The GPS/GNSS laboratory is part of the Department of Telecommunications at the Aeronautics Institute of Technology (Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica, ITA ), located in São José dos Campos, São Paulo, Brazil. Prof. Felix Antreich is the head of the GPS/GNSS laboratory. From 2003 till 2018 he was an Associate Researcher with the Department of Navigation, Institute of Communications and Navigation of the German Aerospace Center (DLR), Wessling, Germany. From 2016 to 2018 he was a Visiting Professor in the Department of Teleinformatics Engineering (DETI) at the Federal University of Ceará (UFC) in Fortaleza, Brazil. Since July 2018 he is a Professor with the Department of Telecommunications in the Division of Electronics Engineering of ITA in São José dos Campos, Brazil. |
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We are developing signal and data processing algorithms as well as instrumention and software for reliable and robust positioning with global navigation satellite systems (GNSS), remote sensing, and wireless communications. Click here to find our publications |
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The main research areas of LAB-GNSS are:
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Webinar: GNSS Signal Processing and Navigation Techniques
Day 1/5 - GIC-BR Professional Training
Day 2/5 - GIC-BR Professional Training
Day 3/5 - GIC-BR Professional Training
Day 4/5 - GIC-BR Professional Training
Day 5/5 - GIC-BR Professional Training
L01 Multiple access for GNSS
L02 Spread spectrum
L03 Chip pulse shapes and multiplexing
L04 Signal acquisition
L05 Propagation aspects
L06 Parameter tracking
L07 Use of remote sensing in water resource management
L08 Synergy between GNSS and remote sensing products
L09 Introduction to GNSS positioning techniques
L10 Satellite orbits and clocks
L11 Code pseudorange modelling
L12 Augmentation systems
L13 Solving navigation equations
L14 Precise Point Positioning (PPP)
This organization is meant to provide an integrated environment for the laboratory's internal and external researchers to work on joint projects, share knowledge, and collaborate on research and development activities. For this purpose, this organization contains all the material (organized in repos) of interest for the research group, including papers, reports, code, software, and other relevant documents.
While some repositories were forked from external sources and maintained as public repositories, most of the content is original and was developed by the research group members (students, professors, and researchers) with possible external collaborators. The project repositories can have finished or work-in-progress status, and be either public or private. When part of a private repository is intented to be shared with the scientific community in general, a mirrored filtered public repository is created for that goal.