News

As people travel, it’s second nature to utilize GPS. However, what happens when GPS is not an option? For the Army, the ...
There are huge, invisible structures in the ionosphere that are high above the surface of the Earth. These structures are ...
The global precision farming market is expected to grow from USD 11.38 billion in 2025 to USD 21.45 billion by 2032, growing ...
Space weather sensors developed at the University of Bath satellite are set for launch into orbit, as part of a mission ...
When GPS was conceived, none of that was possible. Constellations in low Earth orbit—altitudes up to 1,200 miles (2,000 km)—require hundreds of satellites to provide constant coverage over the ...
Luke Bishop, director of Navigation and Sensor Systems at BAE Systems, stated, "There is now an M-Code version of every GPS receiver created by BAE Systems." ...
Ashtech, Inc. has introduced the G12 receiver, a new OEM board intended for integration into a wide variety of high-accuracy marine, avionics and land navigation applications. The ...
GPS Spoofing is more dangerous and is purely intentional. Spoofing tricks a GPS receiver into thinking it's somewhere else by sending fake signals.
The U.S. Army approved the full-rate production of a Collins Aerospace-developed vehicle-mounted positioning, navigation and timing, or PNT, system vital to operating in GPS-denied environments ...
The as-yet-unnamed new system, which is being developed by Australian firm Advanced Navigation and European missile manufacturer MBDA, swaps the GPS receiver for a downward-facing neuromorphic camera.
Australian personnel testing a Defense Advanced GPS Receiver before commencing resilience tests at Kirtland AFB, New Mexico. Credit: U.S. Air Force Members of the U.S. and Australian militaries ...