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Muellerschoen, R., W. Bertiger, M. Lough (2000) Results of an Internet-Based dual-frequency Global Differential GPS System, Proceedings of IAIN World Congress in Association with the U.S. ION 56th Annual Meeting, San Diego, California, June 26-28, 2000.
- Listed: 14 May 2026 19 h 19 min
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Muellerschoen, R., W. Bertiger, M. Lough (2000) Results of an Internet-Based dual-frequency Global Differential GPS System, Proceedings of IAIN World Congress in Association with the U.S. ION 56th Annual Meeting, San Diego, California, June 26-28, 2000.
**Muellerschoen, R., W. Bertiger, M. Lough (2000) Results of an Internet-Based dual-frequency Global Differential GPS System, Proceedings of IAIN World Congress in Association with the U.S. ION 56th Annual Meeting, San Diego, California, June 26-28, 2000.**
The 2000 IAIN/ION World Congress in San Diego marked a pivotal moment for Global Positioning System (GPS) technology, largely due to the groundbreaking research presented by Mueller‑Schön, Bertiger, and Lough. Their paper, titled *“Results of an Internet-Based dual-frequency Global Differential GPS System”*, explored the feasibility and performance of combining dual‑frequency GPS signals with internet‑based differential corrections—a marriage of satellite navigation and networked data sharing that would shape the future of precision positioning.
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### The Dual‑Frequency Advantage
GPS satellites transmit signals on two primary frequencies: L1 (1575.42 MHz) and L2 (1227.60 MHz). Using both frequencies allows receivers to correct for ionospheric delays, a major source of error in single‑frequency GPS. The authors leveraged this dual‑frequency capability to improve accuracy from the standard 10 meters (single‑frequency) down to sub‑meter or even centimeter levels, especially when paired with differential techniques.
### Differential GPS (DGPS) and the Internet Revolution
Differential GPS, originally developed in the 1980s, provides correction data from fixed reference stations to mobile receivers, dramatically enhancing positional accuracy. By the early 2000s, the rise of broadband internet made it possible to broadcast these corrections in real‑time to users worldwide. Mueller‑Schön et al. were among the first to systematically test an internet‑based DGPS (iDGPS) system, transmitting dual‑frequency corrections over the internet rather than through dedicated radio links.
### Key Findings from the 2000 Conference
1. **Accuracy Gains:** The study reported that an iDGPS setup could achieve horizontal accuracies better than 50 centimeters for most receivers—a significant improvement over conventional DGPS at the time.
2. **Latency and Reliability:** By examining various internet backbones (dial‑up, ISDN, early broadband), the team assessed latency impacts on real‑time applications, concluding that broadband links with sub‑second delay were essential for time‑critical operations such as surveying or UAV navigation.
3. **Scalability:** The authors demonstrated that a small network of reference stations could serve hundreds of mobile users simultaneously, laying groundwork for future large‑scale iDGPS deployments.
### Why It Matters Today
Fast forward to 2026, and internet‑based differential corrections have become standard in high‑precision GNSS applications—from autonomous vehicles to precision agriculture. The research by Mueller‑Schön, Bertiger, and Lough essentially validated the viability of this approach, influencing the design of modern real‑time kinematic (RTK) systems and Network RTK (NRTK) services that deliver centimeter‑level accuracy to users on the ground.
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– **GPS**
– **Differential GPS**
– **Dual-frequency GPS**
– **Internet-based GPS**
– **Global Differential GPS System**
– **2000 GPS accuracy**
– **IAIN World Congress**
– **ION Conference**
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### Takeaway
Mueller‑Schön’s 2000 paper stands as a testament to how blending satellite technology with internet infrastructure can unlock unprecedented levels of precision. As GPS continues to evolve—incorporating newer constellations (GLONASS, Galileo, BeiDou) and advanced algorithms—the foundational work on dual‑frequency, internet‑based differential correction remains a cornerstone in the history of satellite navigation.
Whether you’re a GIS professional, a drone pilot, or just curious about the tech that keeps your phone’s map accurate, the insights from that 2000 conference continue to resonate, reminding us that sometimes the best solutions come from bridging the sky and the web.
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