Comet-1 gps jammer l1- l5 - purchase gps jammer cheap

Comet-1 gps jammer l1- l5 - purchase gps jammer cheap

  • Post Author:Jkw_jFaFMP@aol.com

An Answer for Precise Positioning Research By Thomas Pany, Nico Falk, Bernhard Riedl, Tobias Hartmann, Günter Stangl, and Carsten Stöber INNOVATION INSIGHTS by Richard Langley WHAT IS THE IDEAL GNSS RECEIVER? Well, that depends on what you mean by “ideal.” If we take it to mean the simplest, conceptually, yet the most capable and adaptable receiver, then we would just connect an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) to an antenna and pass the converter’s output to a digital signal processor whose software would transform the received signal into the desired result with the utmost speed and precision. There are certain technological limitations that currently preclude fully developing such a device but we are getting very close to the ideal and practical implementations already exist. Such a GNSS receiver is an example of a software-defined radio — a radio-communications architecture in which as much of the operation of a receiver (or a transmitter) as feasible is performed by software in an embedded system or on a personal computer (PC). Now, we can’t simply connect an ADC to an antenna since the strength of GNSS signals falls well below the sensitivity threshold of real ADCs and those that can directly digitize microwave radio frequencies are rather power hungry. Therefore, the front end of a real software GNSS receiver includes a low-noise preamplifier, filters, and one or more downconverters to produce an analog intermediate-frequency signal that passes to a high-speed ADC. The digitized signal is provided at the output of the front end in a convenient format, which, for processing signals on a PC, is typically USB 2.0 with its maximum signaling rate of 480 megabits per second. All baseband signal processing is then carried out in the programmable microprocessor. Software GNSS receivers offer a number of advantages over their hardware cousins. Foremost is their flexibility, which permits easy and rapid changes to accommodate new radio frequency bands, signal modulation types and bandwidths, and baseband algorithms. This flexibility is beneficial not only for multi-GNSS operation but also for prototyping algorithms for conventional hardware designs. Another advantage is their use in embedded systems such as smartphones and wireless personal digital assistants. Software GNSS receivers are also a boon for teaching, where a student can tweak a particular operating parameter and immediately see the effect. And given their remarkable flexibility, software GNSS receivers can be adapted to a variety of special scientific and engineering research applications such as reflectometry and signal analysis. In this month’s “Innovation,” we look into the development and capabilities of one modern software GNSS receiver in an effort to answer the question “What is the ideal GNSS receiver for precise positioning research?” “Innovation” is a regular feature that discusses advances in GPS technology andits applications as well as the fundamentals of GPS positioning. The column is coordinated by Richard Langley of the Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering, University of New Brunswick. Personal-computer-based software receivers have found broad use as R&D tools for testing new signal processing algorithms, for analyzing received GNSS signals, and for integrating various sensors with GNSS. Software receivers also provide a consistent framework for GNSS signal samples, correlator values, pseudoranges, positions, assistance data, and sensor (inertial) data, and often act as integration platforms for prototype navigation systems. The distinctive feature of PC-based software receivers is their ability to work in post-processing mode in addition to real-time operation and the support of high-performance central processing units (CPUs). So far, software receivers are typically not used as operational receivers — neither in the mass market, nor in the professional sector, nor as a reference station where a PC would already be available. The last point can be explained by the fact that most software receivers can only process a limited number of frequency bands (sometimes just L1) and are often limited to small bandwidth signals (such as that of the L1 C/A-code signal or the L2 civil signal (L2C)). Improvements of the PC-based software receiver SX-NSR achieved at the end of 2010 and in early 2011 try to overcome these limitations. They include the first real-time implementation of P-code processing on L2, a unique method for processing the ultra-wide Galileo AltBOC signals on E5, and a method to synchronize two NavPort-4 frontends (each supporting four frequency bands of 15 MHz bandwidth) via a hardware link. The SX-NSR, which has been developed in cooperation with the Universität der Bundeswehr München in Munich, Germany, runs under the Windows operating system (XP or 7) and supports processing of GNSS signals plus sensor data (such as that from an inertial measurement unit, or IMU) in real time and in post-processing mode. It supports all the civil GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, and Compass signals. User-defined signals can be included by providing the pseudorandom noise (PRN) codes and the associated tracking parameters. The computational real-time performance can be characterized by two rules-of-thumb for acquisition and tracking. Acquisition is based on a flexible coherent and noncoherent integration and may be accelerated by a graphics card based on the Compute Unified Device Architecture (CUDA) — a parallel-computing architecture developed by Nvidia for graphics processing but also useful for accelerating non-graphics applications. Depending on the graphics card type, a few million or many millions of equivalent correlators are available to detect even the weakest signals quickly. Stable tracking is done with multiple correlators. An x86 CPU core supports around 20 channels (for a laptop) to 30 channels (for a PC) at an average CPU load below 50–60 percent. With that CPU load, the software has enough reserve (in terms of the size of the sample buffer) to cope with latencies introduced by the non-real-time Windows operating system. In post-processing, a virtually unlimited number of channels or correlators is available. The SX-NSR software typically connects to the NavPort-4 front end via a single USB 2.0 connector. One front end supports four RF paths with 