The GIANT Project

Luis Chocano, Javier Pérez, Miguel Aguilera

ABSTRACT

As the European satellite navigation programme moves forward, with EGNOS as the first step towards Galileo, the user community finds out the potential benefits that the GNSS-based applications can provide to the different economic areas of society. The aviation sector, which has played a decisive role in the specification of these systems, can obtain significant advantages by means of the combined use of GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite Systems) systems, once the technical, operational and regulatory problems are overcome.

This paper describes the activities that are planned in the context of the GIANT project, the organization of the proposed work and a detailed description of the flight trial campaign.

Reprinted with permission from The Institute of Navigation (ION.org) and The Proceedings of the 18th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, (pp. 1854-1860). Fairfax, VA: The Institute of Navigation.

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Issue No. 9

Winter 2006

Global Navigation Satellite System

General Editor Introduction
From the Guest Editors
Growth and Expansion
  GNSS Regulation: Australia
  GPS Augmentation: India
  Operating EGNOS: Europe
  Next Generation GPS: United States
  Polar Air Traffic Control
  GALILEO and Skynet-5
  Using GLONASS
Ground Applications
  Navigation for Pedestrians
  Precise Urban Positioning
  Deflection Monitoring
  The DARPA Challenge
  Intelligent Vehicle
  Navigation Errors
Air Applications
  Aviation Navigation
  Helicopter Landing System
  The GIANT Project
Water Application
  Marine Environment
  Hydrographic Survey
  Marine Applications
Space Applications
  Sensing from Space
  Geosynchronous Satellite
Local Applications
  Galileo in Bavaria
  Moving Map
Future Directions and Research
  EGNOS Networks
  Surface Wave Information
  Receiver Performance
  National Geodetic Survey
Critical Perspectives
  GPS and Galileo
  New U.S. GPS Policy
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