TRSR GPS tracking receiver

The TRSR (Turbo Rogue Space Receiver) is a tracking system that uses the GPS constellation of satellites to determine the exact position of a transmitter.

 

This Jason-1 GPS POD TRSR instrument failed on April 8, 2009. The POD is now ensured by Doris and SLR only with an accuracy about 1.5 cm rms.

Function

The TRSR supports precise orbit determination by the Doris system. It also helps to improve gravity field models and provides data for satellite positioning accurate to about 50 meters and 50 nanoseconds.

Principle

The TRSR receives dual-frequency navigation signals continuously and simultaneously from 16 GPS satellites. It uses these signals to acquire phase measurements accurate to about one millimeter and pseudo-range measurements accurate to about 10 centimeters.

Technical data

The onboard system consists of two independent receivers operating in cold redundancy, each with an omnidirectional antenna, low-noise amplifier, quartz oscillator, sampling converter, and a baseband digital processor communicating via the bus interface.

For more information see International GPS Services.