Publication | Closed Access
GPS Signal Structure and Performance Characteristics
316
Citations
3
References
1978
Year
RadarEngineeringGlobal Positioning SystemAerospace EngineeringLocation EstimationGlobal Navigation Satellite SystemPositioning SystemSatellite Signal ProcessingSignal GenerationGlobal Satellite Navigation SystemsSignal ProcessingNavigation SystemGps Signal StructureSatellite Navigation Systems
The GPS signal structure, performance objectives, orbit geometry, and propagation effects are examined to understand the required characteristics of the navigation system. The study aims to detail the GPS signal, focusing on dual‑frequency transmission and the precision P and clear/acquisition C/A codes. The authors describe the GPS signal structure, detailing dual‑frequency transmission and the precision P and clear/acquisition C/A codes. Simplified receivers achieve an rms position error below 10 m, demonstrating that the system meets its performance bounds.
Details of the gps signal structure are discussed as relates to the signal generation and the performance of the navigation system. GPS performance objectives, orbit geometry, and propagation effects are summarized in order to gain better understanding of the signal and what characteristics it must provide. With these performance objectives as a preface, the details of the signal are described, showing the details of the dual frequency transmission and both the precision P and clear/acquisition C/A codes and their characteristics. Finally, the basic performance of simplified receivers operating on this received signal is discussed. It is shown that an rms position error of less than 10 meters is well within the achievable performance bounds of the system.
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