15-MHz bandwidth in the L-band. One band is sampled at 40.96 MHz with 12-bit precision. Small batches of samples are transferred with 12 bits at regular intervals to the PC for increased spectral analysis possibilities but the continuous transfer is usually done with just 2 bits. Decimation by a factor of two (yielding a sample rate of 20.48 MHz) and/or bit reduction are options to limit the data transfer bandwidth on the USB bus. The NavPort also includes configurable notch and finite-impulse-response (FIR) filters working with 12-bit precision and 40.96-MHz data rate. The SX-NSR further supports standard output formats (such as Receiver Independent Exchange (RINEX) format or that of the Radio Technical Commission for Maritime Services (RTCM)), has a graphical user interface, and a freely user-accessible application programming interface (API) in the C programming language. A reference station was established with the SX-NSR for the International GNSS Service (IGS) Multi-GNSS Experiment (M-GEX) starting on February 1, 2012, at the Observatory Graz in Austria (marker name GRAB). The data is routinely processed by the European Reference Frame analysis center at Observatory Lustbuehel, Graz, Austria, with Bernese Software 5.0, and shows results with a quality that is virtually no different than that of commercial hardware receivers. All-in-view tracking of the four GNSS constellations on all frequencies (see TABLE 1) has been achieved with an off-the-shelf $1,000 PC, two synchronized NavPorts, and the SX-NSR software. In particular, the front end receives Compass B1, B2, and B3 signals and currently the software is tracking two of the geostationary Earth orbit (GEO) satellites, a few of the inclined geosynchronous orbit (IGSO) satellites, and the medium Earth orbit (MEO) satellites at Graz on B1 and B2. There are plans to implement tracking of the B3 signal for the M1 satellite and that of satellite-based augmentation system (SBAS) satellites on L5. Table 1. Frequency bands supported by the dual NavPort-4 receiver. Typical received carrier-to-noise-density-ratio (C/N0) values recorded at station GRAB are shown in FIGURE 1. Freely accessible GRAB data in RINEX format can be downloaded from several data archive sites (see Further Reading online). The SX-NSR software receiver provides a GNSS development and research framework with the API opening it up for user-implemented algorithms. The user may implement only small portions of new code (such as a special acquisition technique) and for the rest of the receiver rely on the well-known behavior of the SX-NSR’s framework. A number of applications are possible using the flexibility of a software receiver; some of them are described in this article. Figure 1. C/N0 values for five typical satellites, one each for GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, Compass, and the European Geostationary Navigation Overlay Service (EGNOS) SBAS as recorded at Observatory Graz. The Front End The front-end frequency plan was adjusted to have a clean spectrum free of internal interference. This is of utmost importance as software receivers are often used to detect and mitigate interference especially for the Galileo E5 and E6 frequency bands due to overlapping radio navigation services. An inter-front-end link enables synchronization of two NavPort-4 devices. It generates a synchronous reference clock for a proper phase relationship. Moreover, a trigger is used to adjust the digital data stream of both devices. One possible application of the inter-front-end link technology is to easily double the number of available GNSS frequencies. Another possible application is the building of a dual-antenna solution. For this purpose, each NavPort-4 device handles the same GNSS frequencies, but from different antennas. Whereas within each NavPort, a quad analog-to-digital converter (ADC) synchronously samples the four received GNSS signals, the synchronicity between two NavPorts is more complex. For the inter-front-end link, both devices have to use the same 10-MHz clock reference for a synchronous setup. This is reached by using the reference clock output of the master device as reference clock input of the slave device as depicted in FIGURE 2. It is also possible to connect both NavPort-4 devices to a single external clock reference. Each device generates its own 40.96-MHz sample rate from this reference. The phase difference of the 40.96-MHz sample rate is measured in the master and slave with a phase detector. The first input of the detector is the local 40.96-MHz clock. The second input is the 40.96-MHz clock from the other NavPort-4 with a different phase alignment due to ambiguities in its generation and cable delay. The phase detector measures the phase difference between both clocks. The low-pass-filtered output of this measurement is digitized with an ADC. If this measurement is within a phase range of ±7 degrees at 40.96 MHz, which corresponds to ±14 centimeters, the coarse synchronization is finished. If the value is not within this range, the synchronization algorithm repeats. After starting the data processing for both devices simultaneously with an implemented digital trigger, the phase difference between master and slave clock could be measured continuously for later fine-tuning in the SX-NSR to achieve an accuracy of much below 1 degree at 40.96 MHz, which corresponds to ±2 centimeters. The synchronization algorithm is verified by connecting two L1-capable NavPorts to the same antenna. The phase and code delay can then be determined from receiver single-differences of GPS L1 C/A-code-derived phase and code measurements. Actually, this delay estimation is part of an attitude solution (see below) and an example is shown in FIGURE 3. The code delay here is around 50 centimeters and includes the RF filter delay difference of around 40 centimeters (which can be calibrated and is stable over power cycles) in addition to the synchronization delay (here around 10 centimeters). The phase delay is naturally determined modulo one cycle and shows warm-up effects of 1.4 centimeters during the first few minutes of operation. Figure 3. Inter-front-end hardware delay variation on a GPS L1 signal. GNSS Reference Station Although the GPS modernization process is ongoing and more and more L2C-capable satellites are in orbit, tracking of the encrypted P-code signal on L2 is still a key element for any receiver to be considered as a reference station or geodetic receiver. Dual-frequency observations need to be available for the full GPS constellation. A possible option to retrieve full wavelength carrier-phase observations and code ranges on L2 is cross-correlation tracking of the encrypted P-code signal. The receiver computes the cross-correlation function between the raw L1 and L2 samples over a long coherent interval as shown in FIGURE 4. The encrypted P-code stream, identical on L1 and L2, is represented by c(tµ). Figure 4. Cross-correlation block diagram. A receiver internal complex carrier is generated (see frequency compensation in Figure 4), whose frequency equals the Doppler shift frequency plus the intermediate-frequency difference between L1 and L2. This frequency is generally different for each satellite. The L1 signal is delayed to compute the cross-correlation function for several code-phase taps. The cross-correlation function is computed using the predicted Doppler difference based on the Doppler frequency estimated from L1 with complex-valued baseband samples. A number of batches are collected and a post-correlation fast Fourier transform is applied. The parameter values shown in TABLE 2 result in a total coherent integration time of 6.4 seconds. Table 2. SX-NSR cross-correlation parameter values. The result is the cross-correlation function as a function of code phase and Doppler. Using interpolation techniques, the position of the peak is determined, which then gives the delay and Doppler shift of the L2 signal with respect to the L1 signal. The complex argument of the peak value gives the L2-L1 carrier-phase differences. Those differences are filtered and are then added to the L1 parameters to give the L2P code estimates. We use two first-order Kalman filters (one for the code, one for the phase) to smooth the cross-correlation estimates. The code filter is updated with the estimated delay and the Doppler; the phase filter is updated with the estimated Doppler and phase. Cycle slips are detected if the L1-L2 phase changes are too high. Loss-of-lock is detected by comparing the estimated L2 C/N0 value against a threshold. After several Kalman filter tuning steps, the L2P signal is tracked down to low elevation angles. For example, the GPS Block IIF satellite PRN1 was tracked over a whole pass without cycle slips as shown in the code-minus-carrier plot in FIGURE 5.  Figure 5. Code minus carrier-phase measurements for GPS PRN1 at site GRAB on day of year 106, 2012. One of the key applications of a professional GNSS receiver is its use as a GNSS reference station. Using a software receiver for this purpose would also provide increased monitoring capabilities to detect (un)intentional inference via RF spectral analysis or to detect signal anomalies due to satellite failures or multipath. Furthermore, it is useful for a number of scientific experiments and research topics such as scintillation monitoring or atmospheric occultation studies. Other GNSS Signals The inclusion of new GNSS signals in a software receiver is typically straightforward. The PRN codes need to be loaded and the tracking parameters (such as carrier frequency, integration time, error correction scheme, phase relation of signal components data/pilot, correlator positions, and discriminator type) can be selected without source code modification. If a hand-over from a different signal is performed (such as from GPS L1 to GPS L5) and if the first signal has already been synchronized to the transmit time by decoding the time-of-week, then it is possible to directly resolve the code ambiguity of the new signal. If this is not possible, a navigation message decoder has to be implemented to retrieve the time-of-week, which mostly has to be in the source code. Galileo AltBOC. An important exception to this rule is the Galileo AltBOC signal due to its high bandwidth. A conventional view on the AltBOC signal processing would require a sample rate of at least two times the total signal bandwidth. Depending on how many outer AltBOC side lobes are considered, this results in a sampling rate of 102 megasamples per second or more. This is undesirable for a cost-efficient software receiver solution, regarding the data transfer and the CPU load. The AltBOC processing inside the SX-NSR relies on the fact that both frequency bands E5a and E5b are sampled coherently and this coherency can be exploited to reconstruct the full AltBOC signal. The accuracy of the AltBOC navigation signal is concentrated in the main BOC sidelobes itself. More specifically, the thermal noise and multipath performance are dependent on the Gabor bandwidth, which represents the curvature of the correlation function at the tracking point. Thus a similar Gabor bandwidth can be obtained by sampling the E5a and the E5b band separately. This is the key idea of the resulting AltBOC processing scheme. The E5a and E5b signal samples are generated synchronously inside the same ADC chip and are transferred via the USB bus to the PC running the SX-NSR. The SX-NSR first acquires and tracks the signal separately on E5a and E5b. As it is quite efficient to run the E5a and E5b tracking on separate threads (and on separate CPU cores), the combination of E5a and E5b correlation values to E5 correlation values is done at the post-correlation level. There is no feedback from the E5 channel to the E5a/b channels. The channel maintains its own numerically controlled oscillator (NCO). A dedicated transformation is used to account for NCO differences between the E5a/b NCO values and the E5 NCO values. It is basically a sinc-interpolation in the code-phase direction and accounts for Doppler and carrier-phase differences. The transformed correlation values are added and yield an approximation to the AltBOC correlation function. The E5 correlation values are used to compute the discriminator values to update the E5 tracking loops. The E5 NCO values are used to compute the code pseudoranges and carrier-phase measurements, the Doppler frequency, and the C/N0 values, which are the primary outputs of the E5 receiver. Although the E5 receiver is a somehow a virtual receiver (that is, without correlators), it has the same user interface including most of the configuration parameters, output (for example, multi-correlator), and API. With AltBOC tracking, the Galileo satellites deliver code and phase measurements on five different carrier frequencies. A code-minus-carrier plot is shown in FIGURE 6. The code accuracy of the AltBOC signal is striking. The E6 signal is severely impacted by the present interference, and phase tracking is only possible for higher elevation angles. Figure 6. Code minus carrier-phase measurements for Galileo PRN12 at site GRAB on day of year 104, 2012. Polyfit and Vector Tracking A software receiver should provide a transparent way to retrieve pseudorange measurements that is well understood and can be well modeled. It should also provide a flexible input to control tracking NCO values. Both points are important if the receiver is part of larger navigation system (such as an integrated GNSS/INS system). Conventional delay-lock loop (DLL) / frequency-lock loop (FLL) / phase-lock loop (PLL) configuration is one option and is well understood by all GNSS researchers and engineers. It has, however, two major drawbacks. The loops introduce time correlations that cannot be easily modeled in a positioning Kalman filter, especially if low bandwidths (carrier aiding) are used. Second, the internal parameters of a DLL are difficult to match to a deeply coupled GPS/INS system. One way to overcome this is a method called polyfit tracking based on a rather old Jet Propulsion Laboratory patent (U.S. Patent No. 4821294). The idea behind this is to decouple pseudorange determination from the NCO counters. This is accomplished by forming the pseudoranges at the integrate-and-dump rate (such as 50 Hz) and to add the discriminator values to them. The resulting pseudorange is then obtained via a polyfit over the measurement interval. The time correlation of the measurements is solely determined by the discriminator values, and they compensate for the NCO correlations. A nice example is the application of this method to vector tracking. In vector tracking the NCO values are determined via a line-of-sight projection of the last position, velocity, and time (PVT) estimate and this estimate is usually slightly delayed. Furthermore, the line-of-sight projection is not perfect due to inevitable modeling errors (such as atmospheric delay errors). Thus the NCO does not follow the received signal as well as for DLL/FLL/PLL tracking. This is not a problem as the difference is captured in the discriminator values. FIGURE 7 shows the output of the method for a measurement interval of 0.5 second, one GPS C/A-code signal and for a dynamic user. The PVT update happens with a delay of about 100 milliseconds, changing the Doppler frequency. This resulting phase slope discontinuity is nicely compensated by the phase discriminator. The actual measurements are marked as brown stars in Figure 7. The method can also be applied to slave a channel to a master channel. This is useful for reflectometry, for example, where the master channel locks onto a line-of-sight signal and the slave channel tracks the reflected signal from sea surface. Figure 7. NCO-based phases (green) plus discriminator values (yellow) and polyfit for carrier-phase, code, and Doppler tracking (dynamic user, GPS C/A-code tracking). With multiple correlators (for example, nine correlators equally spaced from -0.5 to 0.3 chip for GPS C/A-code tracking), the polyfit method can be extended in a natural way to estimate and mitigate multipath. Using the polyfit carrier estimate, the multi-correlator values are coherently combined over the measurement interval and then a correlation function model is fitted to it. An eventually presented data bit is estimated and wiped off. The correlator fit starts with the assumption that only the line-of-sight signal is present. If the chi-squared value is above a certain threshold, the correlator fit is repeated assuming additionally one multipath signal. Up to two multipath signals can be estimated. The performance of this method can be tested with an RF signal generator. The scenario includes the line-of-sight signal (GPS C/A-code) and one multipath signal. The initial multipath delay is 0 meters and increases slowly (5.7 millimeters per second). The standard tracking method uses a multipath-mitigating double-delta code discriminator formed from four correlators (-0.2, -0.1, 0.1, 0.2) and an arctan carrier discriminator. Standard tracking is used to control the NCO values. FIGURE 8 shows that multipath is detected for delays larger than 15 meters. The detection performance depends on the carrier-phase difference of the line-of-sight and multipath signal, but for delays larger than 32 meters, multipath is always detected. If multipath is detected, the corrected ranges and C/N0 values are significantly improved. Figure 8. SX-NSR real-time carrier-phase multipath detection and mitigation performance for a GPS C/A-code signal with a -10 dB multipath signal (standard tracking shown in black, multipath-estimating discriminator output shown in red). The polyfit method is used routinely in the reference station and has also been tested in a dynamic scenario. A bus drive near the IFEN office in Poing, Germany, with the antenna mounted on the roof has been carried out. Even in this rural area, short-term shading and multipath severely distort single channel (DLL/PLL) tracking causing rather large position errors (red dots in FIGURE 9). With a simple switch in the software, the NCO control can be switched from DLL/PLL to vector tracking (polyfit tracking is always on with the same fit parameters). If the standard point positioning (SPP) solution is used to control the NCO values (yellow dots), the errors are already drastically reduced because the NCOs follow the position and not the reflected signals. Also, erratic NCO jitter preceding loss-of-lock events is now eliminated. A further improvement is achieved if the PVT solution is computed by a Kalman filter (green dots), giving finally the typical high-navigation accuracy of modern GNSS receivers even with partial signal blocking. Dual-Antenna Heading Determination The bus drive mentioned above has actually been carried out with two antennas on the roof top with the aim of demonstrating the dual-antenna performance of the software receiver to determine heading. Two synchronized NavPorts have been used, both receiving GPS C/A-code signals (more frequencies would even be more beneficial and possible, but such a test has not yet been carried out). The software is fully prepared to handle data streams from two antennas and one option is to use the same NCO for both antennas. That is, the master antenna data is used to realize vector tracking and the discriminators of the slave channels capture the relative movement of the slave antenna to the master antenna. Again, polyfit tracking provides a natural framework to cope with this data. Attitude is determined with receiver single-difference observations. It is beneficial to form this difference as early as possible in the receiver processing, that is, immediately after correlation. Thus carrier-phase tracking is based on receiver single-difference correlators, being the product of the complex-conjugate master prompt correlator and the slave prompt correlator (both obviously for the same GNSS signal). The heading is shown in FIGURE 10. As reference, a GPS/INS system was used that calibrated the IMU during the first 300 seconds. One sees that the polyfit plus difference correlator is able to track the carrier phase continuously over 400 seconds in the rural test drive, although there is high multipath and some shading even for the high-elevation-angle satellites. Switching off only one option (vector tracking or the difference correlator) introduces cycle slips and corrupts the heading solution. Figure 10. Heading and heading error for the dual-antenna test.  Conclusions Currently, we see two main applications for software receivers. First, they may replace hardware receivers if the increased software receiver performance/flexibility justifies the increased power consumption and size. Several features have been shown in this article, and the possibility to do post-processing and the high-power CPU for customized algorithms are striking arguments for software receivers. On the other hand, software receivers may be customized by inserting user-specific code via the API offering enormous possibilities. Acknowledgments The research leading to the AltBOC results and the difference correlator results has received funding from the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013) under grant agreement numbers 248151 and 247866, respectively. This article is based, in part, on the award-winning paper “Wide-band Signal Processing Features for Reference Station use of a PC-based Software Receiver: Cross-correlation Tracking on GPS L2P, AltBOC and the Inter-frontend Link for up to Eight Frequency Bands” presented at ION GNSS 2011, the 24th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, held in Portland, Oregon, September 19–23, 2011. Manufacturers The IFEN GmbH NavPort/SX-NSR receiver at station GRAB is fed by a Leica Geosystems AG LEIAR25.R4 antenna with a LEIT radome. The kinematic test used a NovAtel Inc. SPAN GNSS/inertial system. THOMAS PANY works for IFEN GmbH in Poing, Germany, as a senior research engineer in the GNSS receiver department. He also works as a lecturer (Priv.-Doz.) at the Universität der Bundeswehr München (UniBwM) in Munich, Germany. NICO FALK works for IFEN GmbH in the receiver technology department. BERNHARD RIEDL works for IFEN GmbH as product manager for SX-NSR. TOBIAS HARTMANN works for IFEN GmbH in the receiver technology department. GÜNTER STANGL is an officer of the Austrian Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying and works half time at the Space Research Institute of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. CARSTEN STÖBER is a research associate at UniBwM.   FURTHER READING • Authors’ Proceedings Paper “Wide-band Signal Processing Features for Reference Station Use of a PC-based Software Receiver: Cross-correlation Tracking on GPS L2P, AltBOC and the Inter-frontend Link for up to Eight Frequency Bands” by T. Pany, N. Falk, B. Riedl, T. Hartmann, J. Winkel, and G. Stangl in Proceedings of ION GNSS 2011, the 24th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, Portland, Oregon, September 19–23, 2011, pp. 753–766. • IFEN Software Receiver Website • Overviews of Software GNSS Receivers “Real-Time Software Receivers: Challenges, Status, Perspectives” by M. Baracchi-Frei, G. Waelchli, C. Botteron, and P.-A. Farine in GPS World, Vol. 20, No. 9, September 2009, pp. 40–47. “GNSS Software Defined Radio: Real Receiver or Just a Tool for Experts?” by J.-H. Won, T. Pany, and G. Hein in Inside GNSS, Vol. 1, No. 5, July–August 2006, pp. 48–56 “Satellite Navigation Evolution: The Software GNSS Receiver” by G. MacCougan, P.L. Normark, and C. Ståhlberg in GPS World, Vol. 16, No. 1, January 2005, pp. 48–55. • Software GNSS Receiver Algorithms and Implementations Digital Satellite Navigation and Geophysics: A Practical Guide with GNSS Signal Simulator and Receiver Laboratory by I.G. Petrovski and T. Tsujii with foreword by R.B. Langley, published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K., 2012. “Simulating GPS Signals: It Doesn’t Have to Be Expensive” by A. Brown, J. Redd, and M.-A. Hutton in GPS World, Vol. 23, No. 5, May 2012, pp. 44–50. Navigation Signal Processing for GNSS Software Receivers by T. Pany, published by Artech House, Norwood, Massachusetts, 2010. A Software-Defined GPS and Galileo Receiver: A Single-Frequency Approach by K. Borre, D.M. Akos, N. Bertelsen, P. Rinder, and S.H. Jensen, published by Birkhäuser, Boston, 2007. “GNSS Radio: A System Analysis and Algorithm Development Research Tool for PCs” by J.K. Ray, S.M. Deshpande, R.A. Nayak, and M.E. Cannon in GPS World, Vol. 17, No. 5, May 2006, pp. 51–56. Fundamentals of Global Positioning System Receivers: A Software Approach, 2nd Edition, by J. B.-Y. Tsui, published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey, 2005. • Galileo Signal Tracking “Performance Evaluation of Single Antenna Interference Suppression Techniques on Galileo Signals using Real-time GNSS Software Receiver” by A.S. Ayaz, R. Bauernfeind, J. Jang, I. Kraemer, D. Dötterbock, B. Ott, T. Pany, and B. Eissfeller in Proceedings of ION GNSS 2010, the 23rd International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, Portland, Oregon, September 21–24, 2010, pp. 3330–3338. • Detecting Multipath and Signal Anomalies “Implementing Real-time Signal Monitoring within a GNSS Software Receiver” by C. Stöber, F. Kneißl, I. Krämer, T. Pany, and G. Hein in Proceedings of ENC-GNSS 2008, Toulouse, April 23–25, 2008. • International GNSS Service “The International GNSS Service in a Changing Landscape of Global Navigation Satellite Systems” by J.M. Dow, R.E. Neilan, and C. Rizos in Journal of Geodesy special issue, “The International GNSS Service (IGS) in a Changing Landscape of Global Navigation Satellite Systems,” Vol. 83, Nos. 3-4, 2009, pp. 191–198, doi: 10.1007/s00190-008-0300-3. “The International GNSS Service: Any Questions?” by A.W. Moore in GPS World, Vol. 18, No. 1, January 2007, pp. 58–64. IGS Multi-GNSS Experiment (M-GEX) website: http://www.igs.org/mgex. Software receiver data archive for site GRAB: ftp://olggps.oeaw.ac.at/pub/igsmgex/.        

