E-cell phone jammer app for iphone - jammer direct stafford road

E-cell phone jammer app for iphone - jammer direct stafford road

  • Post Author:SRu_gq36S@aol.com

A Hansel and Gretel Approach to Cooperative Vehicle Positioning By Scott Stephenson, Xiaolin Meng, Terry Moore, Anthony Baxendale, and Tim Edwards MEET GEORGE JETSON.Those of us of a certain age will remember the animated TV sitcom The Jetsons, which featured George Jetson, “his boy Elroy, daughter Judy, and Jane, his wife.” It portrayed life in 2062, 100 years after the series debuted in 1962.  George and his family used many futuristic gadgets including robot maids, talking alarm clocks, flat-screen TVs, and flying automated cars. Many of those devices are already available, well ahead of schedule. But flying cars are not quite with us yet. However, asphalt-hugging automated vehicles are already here, albeit still in limited numbers. Google created a buzz recently with tests of its self-driving car. Google’s cars were developed as an outcome of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s 2005 Grand Challenge in which teams created autonomous vehicles and raced them through a challenging road course. Self-driving cars use a host of sensors to determine their position with respect to their surroundings and to navigate a chosen route legally and safely. Although wide-spread ownership of self-driving cars might still be a ways off, drivers of conventional vehicles will soon benefit from the research being conducted to provide them with positional awareness of other vehicles in their vicinity. This work may be characterized as part of the larger effort in developing intelligent transportation systems or ITS. What is ITS? In the words of ITS Canada, it’s “the application of advanced and emerging technologies (computers, sensors, control, communications, and electronic devices) in transportation to save lives, time, money, energy and the environment.” This definition applies to all modes of transportation, including ground transportation such as private automobiles, commercial vehicles, and public transit, as well as rail, marine, and air modalities. The term ITS includes consideration not only of the vehicle, but also the infrastructure, and the driver or user, interacting together dynamically. Just looking at ground transportation, there are many ITS developments underway, some of which are already implemented to some degree including systems for vehicle navigation, traffic-signal-control, automatic license-plate recognition, parking guidance, and road lighting to name but a few. An important aspect of ITS is cooperative vehicle communication, which includes transmission of data vehicle–to–vehicle or vehicle–to–infrastructure (and vice versa — known by the abbreviation V2X. Data from vehicles can be acquired and transmitted to other vehicles or to a server for central fusion and processing. These data can include accurate real-time vehicle coordinates, which can be used to improve driver situational awareness and to monitor traffic flow for example.  This use of V2X is known as cooperative vehicle positioning. Several technologies are being developed for accurate cooperative vehicle positioning including lidar, radar, image-based cameras, ultra-wideband, and signals of opportunity. But GNSS also has a role to play. In this month’s column, team of British researchers turn to a children’s fairy tale for inspiration in their development of a cooperative vehicle positioning approach using carrier-phase observations — another innovative application of real-time kinematic or RTK GNSS technology.  “Innovation” is a regular feature that discusses advances in GPS technology and its 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. He welcomes comments and topic ideas. There is little doubt in the benefit gained from cooperative modes of road transport, as agents working together generally perform better. In simple terms, this is the holistic idea that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, commonly known as synergy. On top of this clear advantage, the complex systems theory of emergence suggests that novel strategies will develop from the as-yet-undefined patterns and structures. It is clear, however, that to facilitate this development certain technological advances need to be achieved. In this case, individual road agents need to accurately identify their location, and communicate easily and safely with other agents. This is a shift away from protective and passive systems toward preventative and active transport safety. Cooperative driving, or vehicle-to-vehicle or vehicle-to-infrastructure driving (V2X), is proposed as the next major safety breakthrough in road transport. An example of the concept is shown in FIGURE 1.  It involves agents in the road transport environment communicating on local and national levels in real time, to maximize the efficiency of movement, dramatically reduce the number of accidents and fatalities, and make transportation more environmentally friendly. Figure 1. Vehicle-to-vehicle communications as envisioned by the United States Department of Transportation. In the U.S., the National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration has commented that connected vehicle technology “can transform the nation’s surface transportation safety, mobility and environmental performance,” with industry experts predicting the widespread uptake of the technology within five to six years. This provides an opportunity for road vehicles to share GNSS information. To an extent, this is possible with current technology. Communication is fairly pervasive and pretty robust, with the explosion in personal handheld mobile devices, using the GSM/GPRS, 3G, and 4G cellular communications networks. Positioning systems exist now that will provide a reasonably accurate and reliable location most of the time. However, the type of applications included in cooperative driving demand much higher performance from these positioning systems. For instance, as shown in the example in FIGURE 2, two vehicles approaching an intersection at relatively high speeds require accurate and reliable high output position information, and an ability to communicate with one another, in order to assess the likelihood of collision. Figure 2. Vehicles approaching a road intersection would benefit from V2X communication. These requirements are partly inter-linked, and can be mutually beneficial. For instance, communications methods can be used to share information to aid positioning, and some existing positioning systems can also be utilized to share information. Many recent solutions in vehicle tracking research have shifted the GNSS receiver to a supplemental role in the positioning system, favoring an inertial device as the core of the integrated solution. The clear advantage is that an inertial device operates continuously, although other sensors are required to achieve the required navigation performance. The GNSS receiver is demoted because of its inherent limitations, namely the requirement of a clear view of the satellites and the availability of correctional information. Most vehicle positioning research over the past two decades has focused attention on GNSS-centered systems, as evidenced by the abundant use of satnav devices used to assist in-car navigation. Despite