GNSS Jamming and Interference: Causes, Consequences, Solutions - Inside GNSS - Global Navigation Satellite Systems Engineering, Policy, and Design

GNSS Jamming and Interference: Causes, Consequences, Solutions

This webinar took place on August 22, 2012. The recorded version is no longer available.

A PDF of the webinar presentation, including "bonus" slides, can be downloaded from our Webinar PDF Archive (Registration required)

ABOUT THE EVENT


This webinar took place on August 22, 2012. The recorded version is no longer available.

A PDF of the webinar presentation, including "bonus" slides, can be downloaded from our Webinar PDF Archive (Registration required)

ABOUT THE EVENT

A marked increase in incidents of GNSS jamming and interference has caused concern about their effects on user equipment. This 90 minute free seminar will cover the causes and effects of accidental or malicious incidents in civil and military environments and how to avoid or mitigate the resulting problems. Viewers can sign up for the live presentation on Wednesday, August 22, or watch a recorded version online, which will be available shortly after the live event.

The webinar will be of particular interest to product designers, system integrators, application developers, equipment manufacturers, and engineering professionals and users who need a high level of assurance in access to GNSS positioning and timing. Registration will begin soon, with an announcement to be posted on this page.

The webinar is organized by Inside GNSS and sponsored by NovAtel, Inc.

THE PRESENTERS

Tom StansellTom Stansell heads Stansell Consulting, which he founded in 1999. Previously he was a vice-president of Leica Geosystems involved in technology development and strategic relationships and, earlier, a staff vice-president at Magnavox where he led the development of many Transit and GPS products and their underlying technologies. Stansell served on the 2000 WAAS Independent Review Board and in 2001 led technical development of the new GPS L2 civil signal (L2C) and later, the L1C signal definition project.

Logan ScottLogan Scott specializes in radio frequency signal processing and waveform design for communications, navigation, radar, and emitter location. He has more than 30 years of military and civil GPS systems engineering experience. At Texas Instruments, Scott pioneered approaches for building high-performance, jamming-resistant digital receivers. The principal of Logan Scott Consulting, based in Fort Collins, Colorado, he is currently active in precision indoor navigation, a jammer location system, nuclear materials detection, and, location based encryption and authentication.

Mark PetovelloModerator Mark Petovello is an associate professor of geomatics engineering at the University of Calgary and GNSS Solutions editor. He has been actively involved in many aspects of positioning and
navigation since 1997, including GNSS algorithm development, inertial
navigation, sensor integration, and software development.


Register for the August 22 webinar

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