Position, Navigation, and Timing Technologies in the 21st Century: Integrated Satellite Navigation, Sensor Systems, and Civil Applications, Volume 1

Author:   Y. Jade Morton (University of Colorado Boulder) ,  Frank van Diggelen (Google) ,  James J. Spilker, Jr. (Stanford University) ,  Bradford W. Parkinson (Stanford University)
Publisher:   John Wiley & Sons Inc
Edition:   Volume 1
ISBN:  

9781119458418


Pages:   1168
Publication Date:   09 February 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Our Price $336.95 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Position, Navigation, and Timing Technologies in the 21st Century: Integrated Satellite Navigation, Sensor Systems, and Civil Applications, Volume 1


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Y. Jade Morton (University of Colorado Boulder) ,  Frank van Diggelen (Google) ,  James J. Spilker, Jr. (Stanford University) ,  Bradford W. Parkinson (Stanford University)
Publisher:   John Wiley & Sons Inc
Imprint:   Wiley-IEEE Press
Edition:   Volume 1
Dimensions:   Width: 21.80cm , Height: 5.30cm , Length: 28.20cm
Weight:   2.336kg
ISBN:  

9781119458418


ISBN 10:   1119458412
Pages:   1168
Publication Date:   09 February 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Part A: Satellite Navigation Systems 1. Introduction, Early History, and Assuring PNT (PTA) Bradford W. Parkinson, Stanford University, US Y. T. Jade Morton, University of Colorado Boulder, US Frank van Diggelen, Google, US James J. Spilker Jr., Stanford University, US 2. Fundamentals of Satellite-Based Navigation and Timing John W. Betz, the Mitre Corporation, US 3. The Navstar Global Positioning System John W. Betz, the Mitre Corporation, US 4. GLONASS Sergey Karutin, PNT Center, Russia N. Testoedov, PNT Center, Russia A. Tyulin, PNT Center, Russia Alexei Bolkunov, PNT Center, Russia 5. Galileo José Ángel Ávila Rodríguez, European Space Agency, the Netherlands Jörg Hahn, European Space Agency, the Netherlands Miguel Manteiga Bautista, European Space Agency, the Netherlands Eric Châtre, European Commission, Belgium 6. Beidou Navigation Satellite System Mingquan Lu, Tsinghua University, China Zheng Yao, Tsinghua University, China 7. The India Regional Navigation Satellite System Vyasaraj Rao, Accord Software and Systems, India 8. Quasi-Zenith Satellite System Satoshi Kogure, National Space Policy Secretariat, Japan Yasuhiko Kawazu, National Space Policy Secretariat, Japan Takeyasu Sakai, National Institute of Maritime, Port, and Aviation Technology, Japan 9. GNSS Interoperability: Purpose, Process, Progress, and Myths Thomas A. Stansell, Jr.,  Stansell Consulting, US 10. Signal Quality Monitoring Frank van Graas, Ohio University, US Sabrina Ugazio, Ohio University, US 11. GNSS Orbit Determination and Time Synchronization Oliver Montenbruck, German Aerospace Center, Germany Peter Steigenberger, German Aerospace Center, Germany 12. Ground-Based Augmentation Systems for Aviation Applications Boris Pervan, Illinois Institute of Technology, US 13. Satellite-Based Augmentation Systems Todd Walter, Stanford University, US Part B: Satellite Navigation Technologies 14. GNSS Receivers: An Overview Sanjeev Gunawardena, Air Force Institute of Technology, US Y. T. Jade Morton, University of Colorado Boulder, US 15. GNSS Receiver Signal Tracking Y. T. Jade Morton, University of Colorado Boulder, US Rong Yang, Shanghai Jiaotong University, China Brian Breitsch, University of Colorado Boulder, US 16. Vector Processing Matthew V. Lashley, Auburn University, US Scott Martin, Georgia Tech Research Institute, US James Sennott, Tracking and Imaging Systems, US 17. Assisted GNSS Frank van Diggelen, Google, US 18. High Sensitivity GNSS Frank van Diggelen, Google, US 19. Relative Positioning and RTK Sunil Bisnath, York University, Canada 20. GNSS Precise Point Positioning Peter Teunissen, Curtin University, Australia 21. Direction Position Estimation Pau Closas, Northeastern University, US Grace Gao, Stanford University, US 22. Robust Positioning in the Presence of Multipath and NLOS GNSS Signals Gary A. McGraw, Rockwell Collins, US Paul D. Groves, University College London, UK Benjamin W. Ashman, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, US 23. GNSS Integrity Sam Pullen, Stanford University, US Mathieu Joerger, Virginia Tech, US 24. Interference, Security, and Proof of Location Logan Scott, Logan Scott Consulting, US 25. Civilian GNSS Spoofing, Detection, and Recovery Mark Psiaki, Virginia Tech, US Todd Humphreys, University of Texas Austin, US 26. GNSS Antenna and Antenna Array Signal Processing Andrew O’Brien, the Ohio State University, US Chi-Chih Chen, the Ohio State University, US Inder J. Gupta, the Ohio State University, US Part C: Satellite Navigation for Engineering and Scientific Applications 27. Global Geodesy and Reference Frames Chris Rizos, University of New South Wales, Australia Zuheir Altamimi, Institut National de l'Information Géographique et Forestière, France Gary Johnson, Geoscience Australia, Australia 28. GNSS Geodesy in Geophysics, Natural Hazards, Climate, and the Environment Yehuda Bock, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, US Shimon Wdowinski, Florida International University, US 29. Distributed Time and Frequency Information Juda Levine, National Institute of Standard and Technology, US 30. GNSS for Neutral Atmosphere and Severe Weather Monitoring Hugues Brenot, Royal Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy, Belgium 31. Ionospheric Effects, Monitoring, and Mitigation Techniques Y. T. Jade Morton, University of Colorado Boulder, US Brian Breitsch, University of Colorado Boulder, US Zhe Yang, University of Colorado Boulder, US Harrison Bourne, University of Colorado Boulder, US Dongyang Xu, University of Colorado Boulder, US Charles Rino, University of Colorado Boulder, US 32. GNSS Ionosphere Observations for Monitoring and Forecasting Hazardous Events Panagiotis Vergados, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, US Attila Komjathy, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, US Xing Meng, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, US 33. GNSS Radio Occultation Anthony Mannucci, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, US Chi O. Ao, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, US Walter Williamson, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, US 34. GNSS Reflectometry for Earth Remote Sensing James Garrison, Purdue University, US Valery U. Zavorotny, University of Colorado and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, US Alejandro Egido, Starlab Barcelona, Spain Kristine M. Larson, the University of Colorado Boulder, US Felipe Nievinski, UFRGS, Brazil Antonio Mollfulleda, Starlab Barcelona, Spain Giulio Ruffini, Starlab Barcelona, Spain Francisco Martin, Starlab Barcelona, Spain Christine Gommenginger, National Oceanography Centre, UK