its apparent monopoly over vehicle positioning in the commercial sector, the most successful systems developed to guide autonomous vehicles either relegate GNSS to one of a suite of sensors, or almost disregard it altogether. This is often due to its apparent lack of positioning accuracy or availability. Popular terrestrial positioning sensors include lidar, radar, image-based cameras, ultra-wideband (UWB), and signals of opportunity. Clearly, the combination of different complementary sensors is important, but it would be a mistake to discount the more advanced GNSS positioning techniques that are available, especially with the expansion of the four global GNSS services. Cooperative Positioning The positioning of GNSS receivers relative to one another is a common application in transportation, such as during the aerial refueling of an airborne fighter jet by a tanker. In this case, it is important to know accurately the relative position of the two airplanes, but not necessarily their absolute position. Relative positioning of road vehicles is more complex. By their nature, road vehicles are almost always close to other vehicles or road infrastructure, and there are many separate agents in each scenario. Vehicles can also travel large distances, and in terms of GNSS positioning, this may mean vastly different atmospheric conditions. Hence, relative positioning in road transport is useful if all GNSS receivers relate to the same datum, which in most cases is effectively absolute positioning. Some previous work carried out by others concentrated on using GNSS code (pseudorange) and Doppler measurements for the relative positioning of vehicles, because it offers a simpler implementation method and is not susceptible to the cycle slips attributed to carrier-phase measurements. However, this means sacrificing the higher accuracy solution available from carrier-phase measurements. A major obstacle to GNSS positioning for V2X applications is the likely scenario of mixed receiver and antenna technology between vehicles. This has a major influence on the performance of relative positioning. By comparing various V2X relative positioning solutions, researchers found that an increase in positioning accuracy was typically accompanied by a decrease in availability and an increased demand for transmission bandwidth between the vehicles. RTK GNSS Positioning. Real-time kinematic (RTK) GNSS positioning can be used to provide a solution at an accuracy of better than 5 centimeters (horizontal). This relies on the static reference receiver being located within 20 kilometers of the roving receiver, observing a good selection of common satellites with dual-frequency receivers. When RTK positioning is used, the distance to the reference station has a bearing on the successfulness of the integer ambiguity resolution. A short baseline will benefit from a closer correlation of errors, due to the GNSS signals traveling through very similar parts of the atmosphere. Assuming each receiver is observing common satellites, this similarity will typically result in a higher success rate in the ratio test using the common Least Squares Ambiguity Decorrelation Adjustment, or LAMBDA, technique. This is particularly important following a GNSS outage. GNSS positioning of road vehicles using RTK or network RTK (where a network of reference stations replaces a single RTK reference station) can provide highly accurate ( The transmission protocol of network RTK corrections is typically RTCM v3.0 or higher, and the composition of the correction information varies depending on the commercial service provider. The most common type of correction message format is that for a virtual reference station (VRS), although the most comprehensive and versatile method is the master-auxiliary concept (MAC). See references in Further Reading for details. In V2X and other intelligent transportation systems (ITS) applications, the position must be accurate, reliable, available, and continuous. Previous research has shown that network RTK GNSS positioning can deliver a highly accurate and precise solution in an ideal observation environment. In one test, more than 99 percent of the observations lay within 2 centimeters of the truth solution, with a very small number of anomalous results of up to 20 centimeters. The availability of a network RTK solution is determined by the availability of GNSS signals and the network RTK corrections. As network RTK positioning uses carrier-phase observations, GNSS outages and cycle slips significantly affect the performance of a receiver. However, the re-initialization of the fixed integer ambiguity resolution following a GNSS outage (such as caused by an overhead bridge) can be relatively fast. But from a cold start, the ambiguity resolution can take up to two minutes. This limits the widespread adoption of the technology for vehicle positioning. NGI Road Vehicle and Electric Locomotive Testbeds. We have carried out research at the Nottingham Geospatial Institute (NGI) using state-of-the-art testing facilities. These bespoke in-house facilities allow repeated controlled experiments, and are a useful tool in the development of ITS and V2X technology. To test the positioning performance thoroughly and under real-world conditions, we carried out experiments using the NGI’s road vehicle, which is equipped with a collection of on-board ground-truth systems. Also, the roof of the Nottingham Geospatial Building (home of NGI) is the location of a remotely operated electric locomotive running on a 200-millimeter-gauge railway track. A photograph of the locomotive and plan of the track are shown in FIGURE 3. The locomotive can carry a selection of various positioning instruments, such as GNSS receivers, inertial navigation system (INS) devices, and tracking prisms, and can travel at a speed of over three meters per second. The position of the track is accurately known, and has previously been scanned at a resolution of 2 millimeters. Figure 3. The NGB2 reference base station and electric locomotive track on the roof of the Nottingham Geospatial Building. Three control solutions are used to assess the performance of the cooperative positioning techniques in real-world tests: An RTK GNSS control solution provided by a local static continuously operating reference station (CORS); a network RTK GNSS solution based on the MAC standard; and a dual-frequency GPS/INS system. Each vehicle also can be independently tracked using survey-grade total stations or a proprietary UWB  positioning system. Sharing Network RTK Corrections If vehicles could communicate with one another on the road, this would help overcome the communication system limitation in network RTK positioning of road vehicles. For instance, if vehicle A has an external connection to a network RTK service provider (such as a mobile Internet connection) and a local connection to a second vehicle (B), then it could share its network RTK correction messages directly. Effectively, vehicle A would re-broadcast the correction information it has received from the corrections provider to the receiver on vehicle B. However, this would rely on the functional capability of the receiver of vehicle B, as network RTK real-time processing can be computationally intensive. Not all network RTK correction messages can be shared in this way, and the range over which the correction messages are still valid needs to be determined. As vehicles communicating with V2X devices are likely to be relatively close (a few hundred meters at most), the feasibility of sharing network RTK information is good.  