Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles It's one of the most important technologies of the 20th century. If it failed tomorrow, banks would crash, planes would get lost and you'd probably struggle to find your way around the city It's called GPS and it was designed to defeat the Soviet Union. This is how a Cold War technology went from guiding bombs to guiding your Uber. GPS is a network of satellites which allows you to open your phone and know where you are anywhere in the world. Billions of people use it everyday. But its roots can be traced back to the world's first satellite. "Today a new moon is in the sky. A 23 inch metal sphere, place in orbit by a Russian rocket" In October 1957 The Soviet Union launched Sputnik. The Space Race between the USSR and America had begun and the U.S. was losing. "All over the world people are tuning in to the bleep bleep of the satellite, which carries aboard the complex mechanism necessary to transmit secrets of the universe" As the beach ball sized satellite flew above, American scientists noticed that the radio frequency it was transmitting increased as it approached and decreased as it moved away. It's called the Doppler Effect, and it could be used to locate the satellite. This was a Eureka moment. If a satellites position was known, the position of a receiver on earth could be determined This is the basic idea of GPS. In 1978, over twenty years after Sputnik, the U.S.A. launched its first Navstar satellite. This is the system we now call GPS. "They will provide highly accurate and continuous global coverage to authorised users by the late 1980's" Unlike earlier navigation satellites , Navstar would give a constant positioning service with unheard of accuracy. Each satellite carried an atomic clock which broadcasts its location with a time stamp. By using the location and time data from at least four satellites, a GPS receiver can tell you where you are, your altitude and the speed and direction you're moving in. 24 satellites are needed to cover the globe. This was cutting edge technology, run by the military, for the military But that all changed when tragedy struck. "My fellow Americans, I'm coming before you tonight about the Korean Airline massacre" On September 1, 1983, a Russian fighter jet shot down a Korean Airline's plane on its way from New York to Seoul. All 269 people onboard were killed. The plane had deviated from its original route and flown through Soviet airspace. Radio technology couldn't track the plane because of its limited range. GPS would have solved this Just two weeks after the attack, President Reagan made GPS available for civilian use as a common good. But the U.S. military was concerned. They didn't want to give away their latest space technology The decision was made to restrict GPS's accuracy by purposefully messing with the location signal. It would take another decade, several more GPS satellites, and a war, for the technology to develop into what we recognise now. In August 1990, the U.S. and it allies launched Operation Desert Storm to remove Iraqi forces from neighbouring Kuwait. This was GPS's first full military test and it passed with flying colours. It allowed troops to navigate and direct fire with unprecedented accuracy. While cruise missiles were guided to their exact locations The Department of Defence paid million to U.S. manufacturers to provide troops with GPS units. After the war, manufacturers quickly found ways to market the new technology. Then in 2000 GPS's accuracy restrictions were lifted and the flood gates opened. Since then the technology has become intertwined with our modern lives GPS is the global time keeper. Its atomic clocks are accurate to within 40 nano seconds that's four thousand-millionths of a second. Banking systems rely on it to timestamp transactions, including withdrawing money from ATMs. It is used to keep our trains running on time and reduce farm wastage Not to mention all the apps that rely on GPS. Today the civilian satellite navigation market is worth nearly thirty five billion dollars And is expected to grow to more than eighty three billion by 2022. Compare that with the global military market and civilian uses now dwarfs it It may have been born out of the Cold War, but GPS services are now a critical part of our everyday lives.
B1 gps satellite technology accuracy military civilian How The Cold War Gave Us Google Maps 5 0 林宜悉 posted on 2020/03/08 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary