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  2. Global Positioning System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Positioning_System

    GPS has become a widely deployed and useful tool for commerce, scientific uses, tracking, and surveillance. GPS's accurate time facilitates everyday activities such as banking, mobile phone operations, and even the control of power grids by allowing well synchronized hand-off switching. [88]

  3. History of GLONASS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_GLONASS

    In 1993, the system, now consisting of 12 satellites, was formally declared operational [6] and in December 1995, the constellation was finally brought to its optimal status of 24 operational satellites. This brought the precision of GLONASS on-par with the American GPS system, which had achieved full operational capability two years earlier. [4]

  4. Satellite navigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellite_navigation

    The United States' Global Positioning System (GPS) consists of up to 32 medium Earth orbit satellites in six different orbital planes. The exact number of satellites varies as older satellites are retired and replaced. Operational since 1978 and globally available since 1994, GPS is the world's most utilized satellite navigation system.

  5. The automated in-car navigator that predated satellites - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2018-08-03-backlog-pre-gps...

    What we all know as GPS wasn't operational until the mid '90s, though this was predated by Transit, the first satellite-based geolocation network completed in the '60s. But the first automated in ...

  6. OPS 5111 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OPS_5111

    OPS 5111, also known as Navstar 1, NDS-1, GPS I-1 and GPS SVN-1, was an American navigation satellite launched in 1978 as part of the Global Positioning System development program. It was the first GPS satellite to be launched, and one of eleven Block I demonstration satellites.

  7. GPS satellite blocks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPS_satellite_blocks

    The GPS satellite constellation is now operated by the 2nd Space Operations Squadron (2SOPS) of Space Delta 8, United States Space Force. The GPS satellites circle the Earth at an altitude of about 20,000 km (12,427 miles) and complete two full orbits every day.

  8. GLONASS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GLONASS

    It has an operational lifetime of 10 years, compared to the 7-year lifetime of the second generation GLONASS-M. It will transmit more navigation signals to improve the system's accuracy — including new CDMA signals in the L3 and L5 bands, which will use modulation similar to modernized GPS, Galileo, and BeiDou.

  9. GPS Block III - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPS_Block_III

    The United States' Global Positioning System (GPS) reached Full Operational Capability on 17 July 1995, [9] completing its original design goals. Advances in technology and new demands on the existing system led to the effort to modernize the GPS system. In 2000, the U.S. Congress authorized the effort, referred to as GPS III.