
Global positioning automatic vehicle location system
Author(s) -
B.J. Papatheofanis,
M.L. Hasenack,
R.T. Teller,
Graeme Ramsey
Publication year - 1997
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/444037
Subject(s) - global positioning system , component (thermodynamics) , interface (matter) , automatic vehicle location , computer science , assisted gps , real time computing , software , network packet , transfer (computing) , tracking system , geographic information system , positioning system , embedded system , engineering , telecommunications , operating system , computer network , remote sensing , geography , structural engineering , node (physics) , physics , bubble , filter (signal processing) , maximum bubble pressure method , computer vision , thermodynamics
Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) is a unique facility covering over 43 square miles. The Emergency Management and Response Office (EM&R) is required to respond, provide Incident Command (IC), and coordination for all Laboratory emergencies. This requires IC`s and support staff to respond to the actual scene of the incident. Since the IC is under numerous constraints and stress, the office wanted the capability of locating the EM&R vehicles on an electronic map. An automated vehicle location (AVL) system was required for the additional safety of the emergency response personal. The requirements for the AVL system include total automatic tracking and low cost. After careful consideration, it was determined that the most efficient and cost effective system would be based on packet radio technology as the transmission media. The location is determined by the Department of Defense Global Positioning System (GPS). The system that was designed and constructed required four components to be interfaced and communicate with each other. The first component was a GPS receiver which actually provides the location information, equipped with a digital interface to communicate location information remotely. The second component is a modem that interfaces the GPS digital interface information to a radio. The third component is the radio itself which allows for the actual information transfer from the remote GPS receiver and modem. The fourth component is the software package that provides moving maps and displays the vehicle location on that map. The equipment was all commercial off-the-shelf that only required proper integration and packaging for the AVL application. This paper describes the steps taken in the integration of the equipment into the AVL package