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| sci.geo.satellite-nav (Global Satellite Navigation) (sci.geo.satellite-nav) Discussion of global navigation satellite systems (GNSS). Topics include the technical aspects of GNSS operation, user experiences in the use of GNSS, information regarding GNSS products and discussion of GNSS policy (such as GPS selective availability). |
| Tags: l2c, other, signals |
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Hello to the group,
1. I am wondering whether the new gps signals will replace the oldies. e.x. when the l2c will be operational ready will the classic l2 signal stop transmitting? In 2015 when the l5 will be active what's the reason of having the new satellites transmitting old weak signals? (except of backward compatibility with old receivers) 2. what's the critical number of l2c transmiting satellites for seeing the first results in high accuracy applications? i think now 6 are operational. Theseus |
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#2
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On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 23:08:22 +0300, Theseus
wrote: Hello to the group, 1. I am wondering whether the new gps signals will replace the oldies. e.x. when the l2c will be operational ready will the classic l2 signal stop transmitting? In 2015 when the l5 will be active what's the reason of having the new satellites transmitting old weak signals? (except of backward compatibility with old receivers) 2. what's the critical number of l2c transmiting satellites for seeing the first results in high accuracy applications? i think now 6 are operational. Theseus L2C will be a civil signal modulated onto the existing L2 frequency. P-code will continue on L2. Unless you have a survey-grade receiver or a military navigation receiver, you are not using L2 currently anyway. L5 will provide a third frequency with a code that is less susceptible to attenuation by foliage (but still very susceptible). It will not replace L1 or L2. The more signals in space, the better for navigation and for surveying. By "high accuracy applications", I presume you mean slightly enhanced low accuracy (i.e. consumer grade, metre-level). You will need 5-6 L2C satellites broadcasting in your area, which effectively means most SVs broadcasting on L2C. The increase in accuracy will be marginal for most users, from 10m to 1 or 2 (because of iono-free options). Enhancements such as WAAS may allow consumer-grade receivers to get reliable metre-level accuracy once two or three frequencies become available. Currently dual-frequency receivers can get centimetre-level accuracy using Precise Point Positioning methods and several hours of data. steve |
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