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Home Science & Technology Science

NASA Seeks to Improve GPS Communications

byCustoms Today Report
07/03/2015
in Science, Science & Technology
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LONDON: When you don’t know how to get to where you are going, chances are you pull out a smartphone or other type of device with a Global Positioning System (GPS) to help guide you where you need to go. What you may not know is that the signals traveling between the GPS satellites and your devices can get distorted thanks to the Earth’s upper atmosphere.
Researchers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in collaboration with the University of New Brunswick in Canada, are studying irregularities in the planet’s ionosphere, a part of the atmosphere approximately 217 miles above the ground that defines the boundary between Earth and space, which could be the cause of the distortions of your GPS device.
The new study, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, compares turbulence in the auroral region to that of higher altitudes in order to gain insight that could help reduce the effects of disturbances in the ionosphere.
“We want to explore the near-Earth plasma and find out how big plasma irregularities need to be to interfere with navigation signals broadcast by GPS,” JPL researcher and lead author of the study, Esayas Shume says.
“One of the key findings is that there are different kinds of irregularities in the auroral zone compared to the polar cap,” says Anthony Mannucci, supervisor of the ionospheric and atmospheric remote sensing group at JPL. “We found that the effects on radio signals will be different in these two locations.”
If you think of the ionosphere as a fluid, the irregularities comprise lower density bubbles in the area of high-density ionization areas. This creates clumps of more and less intense ionization that can interfere with radio signals including those from GPS systems and aircraft, especially at higher altitudes.

Tags: GPS CommunicationsJet Propulsion Laboratoryjournal Geophysical Research LettersNASA Seeks to ImproveNASA Seeks to Improve GPS CommunicationsUniversity of New Brunswick in Canada

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