What is gps and what does it do, Navstar, System overview 4 5 – Leica Geosystems GPS Basics User Manual

Page 5: What is gps and what does it do ? 4

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GPS Basics -1.0.0en

System Overview

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1. What is GPS and what does it do ?

GPS is the shortened form of NAVSTAR

GPS. This is an acronym for NAVigation

System with Time And Ranging Global

Positioning System.
GPS is a solution for one of man’s

longest and most troublesome prob-

lems. It provides an answer to the

question ‘Where on earth am I ?’

One can imagine that this is an easy

question to answer. You can easily

locate yourself by looking at objects that

surround you and position yourself

relative to them. But what if you have no

objects around you ? What if you are in

the middle of the desert or in the middle

of the ocean ? For many centuries, this

problem was solved by using the sun

and stars to navigate. Also, on land,

surveyors and explorers used familiar

reference points from which to base their

measurements or find their way.
These methods worked well within

certain boundaries. Sun and stars

cannot be seen when it is cloudy. Also,

even with the most precise measure-

ments position cannot be determined

very accurately.
After the second world war, it became

apparent to the U.S. Department of

Defense that a solution had to be found

to the problem of accurate, absolute

positioning. Several projects and

experiments ran during the next 25 years

or so, including Transit, Timation, Loran,

Decca etc. All of these projects allowed

positions to be determined but were

limited in accuracy or functionality.
At the beginning of the 1970s, a new

project was proposed – GPS. This

concept promised to fulfill all the require-

ments of the US government, namely

that one should be able to determine

ones position accurately, at any point on

the earth’s surface, at any time, in any

weather conditions.

GPS is a satellite-based system that

uses a constellation of 24 satellites to

give a user an accurate position. It is

important at this point to define ’accu-

rate’. To a hiker or soldier in the desert,

accurate means about 15m. To a ship in

coastal waters, accurate means 5m. To

a land surveyor, accurate means 1cm or

less. GPS can be used to achieve all of

these accuracies in all of these applica-

tions, the difference being the type of

GPS receiver used and the technique

employed.
GPS was originally designed for military

use at any time anywhere on the surface

of the earth. Soon after the original

proposals were made, it became clear

that civilians could also use GPS, and

not only for personal positioning (as was

intended for the military). The first two

major civilian applications to emerge

were marine navigation and surveying.

Nowadays applications range from in-

car navigation through truck fleet man-

agement to automation of construction

machinery.

What is GPS and what does it do ?

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