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Aviation
Almost all modern aircraft are fitted with multiple GPS receivers. This provides pilots and sometimes passengers with a real-time aircraft position and map of each flight’s progress. GPS also allows airline operators to pre-select the safest, fastest and most fuel-efficient routes to each destination, and ensure that each route is followed as closely as possible when the flight is underway.
Marine
When high accuracy GPS is fitted to boats and ships, it allows captains to navigate through unfamiliar harbours, shipping channels and waterways without running aground or hitting known obstacles. GPS is also used to position and map dredging operations in rivers, wharfs and sandbars, so other boats know precisely where it is deep enough for them to operate.
Farming
Farmers rely on repeat planting season after season to maximise their crop productions. By putting GPS receivers on tractors and other agricultural equipment, farmers can map their plantations and ensure that they return to exactly the same areas when sewing their seeds in future. This strategy also allows farmers to continue working in lowvisibility conditions such as fog and darkness, as each piece of machinery is guided by its GPS position instead of visual references. High accuracy GPS is also used to map soil sample locations, allowing farmers to see where the soil is most fertile across individual fields or even entire farms.
Science
Scientists use GPS technology to conduct a wide range of experiments and research, ranging from biology to physics to earth sciences. Traditionally, when scientists wanted to understand where and how far animals roam, they had to tag animals with metal or plastic bands and then follow them to various locations to monitor their movement. Today, scientists can fit animals with GPS collars or tags that automatically log the animal’s movement and transmit the information via satellite back to the researchers. This provides them with more detailed information about the animal’s movements without having to relocate specific animals.
Earth scientists also use GPS technology to conduct a wide range of research. By installing high accuracy GPS receivers on physical features such as glaciers or landslips, scientists can observe and study both the speed and direction of movement, helping them to understand how landscapes change over time. Similarly, GPS receivers can be installed on solid bedrock to help understand very small and very slow changes in tectonic plate motion across the world.
Surveying
Surveyors are responsible for mapping and measuring features on the earth’s surface and under water with high accuracy. This includes things like determining land boundaries, monitoring changes in the shape of structures or mapping the sea floor. Surveyors have historically required line-of-sight between their instruments in order to undertake such work, but the availability of high accuracy GPS receivers has reduced the need for this. GPS can either be setup over a single point to establish a reference marker, or it can be used in a moving configuration to map out the boundaries of various features. This data can then be transferred
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