Differential Global Positioning System (DGPS)

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Some of the interference factors cannot be definitely quantified (e.g. the current state of the atmosphere and it's influence on the signal runtime).

Still, these interferences equally effect neighboring points; thus, the relative positioning (the position of the points to each other) is far more precise than the absolute position (in the WGS 84). Here, “neighboring” means distances to about 100 km. The functional principle of DGPS is to quantify the deviation of the measured position to the actual coordinates on the earth's surface.

For this reason, a GPS positioning to a point with known absolute coordinates is conducted simultaneously to the current GPS positioning. From the difference of the known (correct) coordinates and those obtained from the measuring to the reference point, the deviation can be calculated and used for the correction of other points.

The accuracy gained through DGPS depends on the receiver, the applied DGPS method and the distance to the reference station.

There are three available methods for DGPS measurement:

  1. Fixed positioning of the GPS receiver on a defined point and registration of the position. Direct radio contact to the GPS as the two mensurations have to take place simultaneously.




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