulf War to allow the use of civilian C/A units. Companies like Trimble couldn't keep up with the military demand during the buildup to the war. Selective availability was turned on again some months after the war ended. The effects were quite visible. The level of SA has varied quite a bit since then.
To get military accuracy, all you have to do is take the commercial GPS to known places. Such as the surveying marks at the US Naval Acadamy, or "ground zero" in the Pentagon. Get your "imprecise" reading, calculate the difference between it at the known value, and use it for subsequent calculations.
False. SA-induced errors are time varying, so the differential trick only works in *real time*. You need receivers at both the reference location and the location to be measured at the same time. The experience with differential GPS is that you need updates that are less than 30 seconds old, otherwise accuracy degrades rapidly. By the way, the differential updates include both range offset and range-rate offset (relative velocity). The addition of range-rate makes the updates last as long as 30 seconds, otherwise you'd need a very high update rate to get 2-3m accuracy.
BTW, two satellites is enuff for a general location fix. Three identifies a place on the globe, four adds altitude (handy for planes, bombs, and missles)
Also false. You need at least THREE satellites for any kind of GPS position fix. And you need to know your altitude ahead of time for this to work. Give a unit operating in 3 satellite mode the wrong altitude, and it will give you the wrong latitude/longitude. Four satellites will give you a three-dimensional fix, i.e., the unit will tell you your altitude. Most units have an "auto 2D/3D" mode, where the unit remembers the altitude from the last 3D (4 satellite) fix and uses it in 2D (3 satellite) mode. Some other units, apparently including my Icom GP-22 unit, seem to assume you're at sea level whenever fewer than 4 satellites are visible. This may be a reasonable assumption for a unit designed for marine use, but it is a bad assumption in places like Colorado. When I took it there last summer, I often saw it give one position as soon as it got 3 satellites, and then jump a half mile to the correct position when it got the fourth. About the only useful thing you can do with less than 3 visible satellites is time transfer to a fixed station. A station in a known location need only track one satellite in order to keep its clock updated. At Qualcomm we use special GPS receivers (with built-in rubidium clocks) in our CDMA base stations as time references to synchronize our own spreading codes. Phil
participants (2)
-
karn@qualcomm.com -
Pat Farrell