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gary
17-05-2011, 10:35 PM
One of the engineering journals I receive is "Inside GNSS (http://www.insidegnss.com/magazine)" which is
devoted to the "Global Navigation Satellite System Community".

GNSS is a blanket term which covers all satellite navigation systems, of
which most readers will be familiar with the US-built GPS network.

The magazine is generally filled with technical articles, with titles
such as "Making Sense of GPS Inter-Signal Corrections - Satellite
Calibration Parameters in Legacy and Modernized Ionosphere Correction
Algorithms (http://www.insidegnss.com/node/1580)". Hardly the type of stuff that would generally cause one to
raise an eyebrow.

So it came somewhat as a surprise when I read in the latest March/April
edition that a battle was looming between the US GPS community and a
planned nationwide 4G wireless broadband network being built by a company
called LightSquared (http://www.lightsquared.com/).

In an article entitled "GPS Community Confronts LightSquared
Move into L1 Spectrum (http://www.insidegnss.com/node/2508)", it seems as if a January 26th decision by the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to give LightSquared the go
ahead has the GPS community "seething", as the wireless network has the
"potential to overwhelm GPS receivers across the country".

Originally the LightSquared network was to use satellites augmented by
1,725 ground stations. However, LightSquared later requested to increase
the number of ground stations to some 40,000. The FCC put out a call for
comments over the Thanksgiving Holiday period and apparently only gave
interested parties ten days to respond rather than the usual thirty.

Apparently many federal agencies were caught off guard, and had to
scramble "to get their views in for consideration".

Technically, there are two major issues at the heart of the problem.
Firstly, wireless spectrum is only a finite resource and what limited
amounts exist are already extremely crowded. Secondly, when the GPS
signals reach Earth from satellites some 19,000 km away, they are
incredibly weak, in fact below what is termed the "RF noise floor". To
recover the spread-spectrum signals, GPS receivers have to pull them out
of the noise in an operation called "de-spreading". Preliminary modeling
and testing by some GPS receiver manufacturers and US Government
agencies show that the front-ends of the receivers will be overwhelmed
by the bllion-times more powerful 4G ground station transmissions in a
neighbouring band.

Among those concerned is the US aviation industry, including the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).



In an article in Aviation Week - Article here -
http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story_generic.jsp?channel=awst&id=news/awst/2011/04/11/AW_04_11_2011_p26-307552.xml

Interested readers can find the Inside GNSS article here -
http://www.insidegnss.com/node/2508

LightSquared is a multi-billion dollar venture backed by Harbinger
Capital Partners and other hedge funds with personal links, it is
claimed, all the way back to the White House.

The US GPS industry is said to be worth US$110 billion and is apparently
in for a fight. They have formed a "Coalition to Save Our GPS". Their
web site is here - http://www.saveourgps.org/

Companies and organizations such as the International Air Transport
Association (IATA), Garmin, TomTom, Magellan, the American Car Rental
Association, the Air Transport Association, the Aircraft Owners and
Pilots Association, the Amercan Congress of Surveying and Mapping,
Caterpillar, Deer & Company, UPS, FedEX and many more have put their
weight behind it.

The Coalition also have links to other articles on the issue -
http://www.saveourgps.org/related-articles.aspx

Apart from engineers, technologists, bureaucrats and politicians, there
will no doubt be armies of lawyers and lobbyists taking part in the
battle between the two groups.

In an article in the Wall Street Journal on 31 March, the Pentagon has
raised its concerns. See
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100014240527487037125045762327907 35624946.html?mod=rss_Technology

Under pressure, the FCC has mandated that a Technical Working Group
(TWG) be formed to see whether the issues can be resolved.

As wireless spectrum grows more and more crowded, no doubt we will
see similar battles for the air waves in the years ahead.

GTB_an_Owl
18-05-2011, 12:47 AM
you would think the armed forces would be having a bit to say on the subject Gary ?

geoff

renormalised
18-05-2011, 01:02 AM
And that is precisely the reason why they're getting away with it...or apparently so. Like everything else in American politics, where and when it concerns money and who funds whom, the money talks. Everything else runs even deader than last. The US GPS industry is worth $110 billion. The US communications industry is a multi-trillion dollar enterprise...guess who wins.

gary
18-05-2011, 11:57 PM
Hi Geoff,

According to Aviation Week, both the Deputy Defense Secretary and the Deputy
Transportation Secretary wrote a letter to the FCC on March 25th 2011 urging a
"comprehensive study of all potential interference to GPS".

See http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story_channel.jsp?channel=defense&id=news/asd/2011/03/30/02.xml&headline=GPS%20Jamming%20Study%20Pa rameters%20Concern%20DOD,%20DOT

What is bizarre are the reports of where the FCC sent out the original request
for comment document over the Thanksgiving Holiday break and mandated the
responses need to be received in 10 days rather than the usual 30.

As reported in the Inside GNSS article, it was the FCC that came up with the
original US National Broadband plan in March last year. So when the LightSquared
proposal came along, it was a near perfect fit for the plan's goals. So naturally the
FCC was very enthusiastic about it and it seems as if they tried to rush it through.

However, the reports are stating that it is seriously technically flawed because it
will likely jam GPS receivers in proximity to the ground stations. So if such a system
were to go live and did indeed cause those levels of interference, it would be
pretty hard for people not to notice.

Maybe they thought they will just build it, switch it on and then wait and see if any
planes get lost.

It will be interesting to learn of the results of the Technical Working Group when they report
back on June 15th.