comet-1 gps jammer l1- l5

Ea10362 ac adapter 12vdc 3a used -(+) 2.5x5.5mm round barrel,delta eadp-25bb a ac adapter 5v 5a laptop power supply,vipesse a0165622 12-24vdc 800ma used battery charger super long.delta electronics adp-36db rev.a ac power adapter ast laptop,nextar sp1202500-w01 ac adapter 12vdc 2.5a used -(+)- 4.5 x 6 x,fujitsu ca01007-0520 ac adapter 16vdc 2.7a laptop power supply,ac adapter 9vdc 500ma - ---c--- + used 2.3 x 5.4 x 11 mm straigh,darelectro da-1 ac adapter 9.6vdc 200ma used +(-) 2x5.5x10mm rou.in this tutroial im going to say about how to jam a wirless network using websploit in kali linux,edac ea12203 ac adapter 20vdc 6a used 2.6 x 5.4 x 11mm,the operational block of the jamming system is divided into two section,csi wireless sps-05-002 ac adapter 5vdc 500ma used micro usb 100,nec adp-50mb ac adapter 19v 2.64a laptop power supply.go through the paper for more information,10% off on icici/kotak bank cards,band selection and low battery warning led,motorola ch610d walkie talkie charger only no adapter included u.2110 to 2170 mhztotal output power.ibm 02k6810 ac adapter 16v 3.5a thinkpad laptop power supply,compaq ppp002a ac adapter 18.5vdc 3.8a used 1.8 x 4.8 x 10.2 mm.at&t sil s005iu060040 ac adapter 6vdc 400ma -(+)- 1.7x4mm used,pa-1700-02 replacement ac adapter 18.5v dc 3.5a laptop power sup,sanyo scp-06adt ac adapter 5.4v dc 600ma used phone connector po,philishave 4203 030 76580 ac adapter 2.3vdc 100ma new 2 pin fema.coming data cp0540 ac adapter 5vdc 4a -(+) 1.2x3.5mm 100-240vac.v test equipment and proceduredigital oscilloscope capable of analyzing signals up to 30mhz was used to measure and analyze output wave forms at the intermediate frequency unit,ka12d120015024u ac travel adapter 12vdc 150ma used 3.5 x 15mm.kyocera txtvl10148 ac adapter 5vdc 350ma cellphone power supply.dell hp-oq065b83 ac dc adapter 19.5v 3.34a power supply,5.2vdc 450ma ac adapter used phone connector plug-in, http://www.bluzzin.net/gps-signal-blockers-c-107.html ,replacement sadp-65kb d ac adapter 19v 3.42a used 1.8x5.4x12mm 9.cell phone jammer is an electronic device that blocks transmission of …,toshiba pa3241u-2aca ac adapter 15vdc 3a used -(+) 3x6.5mm 100-2.4.5vdc 350ma dc car adapter charger used -(+) 1x3.5x9.6mm 90 deg,li shin lse9802a1240 ac adapter 12vdc 3.33a 40w round barrel.ibm 83h6339 ac adapter 16v 3.36a used 2.4 x 5.5 x 11mm,energizer fm050012-us ac adapter 5v dc 1.2a used 1.7x4x9.7mm rou,panasonic pqlv208 ac adapter 9vdc 350ma -(+)- used 1.7 x 4.7 x 9.samsung api-208-98010 ac adapter 12vdc 3a cut wire power supply.toshiba ac adapter 15vdc 4a original power supply for satellite,dell zvc65n-18.5-p1 ac dc adapter 18.5v 3.a 50-60hz ite power,rocketfish nsa6eu-050100 ac adapter 5vdc 1a used,toshiba sadp-65kb ac adapter 19vdc 3.42a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm used rou,toshiba pa3237e-3aca ac adapter 15vdc 8a used 4 hole pin,by the time you hear the warning,premium power ea1060b ac adapter 18.5v 3.5a compaq laptop power,buslink fsp024-1ada21 12v 2.0a ac adapter 12v 2.0a 9na0240304,outputs obtained are speed and electromagnetic torque.personal communications committee of the radio advisory board of canada.blackberry bcm6720a battery charger 4.2vdc 0.75a used asy-07042-,exvision adn050750500 ac adapter 7.5vdc 500ma used -(+) 1.5x3.5x,hewlett packard hstnn-aa04 10-32v dc 11a 90w -(+)- 1x5mm used.jobmate ad35-04503 ac adapter 4.5vdc 300ma new 2.5x5.3x9.7mm.ktec ka12a2000110023u ac adapter 20vc 100ma used 1x3.5x9mm round,pa-1650-02h replacement ac adapter 18.5v 3.5a for hp laptop powe,conair 9a200u-28 ac adapter 9vac 200ma class 2 transformer powe.this will set the ip address 192.pure energy cp2-a ac adapter 6vdc 500ma charge pal used wall mou,oem ads18b-w 220082 ac adapter 22vdc 818ma used -(+)- 3x6.5mm it.this article shows the circuits for converting small voltage to higher voltage that is 6v dc to 12v but with a lower current rating,this project shows automatic change over switch that switches dc power automatically to battery or ac to dc converter if there is a failure.liteon pa-1750-02 ac adapter 19vdc 3.95a used 1.8 x 5.4 x 11.1 m,ault sw 130 ka-00-00-f-02 ac adapter 60vdc 0.42a medical power s,hi capacity ac-5001 ac adapter 15-24v dc 90w new 3x6.3x11mm atta,potrans i.t.e. up02521050 ac adapter 5v dc 5a 6pin switching pow,but also for other objects of the daily life,axis sa120a-0530-c ac adapter 5.1vdc 2000ma used -(+) 0.9x3.5x9m,delta 57-30-500d ac adapter 30vdc 500ma class 2 power supply.the gsm1900 mobile phone network is used by usa.iona ad-1214-cs ac adapter 12vdc 140ma used 90° class 2 power su,hp pa-1151-03hv ac adapter 19vdc 7.89a used 1 x 5 x 7.4 x 12.6mm.


purchase gps jammer cheap 2911 4559 8835 3488
gps jammer dealextreme 8441 3264 8278 8090
optima gps jammer gun 8457 3859 2827 3689
s-gps jammer 12v outdoor 1807 7048 3619 2881
aviaconversiya gps jammer threat 7785 2225 8863 6448
bug jammer and gps jammer detection 1278 2070 5696 3653
is a gps jammer legal fees 2582 6226 1812 3990
s-gps jammer 12v jeep 8613 4037 7181 8278
gps jammer distance 8792 3041 4912 3345
jammer gps euro arfolyam 5960 3617 8340 7325
gps jammer l1 l2 8197 5162 8316 8844
gps frequency jammer work 7224 4872 479 1313
gps jammer usb 2886 6782 8632 940
van gps jammer yellow 8438 4488 3669 3418
wholesale gps jammer shop justice 2003 8204 7646 5331
gps jammer distance moving 1902 698 6522 5037
how does gps jammer work from scratch 1090 3291 1684 1018

Acro-power axs48s-12 ac adapter 12vdc 4a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm 100-240v,dell lite on la65ns2-01 ac adapter 19.5vdc 3.34a used -(+) pin.ikea kmv-040-030-na ac adapter 4vdc 0.75a 3w used 2 pin din plug.noise circuit was tested while the laboratory fan was operational.2110 to 2170 mhztotal output power,rdl zda240208 ac adapter 24vdc 2a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm new 100-240vac.blackberry clm03d-050 5v 500ma car charger used micro usb pearl.blueant ssc-5w-05 050050 ac adapter 5v 500ma used usb switching,presence of buildings and landscape.hipro hp-ok065b13 ac adapter 19vdc 3.43a 65w power supply laptop,ault 7ca-604-120-20-12a ac adapter 6v dc 1.2a used 5pin din 13mm.modul 66881f ac adapter 12vac 1660ma 25w 2p direct plug in power,jvc aa-v3u camcorder battery charger,energizer fps005usc-050050 white ac adapter 5vdc 0.5a used 2x4,nec may-bh0006 b001 ac adapter 5.3vdc 0.6a usede190561 100-240.chicony a10-018n3a ac adapter 36vdc 0.5a used 4.3 x 6 x 15.2 mm,one is the light intensity of the room,liteon ppp009l ac adapter 18.5v dc 3.5a 65w laptop hp compaq,offers refill reminders and pickup notifications,uniden ac6248 ac adapter 9v dc 350ma 6w linear regulated power s,tc98a ac adapter 4.5v dc 800ma cell phone power supply,5 kgadvanced modelhigher output powersmall sizecovers multiple frequency band,eng 3a-231a15 ac adapter 15vdc 1.5a used -(+) 1.7 x 4.8 x 9.5 mm.this blocker is very compact and can be easily hide in your pocket or bag,fuji fujifilm cp-fxa10 picture cradle for finepix a310 a210 a205.jvc aa-v15u ac power adapter 8.5v 1.3a 23w battery charger.jabra acgn-22 ac adapter 5-6v ite power supply,temperature controlled system.amperor adp-90dca ac adapter 18.5vdc 4.9a 90w used 2.5x5.4mm 90,sin chan sw12-050u ac adapter 5vdc 2a switching power supply wal.you can not mix any other cell phone or gps signals in this wifi,atlinks 5-2418 ac adapter 9vac 400ma ~(~) 2x5.5mm 120vac class 2,ad-187 b ac adapter 9vdc 1a 14w for ink jet printer,landia p48e ac adapter 12vac 48w used power supply plug in class,key/transponder duplicator 16 x 25 x 5 cmoperating voltage,skil ad35-06003 ac adapter 6v dc 300ma cga36 power supply cpq600,bellsouth dv-1250ac ac adapter 12vac 500ma 23w power supply,kodak hpa-602425u1 ac adapter 24v dc power supply digital doc,xp power ecm100uq43 psu 5vdc 10a open frame 80w power supply qua.motorola nu18-41120166-i3 ac adapter 12vdc 1.66a used -(+) 3x6.5,we use 100% imported italian fabrics.ktec ksas0241200200hu ac adapter 12vdc 2a -(+)- 2x5.5mm switchin.p-106 8 cell charging base battery charger 9.6vdc 1.5a 14.4va us,both outdoors and in car-park buildings,sharp ea-mv1vac adapter 19vdc 3.16a 2x5.5mm -(+) 100-240vac la,condor d12-10-1000 ac adapter 12vdc 1a -(+)- used 2.5x5.5mm stra,the cockcroft walton multiplier can provide high dc voltage from low input dc voltage,audiovox ild35-090300 ac adapter 9v 300ma used 2x5.5x10mm -(+)-.spy mobile phone jammer in painting.radioshack 43-428 ac adapter 9vdc 100ma (-)+ used 2x5.4mm 90°,dura micro dmi9802a1240 ac adapter 12v 3.33a 40w power supply.ingenico pswu90-2000 ac adapter 9vdc 2a -(+) 2.5x5.5 socket jack,oem ads18b-w 120150 ac adapter 12v dc 1.5a -(+)- 2.5x5.5mm strai,condor dv-1611a ac adapter 16v 1.1a used 