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posted by chromas on Thursday September 30 2021, @01:11AM   Printer-friendly
from the its-good-to-know-where-you-are dept.

Researchers use Starlink satellites to pinpoint location, similar to GPS:

Researchers track six satellites to get location with accuracy of eight meters.

Signals from SpaceX Starlink broadband satellites can be used to pinpoint locations on Earth to within eight meters of accuracy, engineering researchers reported in a new peer-reviewed paper. Their report is part of a growing body of research into using signals from low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellites for navigation, similar to how GPS works.

Kassas said his "team has used similar techniques with other low-Earth orbit satellite constellations, but with less accuracy, pinpointing locations within about 23 meters," according to the Ohio State News article.

SpaceX satellite signals used like GPS to pinpoint location on Earth

Researchers find novel way to use Starlink system

Engineering researchers have developed a method to use signals broadcast by Starlink internet service satellites to accurately locate a position here on Earth, much like GPS does. It is the first time the Starlink system has been harnessed by researchers outside SpaceX for navigation.

[....] Their findings, shared today (Sept. 22, 2021) at the Institute of Navigation GNSS annual meeting in St. Louis, may provide a promising alternative to GPS. Their results will be published in the upcoming issue of the journal IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems.

The researchers did not need assistance from SpaceX to use the satellite signals, and they emphasized that they had no access to the actual data being sent through the satellites – only to information related to the satellite’s location and movement.

Foreign adversaries who cannot launch their own global navigation satellites might find this as a "poor man's" alternative.

Journal Reference:
Zaher Zak Kassas, Joe Khalife, Mohammad Neinavaie. The First Carrier Phase Tracking and Positioning Results with Starlink LEO Satellite Signals, IEEE (DOI: 10.1109/TAES.2021.3113880)


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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 30 2021, @11:08AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 30 2021, @11:08AM (#1183077)

    Also they can't probably be to accurate either. Not with the any useful level of accuracy at least. That said within 23 meters is good enough for a warhead or a very large, or decent sized, bomb.

    Thanks for not even reading The Fine Summary. If by "can't probably" you mean "are" and the two following sentences being oxymoronic and the subject being non-Starlink satellites instead of Starlink, then you are 100% correct. The 23 meters is about using non-Starlink satellites,

    team has used similar techniques with other low-Earth orbit satellite constellations, but with less accuracy, pinpointing locations within about 23 meters

    With Starlink you get at present 8m accuracy as per the research article. With more Starlinks being launched, it will probably be more accurate going forward.

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