Engineers Invited to Explore GNSS Filters at JAVAD GNSS - GPS World

Engineers Invited to Explore GNSS Filters at JAVAD GNSS

January 3, 2012  - By
Image: GPS World

Javad Ashjaee, president and CEO of JAVAD GNSS, invites engineers “who want to roll up their sleeves” to a working session at his company’s San Jose, California facility on Tuesday, January 17, to “find solutions and discuss technical details” related to the LightSquared/GPS conflict. The invitation comes at the end of a lengthy statement, “A Technical Story of a Bad Filter and a Good Filter — Which Turned Political!,” downloadable as a PDF from the company’s website.

A few excerpts from the paper, which will also appear as an advertisement in the January issue of GPS World magazine, follow. The GPS World webinar that is mentioned in the paper is also downloadable as an audio file with presentation slides, a 50-minute talk given by Javad Ashjaee on December 8: A Proposed Solution for LightSquared Effects on High-Precision GPS.

From the recently released paper:

“I have been reflecting on events related to the GPS interference issue and LightSquared. What I discovered revealed the root of this problem, and as I will describe in this paper, it is entirely caused by poor design of GPS receivers The problem can be solved easily and with existing technology. In fact, it already has been solved.

[ . . . . ] “In order to defend the GPS system and provide technical data, I started my own investigation of the problem. I soon realized that my own company had a fundamental problem in the first stage of our antenna system. It was allowing other radio energies into the receiver in addition to the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) signals. I recognized that the flaw in our filter system would degrade the performance of our GNSS receivers whether LightSquared’s system is deployed or not.

“As an engineer, I always strive to innovate my products and took it upon myself to see if we could develop a device that filters out as much noise as possible from the adjacent band without affecting the integrity of the GNSS signals. Unfortunately, this was never a priority in our industry – we always used filters that offered little protection against interference. I soon drew the conclusion that the standard operating procedure resulted in degraded performance.

[ . . . . ] “Our challenge is to build the best filter that keeps the GNSS signals intact and blocks unwanted signals as much as possible. In other words, make the side slopes, or skirts, of a filter as steep as possible. How difficult it is to build such a filter? How much would it cost?

[ . . . . ] “If we build better filters and better GNSS receivers, both general purpose users and high-precision users of GNSS will get improved results. In addition, the Figure 5 [all figures are shown in the downloadable PDF at JAVAD GNSS website] filter will protect the receiver from hearing LightSquared signals. This is shown in Figure 7, below. The GPS and GLONASS signals are shown in green. Our new steep-skirt filter is shown in grey, and the LightSquared signals are pink. Note that this new filter completely blocks out the LightSquared signals without reducing the signal strength of GNSS signals.”

[ . . . . ] “The reaction from many of my industry peers to my scientific analysis was decidedly unscientific. My pure technical findings were tagged as hostile, harsh, disrespectful, political, self-serving and betraying. I ask my critics: How in the world could I possibly want to cause harm to GNSS systems that I have worked so hard in the past 30 years to improve?
If GNSS system receives any harm, my company and I are among the first to feel the damage!

“I’m not a stranger to controversy, so I chose to ignore them. I received similar personal attacks for ten years when I was working on GLONASS. Déjà vu!

[ . . . . ] “This technical matter has a lot of lawyers, lobbyists and spin doctors involved, but it’s the engineers who have the ability to solve this problem.

No matter what happens to LightSquared, I am determined to build a better filter system for our GNSS receivers and offer better products to surveyors worldwide, and if we can accomplish this while facilitating a better RTK network, all the more reason.

I would like to invite engineers who want to roll up their sleeves and find solutions and discuss technical details to join me and several of my peers on Tuesday, January 17, 2012 in my San Jose facility. Please RSVP to javad at javad dot com.”

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