ENHANCED
LORAN (eLORAN)
eLORAN Applications
Aviation: Aviation navigation services support
aircraft operations in the departure, en-route, and approach and
landing phases of flight. In the US, Loran C has long been approved
for use by aircraft with certified receivers, flying en-route and
making departures and arrivals, but not for the critical approach
and landing phases. The much higher accuracy, availability, integrity,
and continuity of eLORAN does meet the specifications for
each of these phases allowing eLORAN to support aircraft
operations from gate-to-gate.
Maritime: The world’s shipping industry
is experiencing strong growth, which is expected to continue. Ships
are getting larger and faster, sea-lanes are becoming more crowded,
and crews are increasingly relying on electronic navigation systems
to operate in this environment. The newly proposed concept of e
Navigation will improve safety, security, and protection of the
marine environment as well as potentially reducing costs. It will
provide bridge officers with all the information they need on a
single display. In order to make these critical e-navigation services
available, the system will require a supply of position and timing
data of exceptionally high accuracy and reliability. This information
will come principally from GNSS. But GNSS alone cannot be guaranteed
to meet the availability and reliability required. Uniquely, the
combination of GNSS and eLORAN will do so, with the two systems
operating independently of one another, but providing a single combined
output data stream. Thus, eLORAN is the key that will enable
e Navigation to deliver its full range of benefits and maintain
safety through redundancy. The high availability achieved could
also lead to a reduction in the number of traditional physical aids
to navigation - lights and buoys – with potentially substantial
cost savings.
Land Mobile: eLORAN will provide PNT data
for a variety of land mobile applications, working alongside GNSS.
However, it can also provide the e-Loran compass capability to determine
the heading of a vehicle even when it is stationary. eLORAN,
via the data channel, can authenticate its own and GNSS data when
it is used for toll collection or vehicle monitoring. It is perhaps
on land that eLORAN’s greatly enhanced immunity to
jamming compared to that of GNSS will prove to be of the greatest
value. eLORAN employs high-powered transmitters, so the signals
reaching receivers are of much greater strength than those of GNSS
and require much more power to jam. Given that radiating significant
power efficiently at the low frequency and long wavelength of Loran
requires large antenna structures, it is extremely difficult to
produce a signal that could jam an eLORAN signal over more
than a very small local area. In contrast, jamming a GNSS signal
even over a whole city (for example, to block a road pricing system)
is not very technically demanding. A further important benefit of
eLORAN’s low frequency signals is their ability to
penetrate into places where GNSS signals either cannot be received
at all, or where they are intermittent or inaccurate. These include
the urban canyons in the centers of major cities. Loran signals
have been shown to penetrate reliably into steel shipping containers,
refrigerated vehicles and storage warehouses . This ability has
led to the development of systems that track items either of high-value
or whose safe and timely delivery must be guaranteed. The tracking
of hazardous cargoes also demands the consistent updates and high
availability of eLORAN-based systems.
Location Based Services: eLORAN services
will also deliver PNT data to support numerous location based services
(i.e. personal applications). eLORAN’s ability to penetrate
into urban canyons and building can assist service providers in
meeting the evolving PNT performance requirements including those
for E-911(US) or E-112 (Europe) response systems. Other applications
include, but are not limited to, location-based encryption systems,
geo-fencing, weather balloon tracking, offender tracking, and location-based
billing. The performance standards for these applications, as with
those for any land mobile applications, need to be assessed and
optimized for user specific applications.
Time & Frequency: Using GNSS is now the principal
method of recovering UTC time world-wide. GNSS is extensively employed
as a time source in the telecommunications and many other industries.
It provides time with an accuracy of 5 – 100 nanoseconds.
eLORAN is a viable alternative source of time, since its
transmissions are precisely synchronized to UTC. The data channel
carries messages that receivers use to identify the timing of each
individual eLORAN pulse from each station. Other messages
on this channel also correct for small variations caused by propagation
delays. Employing them allows absolute UTC time to be recovered
with an accuracy of 50 nanoseconds. Thus an eLORAN timing
receiver can serve as a reference clock, a primary source of time,
or as an alternative to GNSS; combined GNSS-Loran timing receivers
are available commercially. A particular advantage of eLORAN
over GNSS is the availability of its signals indoors. This avoids
the need to install an outside antenna with a clear view of the
sky, something that can be particularly difficult (and even expensive)
in downtown city-center locations and high-rise buildings. eLORAN
is also used as a source of precise frequency; frequency is the
rate of change of a clock. eLORAN timing receivers have been
shown to meet the Stratum 1 (1x10-11) frequency standard, even without
differential corrections. And this can be done with an indoor antenna!
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