Print Email Facebook Twitter Geodetic sensor systems and sensor networks: Positioning and applications Title Geodetic sensor systems and sensor networks: Positioning and applications Author Verhagen, S. Grejner-Brzezinska, D. Retscher, G. Santos, M. Ding, X. Gao, Y. Jin, S. Faculty Aerospace Engineering Department Space Engineering Date 2009-06-30 Abstract This contribution focuses on geodetic sensor systems and sensor networks for positioning and applications. The key problems in this area will be addressed together with an overview of applications. Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and other geodetic techniques play a central role in many applications like engineering, mapping and remote sensing. These techniques include precise positioning, but also research into non-positioning applications like atmospheric sounding using continuously operating GNSS networks. An important research area is multi-sensor system theory and applications to airborne and land-based platforms, indoor and pedestrian navigation, as well as environmentalmonitoring. The primary sensors of interest are GNSS and inertial navigation systems. Furthermore, Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) is recognized as one of the most important state-of-the-art geodetic technologies used for generation of Digital Elevation Models and accurately measuring ground deformations Subject current research issuesGNSSInSAR To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:6fb8b968-5682-4b78-9faa-ae5c7b7dcc71 DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-22078-4_7 Publisher Springer ISSN 0939-9585 Source http://www.springerlink.com/content/j10n6722352wt315/ Source VII Hotine-Marussi symposium on mathematical geodesy, Rome 6-10 June, 2009 International Association of Geodesy Symposia, vol.137 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type conference paper Rights (c)2012 The Authors, Springer-Verlag Files PDF 2012-101Verhagen.pdf 129.23 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:6fb8b968-5682-4b78-9faa-ae5c7b7dcc71/datastream/OBJ/view