
| Global Positioning System satellites transmit
signals to equipment on the ground. GPS receivers passively receive satellite signals;
they do not transmit. GPS receivers require an unobstructed view of the sky, so they are
used only outdoors and they often do not perform well within forested areas or near tall
buildings. GPS operations depend on a very accurate time reference, which is provided by
atomic clocks at the U.S. Naval Observatory. Each GPS satellite has atomic clocks on
board.
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Each GPS satellite transmits data that indicates its location and the current time. All GPS satellites synchronize operations so that these repeating signals are transmitted at the same instant. The signals, moving at the speed of light, arrive at a GPS receiver at slightly different times because some satellites are farther away than others. The distance to the GPS satellites can be determined by estimating the amount of time it takes for their signals to reach the receiver. When the receiver estimates the distance to at least four GPS satellites, it can calculate its position in three dimensions. |
| There are at least 24 operational GPS satellites at
all times. The satellites, operated by the U.S. Air Force, orbit with a period of 12
hours. Ground stations are used to precisely track each satellite's orbit.
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| Determining Position A GPS receiver "knows" the location of the satellites, because that information is included in satellite transmissions. By estimating how far away a satellite is, the receiver also "knows" it is located somewhere on the surface of an imaginary sphere centered at the satellite. It then determines the sizes of several spheres, one for each satellite. The receiver is located where these spheres intersect. |
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GPS Accuracy When the system was created, timing errors were inserted into GPS
transmissions to limit the accuracy of non-military GPS receivers
to about 100 meters. This part of GPS operations, called Selective
Availability, was eliminated in May 2000. |
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All images on this page ©1998 Smithsonian Institution.
Before GPS | GPS Revolution | How GPS Works | Land and Sea Navigation
Navigation In The Air |
Mapping The Earth | Managing The Land | New Frontiers in Science
GPS: A New Constellation
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum |