AIS
OVERVIEW
What is the Automatic Identification
System (AIS)?
Picture a shipboard radar display, with overlaid electronic chart
data, that includes a mark for every significant ship within radio
range, each as desired with a velocity vector (indicating speed
and heading). Each ship "mark" could reflect the
actual size of the ship, with position to GPS or differential GPS
accuracy. By "clicking" on a ship mark, you could
learn the ship name, course and speed, classification, call sign,
registration number, MMSI,
and other information. Maneuvering information, closest point
of approach (CPA), time to closest point of approach (TCPA) and
other navigation information, more accurate and more timely than
information available from an automatic radar plotting aid, could
also be available. Display information previously available
only to modern Vessel Traffic
Service operations centers could now be available to every AIS-equipped
ship.
With this information, you could call any ship over VHF radiotelephone
by name, rather than by "ship off my port bow" or some
other imprecise means. Or you could dial it up directly using
GMDSS equipment. Or
you could send to the ship, or receive from it, short safety-related
email messages.
The AIS is a shipboard broadcast system that acts like a transponder,
operating in the VHF maritime band, that is capable of handling
well over 4,500 reports per minute and updates as often as every
two seconds. It uses Self-Organizing Time Division Multiple
Access (SOTDMA) technology to meet this high broadcast rate and
ensure reliable ship-to-ship operation.
How Does AIS Work? >>
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