Assisted
GPS, generally abbreviated as A-GPS or aGPS, is a system that can under certain
conditions improve the startup performance, or time-to-first-fix (TTFF), of a
GPS satellite-based positioning system. It is used extensively with GPS-capable
cellular phones to make the location of a cell phone available to emergency
call dispatchers.
"Standalone"
or "autonomous" GPS operation uses radio signals from satellites
alone. In very poor signal conditions, for example in a city, these signals may
suffer multipath propagation where signals bounce off buildings, or are weakened
by passing through atmospheric conditions, walls, or tree cover. When first
turned on in these conditions, some standalone GPS navigation devices may not
be able to fix a position due to the fragmentary signal, rendering them unable
to function until a clearer signal can be received continuously for a long
enough period of time.
An
assisted GPS system can address these problems by using data available from a
network to locate and use the satellites in poor signal conditions. For billing
purposes, network providers often count this as a data access, which can cost
money depending on the plan.
Basic
Concepts
Standalone
GPS provides first position in approximately 30–40 seconds. A Standalone GPS
system needs orbital information of the satellites to calculate the current position.
The data rate of the satellite signal is only 50 bits/s, so downloading orbital
information like ephemeris and almanac directly from satellites typically takes
a long time, and if the satellite signals are lost during the acquisition of
this information, it is discarded and the standalone system has to start from
scratch. In AGPS, the Network Operator deploys an AGPS server. These AGPS
servers download the orbital information from the satellite and store it in the
database. An AGPS capable device can connect to these servers and download this
information using Mobile Network radio bearers such as GSM, CDMA, WCDMA, LTE or
even using other wireless radio bearers such as Wi-Fi. Usually the data rate of
these bearers is high; hence downloading orbital information takes less time.
AGPS
has two modes of operation:
Mobile
Station Assisted (MSA)
In MSA
mode A-GPS operation, the A-GPS capable device receives acquisition assistance,
reference time and other optional assistance data from the A-GPS server. With
the help of the above data, the A-GPS device receives signals from the visible
satellites and sends the measurements to the A-GPS server. The A-GPS server
calculates the position and sends it back to the A-GPS device.
Mobile
Station Based (MSB)
In MSB
mode A-GPS operation, the A-GPS device receives ephemeris, reference location,
reference time and other optional assistance data from the A-GPS server. With
the help of the above data, the A-GPS device receives signals from the visible
satellites and calculates the position.
Many
mobile phones combine A-GPS and other location services including Wi-Fi
Positioning System and cell-site multilateration and sometimes a hybrid
positioning system.
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