Chuck wrote (in an earlier thread) on 18-10-2007 14:21:
> <snip>
> maybe that's why my offset on the pps kept drifting between
> -5 to +5 microseconds. it seemed to do that about every 4 or 6
> hours. maybe when it switched to different satellites?
> or are gps geostationary?

No, gps satellites are not geostationary.
That question was not the core of Chucks post, but since some insight in
the satellites' orbits can save a lot of trial and error when
positioning the antenna, I will take the opportunity to spend a few
words on it.

The instructions that came with your receiver recommend "clear view of
the sky". Unless you live in the middle of a desert a clear view of the
entire sky will be impossible. Luckily you won't need that, because - no
matter where on earth you live - a large part of the sky will never show
any gps satellites. You can make clever use of this when you have to
position the antenna in a suboptimal position, e.g. on a window.

The orbital plane of any gps satellite has an angle of 55 degrees with
the equatorial plane, taking the satellite up and down between 55 deg
north and 55 deg south. The satellite constellation populates a band -
more or less donut shaped - around the earth, centered around the
equatorial plane. No gps satellite ever flies over the poles (some other
sats do).

Seen from the earth' surface that leaves a large circular area of the
sky - centered over the pole - where no sats fly. In tropical and
temperate zones part of that circle is below the horizon, at latitudes
of more than 55 deg the entire circle is above the horizon, and a
(small) part of the "opposite side of the donut" becomes visible at the
northern horizon (southern horizon if you're down under).

Close to the poles the sats will appear to remain close to the horizon,
with the unpopulated circle overhead, while near the equator two
unpopulated circles are visible, north and south, making the sats appear
in a band from east to west.

Myself I live at a latidude of 52 deg north, meaning the northern sky
is not interesting (except for a small band of 3 deg through the
zenith). Consequently I have my receiver glued to the outside of a south
looking window. A position on the roof would be possible, but I won't go
through the trouble, because no improvement can be expected.

Try to imagine where the satellites fly as seen from your position, it
will help in finding the best position for your gps antenna.

hope this helps a bit,
Jan Hoevers
_______________________________________________
timekeepers mailing list
[email protected]
https://fortytwo.ch/mailman/cgi-bin/listinfo/timekeepers

Reply via email to