Journal of the Institute of Positioning, Navigation and Timing of Japan
Online ISSN : 2185-2952
ISSN-L : 2185-2952
Volume 2, Issue 1
Displaying 1-2 of 2 articles from this issue
papers
  • Cen XIAO, Chunming FAN, Tomoji TAKASU, Kimihiko UENO, Akio YASUDA
    2011Volume 2Issue 1 Pages 1-6
    Published: 2011
    Released on J-STAGE: June 08, 2011
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    In this paper,we propose a method in which GPS satellite orbits are predicted by using previously recorded navigation data to improve TTFF (Time To First Fix) of GPS receivers. We calculated GPS satellite orbits during 72 hours and compared the results with precise orbits provided by IGS. We also evaluated the accuracy of the predicted orbit. For the test,the simulation used JGM-3 up to 8th order for the earth potential and GSPM.04b for the solar radiation pressure model. The result shows that the user range error is below 90 meters and proves the effectiveness of the proposed method.
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  • Hiromune NAMIE, Hisashi MORISHITA
    2011Volume 2Issue 1 Pages 7-12
    Published: 2011
    Released on J-STAGE: June 08, 2011
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The authors focused on the development of an indoor positioning system which is easy to use, portable and available for everyone. This system is capable of providing the correct position anywhere indoors, including onboard ships, and was invented in order to evaluate the availability of GPS indoors. Although the performance of GPS is superior outdoors, there has been considerable research regarding indoor GPS involving sensitive GPS, pseudolites (GPS pseudo satellite), RFID (Radio Frequency IDentification) tags, and wireless LAN .However, the positioning rate and the precision are not high enough for general use, which is the reason why these technologies have not yet spread to personal navigation systems. In this regard, the authors attempted to implement an indoor positioning system using cellular phones with built-in GPS and infrared light data communication functionality, which are widely used in Japan. GPS is becoming increasingly popular, where $GPGGS sentences of the NMEA outputted from the GPS receiver provide spatiotemporal information including latitude, longitude, altitude, and time or ECEF xyz coordinates. As GPS applications grow rapidly, spatiotemporal data becomes key to the ubiquitous outdoor and indoor seamless positioning services at least for the entire area of Japan, as well as to becoming familiar with satellite positioning systems (e.g. GPS). Furthermore, the authors are also working on the idea of using PDAs (Personal Digital Assistants), as cellular phones with built-in GPS and PDA functionality are also becoming increasingly popular.
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