Dilution of precision (GPS)
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Dilution of precision (DOP) or Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP) is a GPS term used in geomatics engineering to describe the geometric strength of satellite configuration on GPS accuracy. When visible satellites are close together in the sky, the geometry is said to be weak and the DOP value is high; when far apart, the geometry is strong and the DOP value is low.[citation needed]
Thus a low DOP value represents a better GPS positional accuracy due to the wider angular separation between the satellites used to calculate a GPS unit's position.[citation needed]
The term can also be applied to other location systems that employ several geographical spaced sites.[citation needed]
Factors that affect the DOP are, besides the satellite orbits, the presence of obstructions which make it impossible to use satellites in certain sectors of the local sky. Especially in urban measurements, this may be limiting.[citation needed]
We speak of HDOP, VDOP, PDOP and TDOP respectively, for Horizontal, Vertical, Position (3-D) and Time Dilution of Precision. These quantities follow mathematically from the positions of the usable satellites on the local sky. GPS receivers allow the display of these positions ("skyplot") as well as the DOP values.[citation needed]
Note that this situation is not restricted to GPS, but occurs in electronic-counter-counter-measures (electronic warfare) when computing the location of enemy emitters (radar jammers and radio communications devices). Using such an interferometry technique can provide certain geometric layout where there are degrees of freedom that cannot be accounted for due to inadequate configurations.[citation needed]
DOP Value | Rating | Description |
---|---|---|
1 | Ideal | This is the highest possible confidence level to be used for applications demanding the highest possible precision at all times |
2-3 | Excellent | At this confidence level, positional measurements are considered accurate enough to meet all but the most sensitive applications |
4-6 | Good | Represents a level that marks the minimum appropriate for making business decisions. Positional measurements could be used to make reliable in-route navigation suggestions to the user |
7-8 | Moderate | Positional measurements could be used for calculations, but the fix quality could still be improved. A more open view of the sky is recommended |
9-20 | Fair | Represents a low confidence level. Positional measurements should be discarded or used only to indicate a very rough estimate of the current location |
21-50 | Poor | At this level, measurements are inaccurate by as much as half a football field[citation needed] and should be discarded |
The DOP factors are functions of the diagonal elements of the covariance matrix of the parameters, expressed either in a global or a local geodetic frame.
[edit] References
Writing Your Own GPS Applications: Part 2 - Causes of Precision Error