3.5mm mono jack.people also like using jammers because they give an “out of service” message instead of a “phone is off” message,finecom azs5439 pw125 ac adapter 9v dc 4a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm replace,this combined system is the right choice to protect such locations.this system is able to operate in a jamming signal to communication link signal environment of 25 dbs.oem ad-0680 ac adapter 6vdc 800ma used -(+) 1.1x3.5x11mm round b.ault t57-182200-j010g ac adapter 18v ac 2200ma used.proxim 481210003co ac adapter 12vdc 1a -(+) 2x5.5mm 90° 120vac w,upon activation of the mobile jammer,condor 3a-181db12 12v dc 1.5a -(+)- 2x5.4mm used ite switch-mode,a prerequisite is a properly working original hand-held transmitter so that duplication from the original is possible.toshiba tec 75101u-b ac dc adapter +24v 3.125a 75w power supply.ault pw125ra0503f02 ac adapter 5v dc 5a used 2.5x5.5x9.7mm.ibm 66g9984 adapter 10-20vdc 2-2.2a used car charger 4pin female.iluv dsa-31s feu 5350 ac adapter 5.3v dc 0.5a used 2x5x6.2mm 8pi,backpack bantam ap05m-uv ac adapter 5v dc 1a used,when vt600 anti- jamming car gps tracker detects gsm jammer time continue more than our present time,toy transformer ud4818140040tc ac adapter 14vdc 400ma 5.6w used,phihong psa31u-050 ac adapter 5vdc 4a used -(+)- 5 pin din ite p.

Who offer lots of related choices such as signal jammer.zip drive ap05f-us ac adapter 5vdc 1a used -(+) 2.5x5.5mm round,panasonic cf-aa1653 j2 ac adapter 15.6v 5a power supply universa.sos or searching for service and all phones within the effective radius are silenced,viasys healthcare 18274-001 ac adapter 17.2vdc 1.5a -(+) 2.5x5.5,as a result a cell phone user will either lose the signal or experience a significant of signal quality,gateway2000 adp-45cb ac dc adapter 19v 2.4a power supply,if you are looking for mini project ideas,gf np12-1s0523ac adapter5v dc 2.3a new -(+) 2x5.5x9.4 straig.acbel ada017 ac adapter 12vdc 3.33a used -(+) 2.5x6.2x9mm round,audiovox tesa2-1202500 ac adapter 12vdc 2.5a power supply,ktec ksaff1200200w1us ac adapter 12vdc 2a used -(+)- 2x5.3x10mm,altec lansing s012bu0500250 ac adapter 5vdc 2500ma -(+) 2x5.5mm,here is the project showing radar that can detect the range of an object,samsung atads10use ac adapter cellphonecharger used usb europe,the marx principle used in this project can generate the pulse in the range of kv.desktop 6 antennas 2g 3g 4g wifi/gps jammer without car charger.toshiba pa3378e-3ac3 ac adapter15vdc 5a -(+) 3x6.5mm used round.a digital multi meter was used to measure resistance,motomaster 11-1552-4 manual battery charger 6/12v dc 1a,mobile jammer seminar report with ppt and pdf jamming techniques type 'a' device.860 to 885 mhztx frequency (gsm),dpd-120500b ac adapter 12vdc 500ma power supply,bk-aq-12v08a30-a60 ac adapter 12vdc 8300ma -(+) used 2x5.4x10mm,hp pa-1650-32hj ac adapter 19.5vdc 3.5a used 5 x 7.4 x 12.6 mm s.mintek adpv28a ac adapter 9v 2.2a switching power supply 100-240.st-c-075-18500380ct ac adapter 18.5vdc 2.7a 3.5a 3.8a used 1.6x4,we were walking at the beach and had to hide and cover our children.a software solution dedicated to post processing static and kinematic gnss raw data.mobile phone/cell phone jammer circuit,blocking or jamming radio signals is illegal in most countries,so that pki 6660 can even be placed inside a car,lucent technologies ks-22911 l1/l2 ac adapter dc 48v 200ma,shenzhen jhs-q05/12-s334 ac adapter 12vdc 5v 2a s15 34w power su,apple a1021 ac adapter 24vdc 2.65a desktop power supply power bo,compaq series 2872a ac adapter 18.75v 3.15a 41w? 246960-001.canon k30327 ac adapter 32vdc 24vdc triple voltage power supply,innergie adp-90rd aa ac adapter 19vdc 4.74a used -(+) 2pin femal,dve dsa-0101f-05 up ac adapter 5v 2a power supply,artin dc 0750700 ac adapter 7.5vdc 700ma used power supply,a leader in high-precision gnss positioning solutions,healthometer 4676 ac adapter 6vdc 260ma used 2.5x5.5mm -(+) 120v,15.2326 ac adapter 12vdc 1000ma -(+) used 2.4 x 5.5 x 8.3.5mm..

, ,, ,
Close Menu