[TECH] GPS (Global Positioning System)
GPS is a satellite-based navigation system providing global positioning and timing to any receiver, accurate to ~3 m commercially and ~30 cm with augmentation, requiring corrections from both special and general relativity.
Overview
The US DoD GPS constellation (24 satellites, first launch 1978, fully operational 1995) uses time-of-flight measurements from 4+ satellites to triangulate position. Each satellite carries an atomic clock; without relativistic corrections (SR: −7 μs/day; GR: +45 μs/day), position errors would accumulate at 10 km/day. GPS is used in navigation, precision agriculture, surveying, finance (timestamping), and now autonomous vehicles.
Key Actors
- Companies: Rockwell International (GPS satellites), Trimble (1978), Garmin (1989), Qualcomm (chipsets), u-blox
- Inventors: Ivan Getting (1912–2003), Bradford Parkinson (1935–), Roger Easton (1921–2014)
Key Patents
- Easton, R. US Patent 3,789,409 (1974) — navigation signal processing
Economic Value
GPS contributes approximately USD 1.4 trillion/year to the US economy alone (RTI International for CGSIC, 2019). Global estimate: ~USD 2–3T/year. Precision agriculture GPS savings: USD 25B/year. Autonomous vehicles will add USD 500B+/year.
Notes
RTI International Economic Benefits of GPS (2019). Global value extrapolated from US figure using GDP ratio. The system's construction cost (~USD 12B) is dwarfed by its economic return.
What This Enables
- [TECH] Mobile Phones & Smartphones — GPS chips in smartphones enable navigation, location services, ride-hailing, and asset tracking used by billions daily.
Discovery Character
Surprise level: Moderate-to-High — The concept of satellite navigation was clear; the economic impact (USD 1.4T/year in the US alone) was not. That GPS would become infrastructure for agriculture, finance (transaction timestamping), ride-hailing, and autonomous vehicles was entirely unanticipated when the system was designed for military navigation.
Mode: Systematic — a large US DoD engineering program with well-defined specifications. The relativistic corrections required (both SR and GR) were controversial during design; some engineers argued they should wait to see if the corrections were actually needed before implementing them. They were needed; GPS without relativistic corrections would accumulate 10 km/day of error.