A hybrid positioning system is merely one in which multiple systems are used for positioning purposes. This virtually always, though not necessarily, includes Global Positioning System (GPS) as it is the only global positioning network currently. Combination of mobile network and GPS positioning techniques provide a higher accuracy of mobile location than positions based on a standalone GPS or mobile network based positions. High accuracy of mobile position is mainly essential for emergency, military and many other location based services such as productivity enhancement, entertainment, position-based advertising, navigation, asset management and geographic information access. Assisted GPS, also known as A-GPS or AGPS, enhances the performance of the standard GPS in devices connected to the cellular network. This paper introduces a new hybrid technique for mobile location determination utilizing Universal Mobile Telecommunication System (UMTS) network, Mobile Station (MS) and GPS positioning characteristics. Different positioning techniques are chosen according to positioning parameters. The minimum required number of UMTS base stations, location measurement units and GPS satellites are calculated in this paper. The required number of GPS satellites is reduced from four satellites to three ones while using three dimension positioning and from three satellites to two ones at two dimension positioning. Moreover, MS receiver main functions including both network and GPS received paths to achieve output assisted data are discussed. In this paper many drawbacks such as indoor positioning, receiver high power consumption, delay in first time to fix position, low position accuracy as well as large number of required satellites and base stations are improved.
[1]
Jukka Lempiäinen,et al.
Practical Network-Based Techniques for Mobile Positioning in UMTS
,
2006,
EURASIP J. Adv. Signal Process..
[2]
A. Klein,et al.
On the Performance of Hybrid GPS/GSM Mobile Terminal Tracking
,
2009,
2009 IEEE International Conference on Communications Workshops.
[3]
Sang Jeong Lee,et al.
Design of an Assisted GPS Receiver and its Performance Analysis
,
2007,
2007 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems.
[4]
Jukka Lempiäinen,et al.
Novel mobile-based location techniques for UMTS
,
2006
.
[5]
Axel Küpper.
Location-based Services: Fundamentals and Operation
,
2005
.
[6]
David Akopian,et al.
An assisted GPS support for GPS simulators for embedded mobile positioning
,
2009,
Electronic Imaging.
[7]
Keith Willett,et al.
Review of "Location-based services fundamentals and operation" by Axel Küpper, John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2005
,
2005,
UBIQ.
[8]
M. E. Cannon,et al.
Evaluation of Assisted GPS (AGPS) in Weak Signal Environments Using a Hardware Simulator
,
2004
.
[9]
アンダーソン,ロバート・ジェイ,et al.
Tdoa / gps hybrid wireless location system
,
2004
.
[10]
Frank van Diggelen,et al.
A-GPS: Assisted GPS, GNSS, and SBAS
,
2009
.
[11]
자리 시르재린네.
Supporting an assisted satellite based positioning
,
2005
.
[12]
Ding-Bing Lin,et al.
Hybrid SADOA/TDOA mobile positioning for cellular networks
,
2007,
IET Commun..
[13]
Andreu Urruela,et al.
Divide-and-Conquer Based Closed-form Position Estimation for AOA and TDOA Measurements
,
2006,
2006 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics Speech and Signal Processing Proceedings.