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posted by on Monday May 08 2017, @03:17PM   Printer-friendly
from the also-detects-mouse-farts dept.
Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

The Global Positioning System consists of 31 Earth-orbiting satellites, each carrying an atomic clock that sends a highly accurate timing signal to the ground. Anybody with an appropriate receiver can work out their position to within a few meters by comparing the arrival time of signals from three or more satellites.

And this system can easily be improved. The accuracy of GPS signals can be made much higher by combining the signals with ones produced on the ground. Geophysicists, for example, use this technique to determine the position of ground stations to within a few millimeters. In this way, they can measure the tiny movements of entire continents.

This is an impressive endeavor. Geophysicists routinely measure the difference between GPS signals and clocks on the ground with an accuracy of less than 0.1 nanoseconds. They also archive this data providing a detailed record of how GPS signals have changed over time. This archival storage opens the possibility of using the data for other exotic studies.

Today Benjamin Roberts at the University of Nevada and a few pals say they have used this data to find out whether GPS satellites may have been influenced by dark matter, the mysterious invisible stuff that astrophysicists think fills our galaxy. In effect, these guys have turned the Global Positioning System into an astrophysical observatory of truly planetary proportion.

The theory behind dark matter is based in observations of the way galaxies rotate. This spinning motion is so fast that it should send stars flying off into extra-galactic space.

But this doesn't happen. Instead, a mysterious force must somehow hold the stars in place. The theory is that this force is gravity generated by invisible stuff that doesn't show up in astronomical observations. In other words, dark matter.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Kromagv0 on Monday May 08 2017, @05:06PM

    by Kromagv0 (1825) on Monday May 08 2017, @05:06PM (#506432) Homepage

    They may also be using RTK [wikipedia.org] which does better than regular DGPS as you make use of the carrier phase of of the encrypted L2 signal to remove errors. Doing that is what usually gets you down from the relative position correctness of a few cm (DGPS ideal) to a few mm (RTK ideal). RTK works best if you have a nearby stationary base station so people doing surveys will usually truck one out and let it settle for a few days before they go out with roving units but there are some publically available ones [noaa.gov] that while not ideal do offer improvements and then some states also run their own supplemental CORS system [state.mn.us].

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