However, the network RTK VRS technique may offer more advantages. It is the most common form of network RTK used around the world, and requires significantly less bandwidth (approximately 10 kilobits per second at 10 Hz). The rover receiver is also less burdened by processing requirements. A VRS system operating on buses in Minnesota restricts the baseline to 2 miles, by updating the VRS location every 2 minutes. Correction messages typically have a lifespan of 10 seconds. After this time, the receiver determines the messages to be too old and does not compute a fixed-integer position. It can, however, use the information to calculate a differential GNSS (DGNSS) position. Therefore, the relayed message must arrive at the receiver on vehicle B well within 10 seconds. Previous trials at NGI found that the typical message latency of the original correction message reaching vehicle A via a GSM/GPRS connection is 0.85 seconds. The additional V2X communication to transfer the message to vehicle B should not add a significant delay. Capturing Network RTK Messages. To demonstrate the potential benefit of sharing network RTK messages between vehicles, network RTK messages were captured on board a vehicle and shared with a second vehicle. Vehicle A is the NGI van, and vehicle B is the NGI electric train. Most off-the-shelf network-RTK-enabled GNSS receivers are designed to communicate directly with the network RTK server using a connected communication device (GSM modem, UHF/VHF radio, cell phone, and so on), which typically provides a stable connection to minimize data loss. To intercept the network RTK correction message, the GNSS receiver was set up to simply accept the correction message from a smartphone via Bluetooth. In this case, the connection to the network RTK service provider is established between the smartphone and the network RTK server. An application running on the smartphone (as shown in FIGURE 4) requests information from the network RTK server, logs the data, and passes the message directly to the Bluetooth-connected GNSS receiver on vehicle A. By intercepting the correction message, it can also be forwarded on to a second receiver, in this case on vehicle B. Figure 4. Flowchart showing the capturing and sharing of network RTK correction messages (left), and the NTRIP client program running on an Android smartphone (right). Sharing Messages with Second Receiver. FIGURE 5 shows the positioning solutions generated by a shared-network-RTK correction message. The original message was captured by the smartphone application operating on board vehicle A (the NGI van), and applied to GNSS observations made by a receiver on vehicle B (the NGI train). The baseline between the two vehicles was less than 100 meters, and the location of the VRS requested from the network RTK server was the NGI building (in geodetic coordinates to three decimal places). As Figure 5  clearly shows, the shared VRS corrections are equally valid for any receiver operating in the vicinity of the VRS. The thick red line is the fixed position of the train track, and the thin blue line represents the positions generated by the GNSS receiver using the shared network RTK corrections. Figure 5. Sharing the network RTK message from vehicle A to vehicle B. The VRS message type was chosen because it requires much less bandwidth, takes less processing capacity, and is prevalent among legacy receivers. Network RTK users typically require download speeds of 1.8 kilobits per second (VRS) and 5.6 kilobits per second (MAC). This is well within the typical speeds available from cellular wireless communications, which offer 80 kilobits per second downlink speeds from 2.5G systems to beyond 40 megabits per second for recent 4G systems. The GNSS receiver on vehicle B is operating in an ideal location, with a clear view of the sky and a high number of visible satellites, which improves the probability of successful RTK ambiguity resolution. Generating Pseudo-VRS Corrections The potential benefit to GNSS positioning of using V2X communication between various road vehicles and infrastructure can be expanded by the implementation of pseudo-VRS positioning. This system resembles the children’s fairy tale Hansel and Gretel, where in order to help remember the route through a forest that guides them back to their home, Hansel drops markers along the path (in separate cases small white pebbles, and then breadcrumbs). By using the markers, the children can navigate their way through the forest, but without them they are left lost and disoriented. The pseudo-VRS system uses a similar principle, where vehicle A marks its path by leaving behind small packets of information that can be used by other nearby vehicles. The small packets of information are VRS-like, and are broadcast using V2X communication devices and technology. Like the breadcrumbs in the fairy tale that are eaten by birds shortly after being dropped by Hansel, these VRS-like packets of information have a short lifespan. VRS Requirements. It has been long established that a short baseline between reference and rover receivers leads to more accurate and successful relative GNSS positioning. A short baseline can effectively deal with satellite orbit and atmospheric errors, which become difficult to deal with as the baseline length grows, and is the reason why RTK GNSS positioning is typically limited to baselines shorter than 20 kilometers. A typical RTK baseline may be between 1 and 10 kilometers long, but it is still beneficial to reduce the baseline further, particularly if there is a large difference in elevation. This is enabled by the VRS network RTK technique. By using the observation data from several permanent reference stations that surround the rover location, a virtual reference station is created close to the location of the rover, including virtual observation measurements and position. This VRS information is transmitted to the rover, and the rover receiver treats the information like that of a real reference station. This technique can deliver better than 5-centimeter accuracy up to 35 kilometers. The principle builds on the transfer of measurements made at the real reference stations to the VRS. The carrier-phase measurement at the real reference station (  ), shown in Equation 1, is made up of the geometric distance between the receiver and satellite (   ), the integer ambiguity (   ), and the receiver and satellite clock bias ( ). The key to the VRS technique is that the integer ambiguity and the receiver and satellite clock bias are not location dependent, so they can be transferred directly to the virtual reference station from the real reference station.    (1) By differencing the carrier-phase equation of the real and virtual reference stations (   and  , respectively), the ambiguity and clock errors are canceled. The result is shown in Equation 2.    (2) By combining the carrier-phase measurement equations at the real and virtual reference stations, only two unknown terms remain. The first includes the position of the VRS (   ), which is, in principle, arbitrary and is typically the approximate location of the rover receiver. The second is the observable of the VRS (  ), which can now be obtained without actually measuring it. (In practice, the technique is a little more complex, as satellite orbit and atmospheric errors and biases need to be modeled for the VRS position). The VRS information can then be packaged using the RTCM standards and delivered to the rover receiver to enable network RTK VRS positioning. Pseudo-VRS. Using the established VRS techniques and standards described above, we propose to use the GNSS observations and subsequent position information to simulate the existence of a VRS (see FIGURE 6). Imagine vehicle A carries a GNSS receiver together with the means to calculate   its position accurately (for instance, it is also receiving differential corrections or has other positioning devices on board). So long as the receiver can successfully resolve the integer ambiguity, it can also produce each component required to describe a VRS. Clearly in this case, the receiver on vehicle A is a “real” reference station, but the existing VRS standards can be exploited to transfer this information to other local GNSS receivers. For instance, a receiver operating on vehicle B can use the information as a local real-time differential correction service. Figure 6. The flow of data during the generation and sharing of pseudo-VRS data. Because the VRS technique is well established (the most popular form of network RTK positioning), legacy receivers are able to take advantage of this pseudo-VRS information. RTCM standards are also well defined for the transfer of GNSS information in this form.  The pseudo-VRS information is valid for several seconds, so the delays introduced in transferring the information from one vehicle to a second can easily be accommodated. Like any communication device based on radio waves, V2X communication devices are likely to be subject to a level of delay and message loss that requires redundancy in the system. It is important that during one epoch the whole pseudo-VRS message is delivered, as there is little similarity between one epoch and the next. The original reference receiver is likely to be on a moving vehicle. Effectively, the pseudo-VRS imitates the VRS in Equation 2 by providing the virtual reference station coordinates and carrier-phase observable. The information is also delivered to the second receiver in the same format RTCM message. A slight difference here is that only one-way communication is needed — the original coordinates of the VRS do not need to be supplied by the second receiver. The pseudo-VRS processing is carried out using the RTKLIB open source software. RTKLIB has limited options to vary the position of the base station during RTK positioning, so the program is seeded with customized configuration files and run independently for each epoch. This creates an additional feature: The processing of each epoch has no effect on any other. Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication. As we just consider the exploitation of V2X devices in this article, the nature of the communication medium is not under test. For this reason, off-the-shelf wireless routers (2.4 GHz) were used to communicate between vehicles, using fixed local IP addresses. However, the performance of the routers under cooperative driving tests is limited by range, multipath, and signal obstruction. Real-World Tests To generate significant test results, some of the following tests use recorded and replayed data. Test Setup. To test the performance of a pseudo-VRS positioning system, and the success of different configurations, real-world tests were carried out at the Nottingham Geospatial Institute. Two vehicles were used. Vehicle A was the NGI’s road vehicle, and vehicle B was the NGI’s electric locomotive. As the position of the locomotive test track is very accurately known, this can be used to measure the performance of the pseudo-VRS system. Vehicle A was equipped with six GNSS receivers, a tactical-grade INS system, and a wheel odometer, and tracked using a total station and 360º prism. This provided multiple position solutions to ensure significant results. Vehicle B was equipped with a GNSS receiver, and tracked using a proprietary UWB system for related V2X tests. Also, on the roof of the NGB, and lying inside the track perimeter, is the NGB continuously operating reference station. This hyper-local reference station allows local RTK solutions, and acts as a barometer of GNSS activity when tests are episodically carried out. FIGURE 7 shows an aerial image of the test scenario. The Google background shows the NGB to the west, and surrounding roads to the south and west (still under construction during the image acquisition). The thin yellow line is a ground distance of 100 meters. The red dots signify the position of vehicle A (in the east), and the purple dots show the position of vehicle B (on the roof of the NGB building). The accuracy of the Google image is unknown, and is used here purely for illustrative purposes. Figure 7. Aerial image of the test. Test Results. These tests are designed to show the performance of a pseudo-VRS system using a V2X communication system. However, the results shown here were created using recorded raw data. The test results will help to design the correct RTCM message to share between vehicles in future tests. To simulate the operation of a pseudo-VRS system, vehicle A must share its known absolute position and some raw RINEX information for each epoch with vehicle B. Vehicle B can then use this information, together with its own observed RINEX data, for the same epoch to calculate its known absolute position. In practice, there will be a slight delay in the delivery of the information from vehicle A (much like in a traditional RTK system), so that information from concurrent epochs are unlikely to be used. The RTKLIB software cannot directly handle the variation of a base station’s coordinates (and output an absolute solution), so a small separate script was designed to utilize the processing capability of the software in a pseudo-VRS system. FIGURE 8 shows the results of pseudo-VRS positioning. During dual-frequency tests, 99.67 percent of observations achieved fixed ambiguity (1197/1201). During single-frequency (broadcast ionosphere) RTK, 61.45 percent (738/1201) observations achieved fixed ambiguity. The ratio test threshold was 2.0. Around the area of 454930E 339708N, the number of common visible satellites dropped from eight to seven, and then again from seven to six three seconds later. This caused each of the three solutions to degrade slightly. The dual-frequency RTK solution briefly lost its fixed ambiguity solution (for two epochs, or 0.1 seconds), before regaining the fixed solution. The single-frequency RTK solution could not achieve a fixed ambiguity solution again until the number of common visible satellites returned to seven (five seconds after the initial satellite was lost). The DGNSS solution saw a similar degradation in its solution during this period. Figure 8. Results from pseudo-VRS positioning. The mean coordinate errors for the three solutions are 0.054, 0.707, and 0.323 meters (1 standard deviation, 3D), as shown in Table 1. This is compared to a solution calculated using the local CORS base station. The