Reviews

""A new tome — make that two new tomes — join the bookshelf of essential and authoritative references for GNSS users, while widening the umbrella a good deal to cover all PNT technologies, their sensors and their integrations. Edited by four leading lights of the community and assistant-edited by two more, its list of authors rounds up another 131 of the 'usual suspects,' the names that are seen repeatedly in the presentations at technical conference and on their organizing boards. In every one of 64 subject matters, the author(s) is/are recognized experts, in many cases the recognized expert, on the material."" —Alan Cameron, Inside GNSS


Author Information

Y. JADE MORTON, PHD is a Professor at Ann and H. J. Smead Aerospace Engineering Sciences Department, University of Colorado at Boulder. Her research interests lie at the intersection of satellite navigation and remote sensing of the space environment, atmosphere, and Earth surface. She has led numerous research projects sponsored by AFOSR, AFRL, DARPA, NASA, NSF, ONR, and private industries. Dr. Morton is the President of the Institute of Navigation (ION), a fellow of IEEE, ION, and the Royal Institute of Navigation (RIN, UK). FRANK VAN DIGGELEN, PHD is a Principal Engineer at Google, where he leads the Android Core-Location Team. He also teaches at Stanford University. He is the inventor of coarse-time GNSS navigation, co-inventor of Long Term Orbits for A-GNSS, and the author of ""A-GPS"" the first textbook on Assisted GNSS. He is Executive Vice President of the Institute of Navigation (ION) and a Fellow of the ION and the Royal Institute of Navigation (UK). JAMES J. SPILKER, JR., PHD was a Consulting Professor in the Aeronautics and Astronautics Department at???Stanford University. Dr. Spilker was an elected member of the National Academy of Engineering, a Life Fellow of the IEEE, and a Fellow of the Institute of Navigation (ION). As one of the originators of GPS, James Spilker shared the Goddard Memorial Trophy and the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering. BRADFORD W. PARKINSON, PHD is an Edward C. Wells Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Parkinson was the Chief Architect for GPS, led the original advocacy and development for the system, and served as the first Director of the GPS Joint Program Office. He has been the CEO of two companies and serves on many boards. Among his many awards are the IEEE Medal of Honor, the Draper Prize of the National Academy of Engineering, and the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List