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posted by janrinok on Thursday December 19 2019, @01:29AM   Printer-friendly
from the cheerleaders-in-space! dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow4408

Satnav watching over rugby players

As France's top rugby players scrum, run and tackle they are being tracked by more than just TV cameras and the watching eyes of the crowd. Satnav-based tracking devices between their shoulder blades are keeping tabs on their position and performance—and helping to safeguard their health.

Rugby is inherently highly physical, but the sport is doing everything it can to limit players playing with concussion. The rules are strict: any player suspected of being concussed must leave the field and be tested .

The problem is that often referees, medics or even the players themselves cannot tell when they have experienced sufficiently high-force impacts to pose head injury risks.

Created in 2002, the French Rugby Federation's Performance Support Department set up wearable GPS-equipped devices to track players' positions, speed and physiological details such as their heart rates.

"These were useful in monitoring their performance and fatigue," comments ESA navigation engineer Nicolas Girault, "but in practice monitoring the movements of players could be patchy, especially on match days when they were needed most."

A new innovative project called GEONAV set out to design an improved monitoring system delivering enhanced monitoring and performance and safety. ESA teamed up with Thales and the French Rugby Federation.

"The major issue was the surrounding environment itself—the stadium," adds Nicolas. "These are typically half-indoor, half outdoor locations. The extended roof blocks out views of many GPS satellites, and some signals can reflect off its high walls. Known as 'multipath," this can often lead to positioning errors.

"In addition, on match days there can be interference from TV signals and mobile/cellular networks, as well as the thousands of spectators carrying smartphones or other devices."

The first element of the solution was to upgrade the satnav receivers to work on a multi-constellation basis, receiving signals from Europe's Galileo system, and optionally Russia's Glonass and China's BeiDou rather than GPS alone. This increased satellite availability overcomes the 'urban canyon' effect, as well as boosting the overall precision of the tracking down to sub-metre accuracy.

Then, to prevent drop-outs when satnav positioning becomes unavailable, additional a short-range but high-precision ultra wide band network is harnessed, based on beacons placed around the stadiums.


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by takyon on Thursday December 19 2019, @01:43AM

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Thursday December 19 2019, @01:43AM (#934051) Journal

    People have been voluntarily carrying satnav trackers for years. You may know them as "smartphones".

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