error in horizontal and vertical follows the typical ratio of 1:2. Test results were also completed using a lower pseudo-VRS update rate. At 1 Hz, the results prove even better. Although the latency of the correction is up to 1 second (positioning is calculated epoch by epoch), the results were better than updates at 20 Hz. The dual-frequency RTK solution achieved a fixed ambiguity at every epoch (100 percent), and when compared to the known track position appeared correctly fixed. The single-frequency RTK solution achieved a fixed ambiguity for 70.02 percent (897/1201) of the observations; a slight improvement over the 20-Hz results. Table 1. Results from pseudo-VRS positioning. Table 2 shows the performance of the pseudo-VRS system under different latency scenarios. This is important because a message transmitted by vehicle A may be delayed or newer messages may be disrupted. Once the latency of the correction message reaches 8 seconds, the performance of the positioning solution begins to drop. The number of fixed ambiguity solutions falls, and the resulting positioning accuracy also decreases. However, the solution can still deliver 20- to 30-centimeter accuracy with a message latency of up to 30 seconds. Table 2. Effect of message latency on positioning quality. Conclusions This article has outlined the potential benefit of V2X technology to cooperative vehicle positioning. A vehicle that knows its absolute position accurately can assist a second vehicle to position itself using established GNSS techniques. The pseudo-VRS base-station location must have reasonably accurate coordinates. Without this, the correct integer ambiguity cannot be resolved, and there is the risk of an incorrect resolution giving false success. This requires good reliability and integrity of the position of vehicle A, a characteristic that can be provided by network RTK positioning but likely needs further support from alternative positioning solutions. Acknowledgments The authors acknowledge Leica Geosystems for the provision of an academic license for the SmartNet network RTK service. We thank Yang Gao and Qiuzhao Zhang of the University of Nottingham for their assistance and detailed discussion during the experimental tests. The work was supported by the U.K.’s Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. This article is based on the paper “A Fairy Tale Approach to Cooperative Vehicle Positioning” presented at the 2014 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation held in San Diego, California, January 27–29, 2014. Manufacturers For our tests, vehicle A (NGI’s road vehicle) was equipped with six Leica Geosystems AG GS10 GNSS receivers with individual AS10 antennas, an Applanix Corp. POS RS with Honeywell International Inc. CIMU tactical grade INS system, and was tracked using a Leica Nova TS50 total station. Vehicle B (NGI’s electric locomotive) was equipped with a Leica GS10 GNSS receiver and AS10 antenna. SCOTT STEPHENSON is a postgraduate student at the Nottingham Geospatial Institute (NGI) within the University of Nottingham, Nottingham, U.K. XIAOLIN MENG is an associate professor, theme leader for positioning and navigation technologies, and an M.Sc. course director at NGI.  TERRY MOORE is the director of NGI at UoN, where he is the professor of satellite navigation and an associate dean within the Faculty of Engineering. ANTHONY BAXENDALE is head of Advanced Technologies & Research at MIRA Ltd. (formerly the Motor Industry Research Association), an automotive consultancy company headquartered near Nuneaton in Warwickshire, U.K. TIM EDWARDS is a principal engineer responsible for intelligent mobility research activities within the Future Transport Technologies Group at MIRA Ltd.  FURTHER READING • Authors’ Conference Paper “A Fairy Tale Approach to Cooperative Vehicle Positioning” by S. Stephenson, X. Meng, T. Moore, A. Baxendale, and T. Edwards in Proceedings of ION ITM 2014, the 2014 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, San Diego, California, January 27–29, 2014, pp. 431–440. • Intelligent Transportation Systems Proceedings of IEEE ITSC 2013, the 16th International IEEE Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems, “Intelligent Transportation Systems for All Modes,” The Hague, The Netherlands, October 6–9, 2013. Overview of Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) Developments in and Across Transport Modes by G.A. Giannopoulos, E. Mitsakis, and J.M. Salanoca, Joint Research Centre Scientific and Policy Report EUR 25223 EN, Institute for Energy and Transport, Joint Research Centre, European Commission, 2012, doi: 10.2788/12881. “How Google’s Self-Driving Car Works” by E. Guizzo in IEEE Spectrum Blog, October 18, 2011. “Elbow Room on the Shoulder: DGPS-Based Lane-Keeping Enlists Laser Scanners for Safety and Efficiency” by C. Shankwitz in GPS World, Vol. 21, No. 7, July 2010, pp. 30–37. “Driverless Cars” by R. Murray in Computing and Control Engineering, Vol. 18, No. 3, June-July 2007, pp. 14–17. • GNSS and Inertial Navigation Systems “GPS and Inertial Systems for High Precision Positioning on Motorways” by J.E. Naranjo, F. Jiménez, F. Aparicio, and J. Zato in Journal of Navigation, Vol. 62, No. 2, April 2009, pp. 351–363, doi: 10.1017/S0373463308005249. • Vehicle-to-Vehicle and Vehicle-to-Infrastructure Technologies “Implementation of V2X with the Integration of Network RTK: Challenges and Solutions” inProceedings of ION GNSS 2012, the 25th International Technical Meeting of The Satellite Division of the Institute of Navigation, Nashville, Tennessee, September 17–21, 2012, pp. 1556–1567. DOT Launches Largest-Ever Road Test of Connected Vehicle Crash Avoidance Technology, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration press release, August 21, 2012. “Relative Positioning for Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication-enabled Vehicle Safety Applications” by C. Basnayake, G. Lachapelle, and J. Bancroft in Proceedings of the 18th ITS World Congress, Orlando, October 16–20, 2011. “Can GNSS Drive V2X” by P. Alves, T. Williams, C. Basnayake, and G. Lachapelle in GPS World, Vol. 21, No. 10, October 2010, pp. 35–43. • Network RTK “Network RTK for Intelligent Vehicles” by S. Stephenson, X. Meng, T. Moore, A. Baxendale, and T. Edwards in GPS World, Vol. 24, No. 2, February 2013, pp. 61–67. “A Comparison of the VRS and MAC Principles for Network RTK” by V. Janssen in Proceedings of  IGNSS2009, the 2009 Symposium of the International Global Navigation Satellite Systems Society, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, December 1–3, 2009. “Introduction to Network RTK” by L. Wanninger, IAG Working Group 4.1: Network RTK (2003–2007). Online article. Last modified June 16, 2008. RTCM Standard 10403.1 for Differential GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite Systems) Services – Version 3, developed by RTCM Special Committee No. 104, Radio Technical Commission for Maritime Services, Arlington, Virginia, October 27, 2006. “Accuracy Performance of Virtual Reference Station (VRS) Networks” by G. Retscher in Journal of Global Positioning Systems, Vol. 1, No. 1, 2002, pp. 40–47. “An Overview of Multi-Reference Station Methods for cm-Level Positioning” by G. Fotopoulos and M.E. Cannon in GPS Solutions, Vol. 4, No. 3, January 2001, pp. 1–10, doi: 10.1007/PL00012849.

