DocumentCode :
3474823
Title :
GPS versus Loran-C for vehicular navigation in urban and mountainous areas
Author :
Lachapelle, G. ; Townsend, B. ; Gehue, H. ; Cannon, M.E.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Geomatics Eng., Calgary Univ., Alta., Canada
fYear :
1993
fDate :
12-15 Oct. 1993
Firstpage :
456
Lastpage :
459
Abstract :
The main characteristics of both Global Positioning System (GPS) and Loran-C (LF) navigation systems are reviewed, with emphasis on vehicular navigation applications. The effects of the GPS line-of-sight requirement and Loran-C signal interference and attenuation in urban and mountainous areas are discussed. Unaided GPS and Loran-C signal availability statistics sufficient for 2D positioning with HDOP < 5 are presented using GPS and Loran-C signal statistics. In Calgary, GPS availability is found to be better than Loran-C. This is attributed to a near complete satellite constellation and to the use of a fast signal acquisition GPS receiver. The use of integrated GPS/Loran-C improve GPS availability by only a few percent. In the mountains, the use of an integrated system increases availability to 95% as compared to 65% for GPS and 75% for multi-chain Loran-C.
Keywords :
navigation; 2D positioning; GPS line-of-sight requirement; Global Positioning System; HDOP; Loran-C signal interference; fast signal acquisition GPS receiver; integrated GPS/Loran-C; mountainous areas; navigation systems; vehicular navigation; vehicular navigation applications; Attenuation; Availability; Global Positioning System; Low-frequency noise; Navigation; Roads; Satellite constellations; Statistical analysis; Surfaces; Testing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Vehicle Navigation and Information Systems Conference, 1993., Proceedings of the IEEE-IEE
Conference_Location :
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-1235-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/VNIS.1993.585669
Filename :
585669
Link To Document :
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