Radiolocation
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Radiolocation is the process of finding the location of something through the use of radio waves. It generally refers to passive uses, particularly radar — as well as detecting buried cables, water mains, and other public utilities. It is similar to radionavigation, but radiolocation usually refers to passively finding a distant object rather than actively one's own position. Both are types of radiodetermination.
The angle at which a signal returns, as well as the time is takes to return can (or must) both determine where an object is. In Doppler radar, the Doppler shift is also taken into account, determining velocity rather than location (though it helps determine future location).
A stud finder can also be an example of radiolocation, if it uses radio waves rather than ultrasound.
[edit] Mobile phones
Radiolocation is also used in cellular telephony via base stations. Most often, this is done through trilateration between radio towers. The location of the Caller or handset can be determined several ways:
- angle of arrival (AOA) requires at least two towers, locating the caller at the point where the lines along the angles from each tower intersect
- time difference of arrival (TDOA) works using multilateration, except that it is the networks that determine the time difference and therefore distance from each tower (as with seismometers)
- location signature uses "fingerprinting" to store and recall patterns (such as multipath) which mobile phone signals are known to exhibit at different locations in each cell
The first two depend on a line of sight, which can be difficult or impossible in mountainous terrain or around skyscrapers. Location signatures actually work better in these conditions however. TDMA and GSM networks such as Cingular and T-Mobile use TDOA.
CDMA networks such as Verizon Wireless and Sprint PCS tend to use handset-based radiolocation technologies, which are technically more similar to radionavigation. GPS is one of those technologies.
Hybrid solutions, needing both the handset and the network include:
- assisted GPS (wireless or TV) allows use of GPS even indoors
- Advanced Forward Link Trilateration (A-FLT)
- Timing Advance/Network Measurement Report (TA/NMR)
- Enhanced Observed Time Difference (E-OTD)
Initially, the purpose of any of these in mobile phones is so that the public safety answering point (PSAP) which answers calls to an emergency telephone number can know where the caller is and exactly where to send emergency services. This ability is known within the NANP (North America) as wireless enhanced 911. Mobile phone users have a selection to also permit the location information gathered to be sent to other phone numbers or data networks, so that it can help people who are simply lost or want other location-based services. By default, this selection is usually turned off, to protect privacy.