Cutoff angle, Cycle slip, Data message – Leica Geosystems GPS Basics User Manual

Page 50: Deflection of the vertical, Delay lock, Differenced measurements, Differential positioning, Glossary

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50

GPS Basics -1.0.0en

Glossary

Cutoff angle
The minimum elevation angle below

which no more GPS satellites are

tracked by the sensor.

Cycle slip
A discontinuity of an integer number of

cycles in the measured carrier beat

phase resulting from a temporary loss of

lock of a GPS satellite signal.

Data message
A message included in the GPS signal

that reports the satellite’s location, clock

corrections, and health. Included is

rough information on the status of other

satellites in the constellation.
DGPS
Differential GPS. The term commonly

used for a GPS system that utilizes

differential code corrections to achieve

an enhanced positioning accuracy of

around 0.5 - 5m.

Deflection of the vertical
The angle between the normal to the

ellipsoid and the vertical (true plumb

line). It is usually resolved into a compo-

nent in the meridian and a component

perpendicular to the meridian.

Delay lock
The technique whereby the received

code (generated by the satellite clock) is

compared with the internal code (gener-

ated by the receiver clock) and the latter

shifted in time until the two codes match.

Differenced measurements
GPS measurements can be differenced

across receivers, across satellites and

across time. Although many combina-

tions are possible, the present conven-

tion for GPS phase measurement

differencing is to perform the differences

in the above order: first across receiv-

ers, second across satellites and third

across time.

A single difference measurement

(across receivers) is the instantaneous

difference in phase of a received signal,

measured by two receivers simultane-

ously observing one satellite.
A double difference measurement

(across receivers and satellites) is

obtained by differencing the single

difference for one satellite with respect to

the corresponding single difference for a

chosen reference satellite.
A triple difference measurement (across

receivers, satellites and time) is the

difference between a double difference

at one epoch of time and the same

double difference at another epoch of

time.
Differential positioning
Determination of relative coordinates

between two or more receivers which

are simultaneously tracking the same

GPS signals.

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