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Principle of satellite compass, Ap-13 – Furuno Sc 50 User Manual

Page 79

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APPENDIX

AP-13

6. Principle of Satellite Compass

Own ship's heading can be determined by decoding the data in the carrier frequency in
addition to ordinary GPS parameters. In principle, a pair of two antennas A1(ref) and
A2(fore), each connected with an associated GPS engine and processor, are installed along
the ship's fore-and-aft line. GPS systems at A1 and A2 calculate the range and azimuth to
the satellite. Difference in range between A1 and A2 is

∆λ

+ n

λ

where

λ

is 19 cm. “n” is

automatically found during the initialization stage by receiving three satellites. A fraction of a
carrier wavelength,

∆λ

, is processed by FURUNO’s advanced kinematic technology in

geographical survey, thus determining a vector (range and orientation) A1 to A2.

In reality, a third antenna is used to reduce the influence of pitch, roll and yaw, and five
satellites are processed to process 3D data. If the GPS signal is blocked by a tall building or
the vessel is under a bridge, the 3-axis solid-state angular rate gyros in the processor unit
take place of the satellite compass, maintaining the current heading continuously.

Heading

θ

Antenna A1

Antenna A2

Antenna A3

Difference between the
range from satellite to
antenna 1 and the range
to antenna 2.

n

λ

∆λ

λ

Fore-

an

d-aft

line

Vector

to

decid

e

heading