HOW
AIS WORKS
How Does it Work?
Each AIS system consists of one VHF transmitter, two VHF
TDMA receivers, one VHF DSC receiver, and standard marine
electronic communications links (IEC 61162/NMEA 0183) to shipboard
display and sensor systems (AIS
Schematic). Position and timing information is normally
derived from an integral or external global navigation satellite
system (e.g. GPS) receiver, including a medium frequency differential
GNSS receiver for precise position in coastal and inland waters.
Other information broadcast by the AIS, if available, is electronically
obtained from shipboard equipment through standard marine
data connections. Heading information and course and
speed over ground would normally be provided by all AIS-equipped
ships. Other information, such as rate of turn, angle
of heel, pitch and roll, and destination and ETA could also
be provided.
The AIS transponder normally works in an autonomous and continuous
mode, regardless of whether it is operating in the open seas
or coastal or inland areas. Transmissions use 9.6 kb
GMSK FM modulation over 25 or 12.5 kHz channels using HDLC packet protocols.
Although only one radio channel is necessary, each station
transmits and receives over two radio channels to avoid interference
problems, and to allow channels to be shifted without communications
loss from other ships. The system provides for automatic contention
resolution between itself and other stations, and communications
integrity is maintained even in overload situations.
Each station determines its own transmission schedule (slot),
based upon data link traffic history and knowledge of future
actions by other stations. A position report from one
AIS station fits into one of 2250 time slots established every
60 seconds. AIS stations continuously synchronize themselves
to each other, to avoid overlap of slot transmissions.
Slot selection by an AIS station is randomized within a defined
interval, and tagged with a random timeout of between 0 and
8 frames. When a station changes its slot assignment,
it pre-announces both the new location and the timeout for
that location. In this way new stations, including those
stations which suddenly come within radio range close to other
vessels, will always be received by those vessels.
The required ship reporting capacity according to the IMO
performance standard amounts to a minimum of 2000 time slots
per minute, though the system provides 4500 time slots per
minute. The SOTDMA broadcast mode allows the system to be
overloaded by 400 to 500% through sharing of slots, and still
provide nearly 100% throughput for ships closer than 8 to
10 NM to each other in a ship to ship mode. In the event of
system overload, only targets further away will be subject
to drop-out, in order to give preference to nearer targets
that are a primary concern to ship operators. In practice,
the capacity of the system is nearly unlimited, allowing for
a great number of ships to be accommodated at the same time.
The system coverage range is similar to other VHF applications,
essentially depending on the height of the antenna. Its propagation
is slightly better than that of radar, due to the longer wavelength,
so its possible to see around bends and
behind islands if the land masses are not too high. A typical
value to be expected at sea is nominally 20 nautical miles.
With the help of repeater stations, the coverage for both
ship and VTS stations can be improved considerably.
The system is backwards compatible with digital
selective calling systems, allowing shore-based GMDSS
systems to inexpensively establish AIS operating channels
and identify and track AIS-equipped vessels, and is intended
to fully replace existing DSC-based transponder systems.
What AIS Broadcasts
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