On the Global Navigation Satellite Systems and Relativity
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10642/1763Utgivelsesdato
2013Metadata
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Originalversjon
Gjevestad, J.G. & Grøn, Ø. (2013). On the Global Navigation Satellite Systems and Relativity. Kart og Plan 73 (1)Sammendrag
GNSS, or more precisely GNSS-2, is an abbreviation for Glob
al Navigation Satellite Systems – Second generation, and
serves as a generic name for the class of modern global sa
tellite based radio navigation systems. GNSS-2 consists mainly
of the four major Global Navigation Satellite Systems known as: GPS (U.S.), GLONASS (Russia), Galileo (EU) and Bei-Dou-2 (China). All these global radio navigation systems are based on the same navigation principle, i.e. utilizing ultra-
stable clocks in satellites to determine the user position by
independent measurements of the transit time of electromagnetic signals transmitted from satellites in orbit, so-called Radio Navigation Satellite Services (RNSS).
The typical performance of these global radio navigation systems is to provide absolute positioning to an observer on the
surface of the Earth within the precision of
5-10 meter. However, this precision can
be improved utilizing state of the art
processing techniques such as Precise Point Positioning (PPP), currently demonstrating absolute positioning of 5-10 centimeters utilizing only one receiver. To
achieve this astonishing precision in terms of absolute position, the rate of time
as measured on the clock in the satellite must be known to
better than a few nanoseconds. Since the satellites are constantly moving with respect to the observer and are also located at highly different gravitational potentials, effects predicted by both the Special- and General theories of Relativity
must be considered in order to achieve the desired accuracy
in the observed transit times.
These systems are in fact one of the very
few man made systems, outside of particle accelerators, that experience significant relativistic effects.