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BeiDou User Segment: Difference between revisions
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The BeiDou User Segment consists of Beidou user terminals<ref name=BEIDOU_MUNICH_2011>China Satellite Navigation Office, ''Development of BeiDou Navigation Satellite System'', Munich Satellite Navigation Summit, 2011.</ref>, which receive BeiDou navigation signals, determine pseudoranges (and other observables) and solve the navigation equations in order to obtain their coordinates. A [[BeiDou Receivers|BeiDou receiver]] is a device capable of determining the user position, velocity and precise time (PVT) by processing the signal broadcasted by BeiDou satellites. Any navigation solution provided by a GNSS Receiver is based on the computation of its distance to a set of satellites, by means of extracting the propagation time of the incoming signals traveling through space at the speed of light, according to the satellite and receiver local clocks<ref name="GNSS-Book ">J. Sanz Subirana, JM. Juan Zornoza and M. Hernández-Pajares, ''Global Navigation Satellite Systems: Volume I: Fundamentals and Algorithms''</ref>. It should be noted that in the first version of the system, [[Other Regional Systems#BeiDou-1|BeiDou-1]], the user position is computed by the ground station and relayed back to the user via GEO satellite. This concept was not adopted in the BeiDou evolution that uses the usual way of computing user position on receiver side. | The BeiDou User Segment consists of Beidou user terminals<ref name=BEIDOU_MUNICH_2011>China Satellite Navigation Office, ''Development of BeiDou Navigation Satellite System'', Munich Satellite Navigation Summit, 2011.</ref>, which receive BeiDou navigation signals, determine pseudoranges (and other observables) and solve the navigation equations in order to obtain their coordinates. A [[BeiDou Receivers|BeiDou receiver]] is a device capable of determining the user position, velocity and precise time (PVT) by processing the signal broadcasted by BeiDou satellites. Any navigation solution provided by a GNSS Receiver is based on the computation of its distance to a set of satellites, by means of extracting the propagation time of the incoming signals traveling through space at the speed of light, according to the satellite and receiver local clocks<ref name="GNSS-Book ">J. Sanz Subirana, JM. Juan Zornoza and M. Hernández-Pajares, ''Global Navigation Satellite Systems: Volume I: Fundamentals and Algorithms''</ref>. It should be noted that in the first version of the system, [[Other Regional Systems#BeiDou-1|BeiDou-1]], the user position is computed by the ground station and relayed back to the user via GEO satellite. This concept was not adopted in the BeiDou evolution that uses the usual way of computing user position on receiver side. | ||
In June 2011, the system has completed the ground segment commissioning, including the test section of the user terminal development<ref> | In June 2011, the system has completed the ground segment commissioning, including the test section of the user terminal development<ref>Compass system 10 months to complete a comprehensive test, covering the Asia Pacific region next year, China news, 20th June 2011.</ref>. However the first terminals appeared in 2009 based in ASIC and comprising already GPS integration<ref>"Status of COMPASS Development", M. Lu, Stanford PNT Symposium 2010</ref>. | ||
There is also an international cooperation in terms of [[Principles of Compatibility among GNSS|Compatibility]] and [[Principles of Interoperability among GNSS|Interoperability]] between BeiDou and other GNSSs<ref name=BEIDOU_MUNICH_2011/>. | There is also an international cooperation in terms of [[Principles of Compatibility among GNSS|Compatibility]] and [[Principles of Interoperability among GNSS|Interoperability]] between BeiDou and other GNSSs<ref name=BEIDOU_MUNICH_2011/>. |
Revision as of 14:20, 12 September 2014
BEIDOU | |
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Title | BeiDou User Segment |
Edited by | GMV |
Level | Basic |
Year of Publication | 2011 |
The BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS), also known as BeiDou-2[1], is China’s second-generation satellite navigation system[1][2] that will be capable of providing positioning, navigation, and timing services to users on a continuous worldwide basis[3]. With continuous efforts put on compatibility and interoperability of the system, the BeiDou user segment and respective applications are expected to be very similar to all other GNSSs for the open service. BeiDou has one particularity over all the other GNSSs: the capability of allowing exchange of short message services between ground stations and users.
BeiDou User Segment
The BeiDou User Segment consists of Beidou user terminals[4], which receive BeiDou navigation signals, determine pseudoranges (and other observables) and solve the navigation equations in order to obtain their coordinates. A BeiDou receiver is a device capable of determining the user position, velocity and precise time (PVT) by processing the signal broadcasted by BeiDou satellites. Any navigation solution provided by a GNSS Receiver is based on the computation of its distance to a set of satellites, by means of extracting the propagation time of the incoming signals traveling through space at the speed of light, according to the satellite and receiver local clocks[5]. It should be noted that in the first version of the system, BeiDou-1, the user position is computed by the ground station and relayed back to the user via GEO satellite. This concept was not adopted in the BeiDou evolution that uses the usual way of computing user position on receiver side.
In June 2011, the system has completed the ground segment commissioning, including the test section of the user terminal development[6]. However the first terminals appeared in 2009 based in ASIC and comprising already GPS integration[7].
There is also an international cooperation in terms of Compatibility and Interoperability between BeiDou and other GNSSs[4]. The China Satellite Navigation Office has been publishing ICD updates on an annual basis being the definition of the Open Service (OS) in a very advanced status.
Applications
GNSS applications are all those applications that use GNSS signals to collect position, velocity and time information to be used by the application. For instance, the position and velocity provided by a BeiDou user terminal may be used for different kinds of applications (civil, military, scientific) such as[4]:
- Fishery: fishermen safety, oceanic and economic security, protection of sovereignty and resources: 14000 fisher users were reported and more than 500 vessel rescue and costal alarm systems have been equipped with BeiDou terminals;
- Disaster Prevention and Mitigation: improvement of rescue response and decision-making capability due to rapid and timely disaster alert, support to rescue operations regarding command scheduling and rapid communication. BeiDou terminals were used in the operations that followed the earthquakes in Wenchuan (Sichuan Province) and Yushu (Qinghai Province);
- Timing: Beidou/GPS multi-mode time synchronization devices, with a reported synchronization accuracy better than 100 ns;
- Other applications include transportation, water management, meteorology, forest fire prevention, soil monitoring and coal mine safety monitoring.
Notes
References
- ^ a b Compass/BeiDou Status, Jun Shen, BNStar Navigation Technology & System, Inc., Rome (Italy), June 11, 2009
- ^ BeiDou Navigation Satellite System in Wikipedia
- ^ BeiDou China’s Rapidly Emerging GNSS, InsideGNSS, May/June 2014
- ^ a b c China Satellite Navigation Office, Development of BeiDou Navigation Satellite System, Munich Satellite Navigation Summit, 2011.
- ^ J. Sanz Subirana, JM. Juan Zornoza and M. Hernández-Pajares, Global Navigation Satellite Systems: Volume I: Fundamentals and Algorithms
- ^ Compass system 10 months to complete a comprehensive test, covering the Asia Pacific region next year, China news, 20th June 2011.
- ^ "Status of COMPASS Development", M. Lu, Stanford PNT Symposium 2010