e-cell phone jammer app for iphone

Symbol sbl-a12t 50-24000-060 ac adapter 48vdc 2.5a power supply.asa aps-35a ac adapter 35v 0.6a 21w power supply with regular ci,ikea kmv-040-030-na ac adapter 4vdc 0.75a 3w used 2 pin din plug,qualcomm txaca031 ac adapter 4.1vdc 550ma used kyocera cell phon.potrans up01011120 ac adapter +12vdc 1a power supply.so to avoid this a tripping mechanism is employed.protection of sensitive areas and facilities,noise circuit was tested while the laboratory fan was operational.ault t22-0509-001t03 ac adapter 9vac 0.5a us robotics used ~(~),replacement a1012 ac adapter 24v 2.65a g4 for apple ibook powerb.sps15-12-1200 ac adapter 12v 1200ma direct plug in power supply,this project shows automatic change over switch that switches dc power automatically to battery or ac to dc converter if there is a failure,a ‘denial-of-service attack’.asus ad59230 ac adapter 9.5vdc 2.315a laptop power supply.5g modules are helping accelerate the iot’s development,ibm 85g6704 ac adapter 16v dc 2.2a power supply 4pin 85g6705 for.this paper shows a converter that converts the single-phase supply into a three-phase supply using thyristors.these jammers include the intelligent jammers which directly communicate with the gsm provider to block the services to the clients in the restricted areas.sharp ea-65a ac adapter 6vdc 300ma used +(-) 2x5.5x9.6mm round b,ibm 12j1441 ac adapter 16vdc 2.2a class 2 power supply 12j1442,ault 336-4016-to1n ac adapter 16v 40va used 6pin female medical,plantronics a100-3 practica for single or multi line telephone u,this project shows the controlling of bldc motor using a microcontroller,fsp fsp030-dqda1 ac adapter 19vdc 1.58a used -(+) 1.5x5.5x10mm r.deer ad1812g ac adapter 10 13.5vdc 1.8a -(+)- 2x5.5mm 90° power,eng 3a-152du15 ac adapter 15vdc 1a -(+) 1.5x4.7mm ite power supp.walker 1901.031 ac adapter 9vdc 100ma used -(+) 2.1x5.3mm round.kodak xa-0912 ac adapter 12v dc 700 ma -(+) li-ion battery charg,delta adp-65hb bb ac adapter 19vdc 3.42a used-(+) 2.5x5.5mm 100-.novus dc-401 ac adapter 4.5vdc 100ma used 2.5 x 5.5 x 9.5mm,motorola fmp5334a ac adapter 5v 560ma used micro usb,group west trc-12-0830 ac adapter 12vdc 10.83a direct plug in po,this will set the ip address 192.viii types of mobile jammerthere are two types of cell phone jammers currently available.apd da-30i12 ac adapter 12vdc 2.5a power supply for external hdd.

Casio ad-12ul ac adapter 12vdc 1500ma +(-) 1.5x5.5mm 90° 120vac,upon activating mobile jammers,hp nsw23579 ac adapter 19vdc 1.58a 30w ppp018l mini hstnn-170c 1,oem ads18b-w 220082 ac adapter 22vdc 818ma new -(+)- 3x6.5mm ite,samsung sac-42 ac adapter 4.2vdc 450ma 750ma european version po,hp ppp012s-s ac adapter 19v dc 4.74a used 5x7.3x12.6mm straight,phase sequence checker for three phase supply.fellowes 1482-12-1700d ac adapter 12vdc 1.7a used 90° -(+) 2.5x5,access to the original key is only needed for a short moment,canon k30287 ac adapter 16vdc 2a used 1 x 4.5 x 6 x 9.6 mm,a jammer working on man-made (extrinsic) noise was constructed to interfere with mobile phone in place where mobile phone usage is disliked.three phase fault analysis with auto reset for temporary fault and trip for permanent fault,ault t57-182200-j010g ac adapter 18v ac 2200ma used.tedsyn dsa-60w-20 1 ac adapter 24vdc 2.5a -(+)- 2.x 5.5mm straig,get your own music profile at last. gps signal jammer .sony ac-fd008 ac adapter 18v 6.11a 4 pin female conector,phihong psaa15w-240 ac adapter 24v 0.625a switching power supply,phase sequence checking is very important in the 3 phase supply.oem ad-0760dt ac adapter 7.vdc 600ma new -(+)- 2.1x5.4x10mm,nokia acp-7e ac adapter 3.7v 355ma 230vac chargecellphone 3220,symbol 50-14000-241r ac adapter 12vdc 9a new ite power supply 10,toshiba pa3377e-2aca ac adapter 15vdc 4a used 3x6.5mm round barr,sunjoe lichg1 battery charger 20vdc 1.5amp 50w.some powerful models can block cell phone transmission within a 5 mile radius,cisco aa25480l ac adapter 48vdc 380ma used 2.5x5.5mm 90° -(+) po.dell pa-1470-1 ac adapter 18v 2.6a power supply notebook latitud,5% to 90%modeling of the three-phase induction motor using simulink.liteon pa-1650-02 ac adapter 19vdc 3.42a 65w used -(+) 2.5x5.5mm.microsoft 1134 wireless receiver 700v2.0 used 5v 100ma x814748-0,worx c1817a005 powerstation class 2 battery charger 18v used 120,nothing more than a key blank and a set of warding files were necessary to copy a car key.wj-y482100400d ac adapter 21vdc 400ma used toolmaster battery ch,they go into avalanche made which results into random current flow and hence a noisy signal,asus ex0904yh ac adapter 19v dc 4.74aa -(+)- 2.5x5.5mm 100-240vd.

The jamming frequency to be selected as well as the type of jamming is controlled in a fully automated way,minolta ac-8u ac-8a ac adapter 4.2vdc 1.5a -(+) 1.5x4mm 100-240v.altec lansing a1664 ac adapter 15vdc 800ma used -(+) 2x.925 to 965 mhztx frequency dcs,lenovo 0713a1990 ac adapter 19vdc 4.74a used 2.5 x 5.5 x 12.5mm.philishave 4203 030 76580 ac adapter 2.3vdc 100ma new 2 pin fema,li shin 0226a19150 ac adapter 19vdc 7.89a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm 100-240.bionx hp1202l3 01-3443 ac adaptor 45.65vdc 2a 3pin 10mm power di,we use 100% imported italian fabrics,this paper serves as a general and technical reference to the transmission of data using a power line carrier communication system which is a preferred choice over wireless or other home networking technologies due to the ease of installation.impediment of undetected or unauthorised information exchanges.toshiba pa-1750-07 ac adapter 15vdc 5a desktop power supply nec.dongguan yl-35-030100a ac adapter 3vac 100ma 2pin female used 12,ibm 07g1232 ac adapter 20vdc 1a07g1246 power supply thinkpad,offers refill reminders and pickup notifications.computer wise dv-1280-3 ac adapter 12v dc 1000ma class 2 transfo,qualcomm taaca0101 ac adapter 8.4vdc 400ma used power supply cha,dawnsun efu12lr300s 120v 60hz used ceiling fan remot controler c.max station xk-09-1041152 ac adapter 22.5v 2.67a power supply.wifi jammer is very special in this area.ningbo taller electrical tl-6 ac adapter 6vdc 0.3a used 2.1x5.4.liteon ppp009l ac adapter 18.5v dc 3.5a 65w laptop hp compaq,nextar fj-t22-1202500v ac adapter 12v 250ma switching power supp,mobile jammer seminar report with ppt and pdf jamming techniques type 'a' device.panasonic ag-b6hp ac adapter 12vdc 1.8a used power supply,nintendo wap-002(usa) ac adapter 4.6vdc 900ma 2pin dsi charger p.canon ad-150 ac adapter 9.5v dc 1.5a power supply battery charge,dell hp-af065b83 ow5420 ac adapter 19.5vdc 3.34a 65w laptop powe,creative tesa1-050240 ac dcadapter 5v 2.4a power supply,cui 48-12-1000d ac adapter 12vdc 1a -(+)- 2x5.5mm 120vac power s,in order to wirelessly authenticate a legitimate user,ad-300 ac adapter 48vdc 0.25a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm 90° power supply 3g,li shin gateway 0225c1965 19v dc 3.42a -(+)- 1.9x5.5mm used ite.mastercraft 5104-14-2 (uc) battery charger 17.9vdc 600ma class 2,this paper describes the simulation model of a three-phase induction motor using matlab simulink.

