GPSMach Posted July 17, 2011 Posted July 17, 2011 This is a problem I initially solved while I was a patient in the mental hospital. A few years later I was testing it to see if it actually worked, which it didn't, so I got into it again with a vengeance, solved every possibility and tested all calculations for any situation on an Excel spreadsheet. This is the result of my work. It's already been solved before but I had to find out for myself. http://jons-math.bravehost.com/triangulation.html A necessary requirement for GPS is to determine the distance between the satellite and the receiver. Somebody told me once that they do that with a time stamp on the signal from the satellite. Even so I still don't see how that distance can be determined. Can anyone enlighten me as to how this is done? I can believe there's a cesium clock on the satellite, but not synchronized with the receiver. Let me know. My spreadsheet that instantaneously computes the solution for any input can be downloaded at, http://jons-math.bravehost.com/triangulation/triangulation03.xls
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted July 17, 2011 Posted July 17, 2011 The receiver's clock can be corrected using time signals from multiple satellites: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPS#Correcting_a_GPS_receiver.27s_clock
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