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On Fri, 16 Dec 2005 22:09:02 -0800, Roy Lewallen
wrote: Toni wrote: Hi, I've seen here before suggestions about using a tuned loop to increase the gain of radio controlled clocks. Do you think this could also be used to increase the gain of a gps receiver? No. If you were to increase the gain of your GPS antenna, either by redesign of the antenna or by an external parasitic structure of some sort, it would have to result in a narrower pattern. So you'd reduce the reception in some directions. Heh heh. This can also be beneficial... I was slightly involved with this a few years ago: "Raytheon’s Anti-jam GPS Receiver (AGR) supports the Tactical Tomahawk missile program. The AGR is a PPS (i.e., Y-code) GPS receiver that operates on both the L1 and L2 frequencies. When configured with a multi-element Controlled Reception Pattern Antenna (CRPA), the AGR’s post-correlation nulling techniques allow continued satellite track in the presence of high levels of hostile jamming. The AGR’s patented approach to anti-jam also implements satellite beam steering, to further enhance the tracking thresholds, and to mitigate the “spurious nulls” that can degrade the performance of other nulling implementations (e.g., pre-correlation). The AGR sequentially tracks up to eight visible satellites, and provides high-quality pseudorange/delta pseudorange (PR/DPR) measurements corrected for the effects of selective availability. The Tactical Tomahawk’s navigation processor then uses the PR/DR measurements to yield a high-performance navigation solution." ref: http://www.raytheon.com/products/pgs/ |
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