Navman 11 User Manual

Page 75

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MN002000A © 2004 Navman NZ Ltd. All rights reserved. Proprietary information and specifications subject to change without notice.

RTCA: Radio Technical Commission for

Aeronautics.
RTCM: Radio Technical Commission for Maritime

Services.
SA: Selective Availability. The method used by

the DoD to control access to the full accuracy

achievable with the C/A code.
Satellite elevation: the angle of the satellite

above the horizon.
SEP: Spherical Error Probable. The radius of

a sphere, centred at the user’s true location,

that contains 50 percent of the individual three-

dimensional position measurements made using a

particular navigation system.
Sequential Receiver: a GPS receiver in which the

number of satellite signals to be tracked exceeds

the number of available hardware channels.

Sequential receivers periodically reassign

hardware channels to particular satellite signals in

a predetermined sequence.
SNR: Signal-To-Noise Ratio (expressed in

decibels).
SOG: Speed Over Ground.
SPS: Standard Positioning Service. A positioning

service available to all GPS users on a continuous,

worldwide basis with no direct charge. SPS uses

the C/A code to provide a minimum dynamic and

static positioning capability.
SRAM: Static Random Access Memory.
Stand-by SRAM: portion of the SRAM that is

powered by a “keep-alive” power supply when

prime power is removed to preserve important

data and allow faster entry into the Navigation

Mode when prime power is restored. All of the

SRAM in the receiver is “keep-alive” SRAM.
SV: Space Vehicle. Also Satellite Vehicle.
TDOP: Time Dilution of Precision. A measure of

how much the geometry of the satellites affects the

time estimate computed from the satellite range

measurements.
Three dimensional coverage (hours): the

number of hours-per-day with four or more

satellites visible. Four visible satellites are required

to determine location and altitude.
Three dimensional navigation: Navigation

mode in which altitude and horizontal position are

determined from satellite range measurements.
Time mark pulse: a one pulse per second (lPPS)

output synchronised to UTC when the receiver is in

its Navigation Mode.
TOW: Time Of Week (see GPS time).

TTFF: Time-To-First-Fix. The actual time required

by a GPS receiver to achieve a position solution.

This specification will vary with the operating state

of the receiver, the length of time since the last

position fix, the location of the last fix, and the

specific receiver design.
TTL: Transistor-Transistor Logic
Two dimensional coverage (hours): the number

of hours-per-day with three or more satellites

visible. Three visible satellites can be used to

determine location if the GPS receiver is designed

to accept an external altitude input (Altitude Hold).
Two dimensional navigation: Navigation mode

in which a fixed value of altitude is used for one or

more position calculations while horizontal (2D)

position can vary freely based on satellite range

measurements.
UDRE: User Differential Range Error. A measure

of error in range measurement to each satellite as

seen by the receiver.
UERE: User Equivalent Range Error.
Update Rate: the GPS receiver specification

which indicates the solution rate provided by the

receiver when operating normally.
U.S. Air Force Space Command: the U.S. Air

Force agency responsible for the operation of the

GPS Space and Control Segments.
UTC: Universal Time Coordinated. This time

system uses the second defined true angular

rotation of the Earth measured as if the Earth

rotated about its conventional terrestrial pole.

However, UTC is adjusted only in increments

of one second. The time zone of UTC is that of

Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
VCO: Voltage Controlled Oscillator.
VDOP: Vertical Dilution of Precision. A measure

of how much the geometry of the satellites affects

the position estimate (computed from the satellite

range measurements) in the vertical (perpendicular

to the plane of the user) direction.
VSWR: Voltage Standing Wave Ratio.
WGS-84 World Geodetic System (1984): a

mathematical ellipsoid designed to fit the shape

of the entire Earth. It is often used as a reference

on a worldwide basis, while other ellipsoids are

used locally to provide a better fit to the Earth in a

local region. GPS uses the centre of the WGS-84

ellipsoid as the centre of the GPS ECEF reference

frame.

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