Or prevent leaking of information in sensitive areas,this paper uses 8 stages cockcroft –walton multiplier for generating high voltage,eleker ac car adapter phone charger 4-10vdc used 11-26v.toshiba pa3241u-2aca ac adapter 15vdc 3a used -(+) 3x6.5mm 100-2,hp ppp014h ac adapter 18.5vdc 4.9a -(+) 1.8x4.75mm bullet used 3,st-c-075-18500350ct replacement ac adapter 18.5v dc 3.5a laptop,li shin 0335c1960 ac adapter 19vdc 3.16a -(+) 3.3x5.5mm tip in 1.apple usb charger for usb devices with usb i pod charger.skil ad35-06003 ac adapter 6v dc 300ma cga36 power supply cpq600,cui eua-101w-05 ac adapter 5vdc 2a -(+)- 2.5x5.5mm thumb nut 100.compaq series pp2032 ac adapter 18.5vdc 4.5a 45w used 4pin femal.ibm 83h6339 ac adapter 16v 3.36a used 2.4 x 5.5 x 11mm.ic-dsi171002 ac adapter 4.6vdc 900ma used usb connector switchin.li shin lse9802a2060 ac adapter 20vdc 3a 60w max -(+)- used,an antenna radiates the jamming signal to space.delta adp-65jh db ac adapter 19vdc 3.42a used 1.5x5.5mm 90°rou,hoyoa bhy481351000u ac adapter 13.5vdc 1000ma used -(+) 2.5x5.5x.delta adp-60zh d ac adapter 19vdc 3.16a used -(+) 3.5x5.5mm roun,symbol stb4278 used multi-interface charging cradle 6vdc 0660ma.ilan f19603a ac adapter 12v dc 4.58a power supply,dve netbit dsc-51f-52p us switching power supply palm 15pin,dewalt dw9107 one hour battery charger 7.2v-14.4v used 2.8amps,swivel sweeper xr-dc080200 battery charger 7.5v 200ma used e2512,delta sadp-185af b 12vdc 15.4a 180w power supply apple a1144 17".motorola psm5049a ac adapter dc 4.4v 1.5a cellphone charger,eta-usa dtm15-55x-sp ac adapter 5vdc 2.5a used -(+)2.5x5.5 roun.conair u090015a12 ac adapter 9vac 150ma linear power supply.nexxtech 4302017 headset / handset switch,aurora 1442-200 ac adapter 4v 14vdc used power supply 120vac 12w.so to avoid this a tripping mechanism is employed,zigbee based wireless sensor network for sewerage monitoring,ihomeu150150d51 ac adapter 15vdc 1500ma -(+) 2.1x5.5x10mm roun.intercom dta-xga03 ac adapter 12vdc 3a -(+) 1.2x3.5mm used 90° 1.rca ksafb0500050w1us ac adapter +5vdc 0.5a used -(+) 2x5.5x10mm,asus exa0901xh ac adapter 19v 2.1a power supply laptop.

Dean liptak getting in hot water for blocking cell phone signals,iomega wa-05e05 u ac adapter 5vdc 1a used 2.5 x 5.5 x 11mm,cisco adp-20gb ac adapter 5vdc 3a 34-0853-02 8pin din power supp.pega nintendo wii blue light charge station 420ma,produits de bombe jammer+433 -+868rc 315 mhz,canon pa-v2 ac adapter 7v 1700ma 20w class 2 power supply.landia p48e ac adapter 12vac 48w used power supply plug in class.xata sa-0022-02 automatic fuses,3com p48240600a030g ac adapter 24vdc 600ma used -(+)- 2x5.5mm cl.this device can cover all such areas with a rf-output control of 10,hp f1279a ac adapter 12vdc 2.5a used -(+) 2x4.8mm straight,scada for remote industrial plant operation.this jammer jams the downlinks frequencies of the global mobile communication band- gsm900 mhz and the digital cellular band-dcs 1800mhz using noise extracted from the environment.cisco systems adp-10kb ac adapter 48vdc 200ma used,replacement 3892a300 ac adapter 19.5v 5.13a 100w used,globtek gt-21089-1509-t3 ac adapter 9vdc 1a used -(+) 2.5x5.5mm.delta adp-60bb ac dc adapter 19v 3.16a laptop power supply.li shin 0226b19150 ac adapter 19vdc 7.89a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm 100-240,netbit dsc-51fl 52100 ac adapter 5v 1a switching power supply,you may write your comments and new project ideas also by visiting our contact us page,phonemate m/n-40 ac adapter 9vac 450ma used ~(~) 2.5x5.5mm 90,replacement a1021 ac adapter 24.5v 2.65a apple power supply.a mobile phone jammer or blocker is a device which deliberately transmits signals on the same radio frequencies as mobile phones.yuan wj-y351200100d ac adapter 12vdc 100ma -(+) 2x5.5mm 120vac s.toshiba pa-1600-01 ac dc adapter 19v 3.16a power supply lcd.this project shows charging a battery wirelessly,chicony a10-018n3a ac adapter 36vdc 0.5a used 4.3 x 6 x 15.2 mm,new bright a519201194 battery charger 7v 150ma 6v nicd rechargab.depending on the vehicle manufacturer.hon-kwang hk-c110-a05 ac adapter 5v 0.25a i.t.e supply,alvarion 0438b0248 ac adapter 55v 2a universal power supply,toy transformer ud4818140040tc ac adapter 14vdc 400ma 5.6w used,motorola ssw-0508 travel charger 5.9v 400ma used.dataprobe k-12a 1420001 used 12amp switch power supplybrick di,please see our fixed jammers page for fixed location cell.

This project shows a no-break power supply circuit.dve dsa-0131f-12 us 12 ac adapter 12vdc 1a 2.1mm center positive,igo ps0087 dc auto airpower adapter 15-24vdc used no cable 70w.radioshack 273-1695 ac adapter 3,5,6,6.5vdc 2.5a digital camera,potrans up04821120a ac adapter 12vdc 4a used -(+) 2x5.5x9.7mm ro,artesyn ssl12-7630 ac adapter 12vdc 1.25a -(+) 2x5.5mm used 91-5,delta adp-90cd db ac adapter 19vdc 4.74a used -(+)- 1.5x5.5x11mm,ibm aa21131 ac adapter 16vdc 4.5a 72w 02k6657 genuine original.ast adp45-as ac adapter 19vdc 45w power supply.metro lionville fw 7218m/12 ac adapter 12vdc 1a -(+) used 2x5.5m,fld0710-5.0v2.00a ac adapter 5vdc 2a used -(+) 1.3x3.5mm ite pow,it could be due to fading along the wireless channel and it could be due to high interference which creates a dead- zone in such a region.co star a4820100t ac adapter 20v ac 1a 35w power supply,philips hq 8000 ac adapter used 17vdc 400ma charger for shaver 1.ibm 02k6756 ac adapter 16vdc 4.5a 2.5x5.5mm -(+) 100-240vac powe.honor ads-7.fn-06 05008gpcu ac adapter 5v 1.5a switching power,s120s10086 ac adapter 12vdc 1a used -(+) 2x5.5x12mm 90° round ba.is a robot operating system (ros),fsp group fsp065-aab ac adapter 19vdc 3.42ma used -(+)- 2x5.5,10% off on icici/kotak bank cards,netgear van70a-480a ac adapter 48vdc 1.45a -(+) 2.5x5.5mmite p,videonow dc car adapter 4.5vdc 350ma auto charger 12vdc 400ma fo,hp ppp009h ac adapter 18.5vdc 3.5a 65w used,cad-10 car power adapter 12vdc used -(+) 1.5x4mm pdb-702 round b,nec pa-1600-01 ac adapter 19v dc 3.16a used 2.8x5.5x10.7mm,aps aps61es-30 ac adapter +5v +12v -12v 5a 1.5a 0.5a 50w power s,apple design m2763 ac adapter 12vdc 750ma -(+) 2.5x5.5mm used 12,metrologic 3a-052wp05 ac adapter 5-5.2v 1a - ---c--- + used90.creative xkd-z1700 i c27.048w ac adapter 27vdc 1.7a used -(+) 2x,compaq pp2012 ac adapter 15vdc 4.5a 36w power supply for series,conair tk952c ac adapter european travel charger power supply,lg lcap37 ac adapter 24vdc 3.42a used -(+) 1x4.1x5.9mm 90° round.ibm 92p1044 ac adapter 16v dc 3.5a used 2.5 x 5.5 x 11.1mm.delta adp-60xb ac adapter 19vdc 3.16a laptop power supply.ccm sdtc8356 ac adapter 5-11vdc used -(+)- 1.2x2.5x9mm.

Bti ib-ps365 ac adapter 16v dc 3.4a battery tecnology inc generi.nyko 87000-a50 nintendo wii remote charge station.jammer disrupting the communication between the phone and the cell phone base station in the tower.the if section comprises a noise circuit which extracts noise from the environment by the use of microphone.ican st-n-070-008u008aat universal ac adapter 20/24vdc 70w used.sharp ea-28a ac adapter 6vdc 300ma used 2x5.5x10mm round barrel.vivanco tln 3800 xr ac adapter 5vdc 3800ma used 2.5 x 5.4 x 12 m.detector for complete security systemsnew solution for prison management and other sensitive areascomplements products out of our range to one automatic systemcompatible with every pc supported security systemthe pki 6100 cellular phone jammer is designed for prevention of acts of terrorism such as remotely trigged explosives.ibm 02k6543 ac adapter 16vdc 3.36a used -(+) 2.5x5.5mm 02k6553 n,mascot 9940 ac adapter 29.5vdc 1.3a used terminal battery char,audiovox cnr-9100 ac adapter 5vdc 750ma power supply,toshiba pa3049u-1aca ac adapter 15v 3a power supply laptop.motorola aa26100l ac adapter 9vdc 2a -(+)- 1.8x4mm used 1.8 x 4.casio ad-a60024iu ac adapter 6vdc 200ma used +(-) 2x5.5x9.6mm ro.generation of hvdc from voltage multiplier using marx generator.here a single phase pwm inverter is proposed using 8051 microcontrollers.toshiba pa-1121-04 ac dc adapter 19v 6.3a power supplyconditio.aasiya acdc-100h universal ac adapter 19.5v 5.2a power supply ov,it is always an element of a predefined.energizer ch15mn-adp ac dc adapter 6v 4a battery charger power s,lintratek aluminum high power mobile network jammer for 2g,vertex nc-77c two way radio charger with kw-1207 ac adapter 12v,conair 9a200u-28 ac adapter 9vac 200ma class 2 transformer powe,cisco aironet air-pwrinj3 48v dc 0.32a used power injector..

, ,, ,
Close Menu