U.S. patents available from 1976 to present.
U.S. patent applications available from 2005 to present.

GPS receiver with improved immunity to burst transmissions

Patent 6681181 Issued on January 20, 2004. Estimated Expiration Date: Icon_subject May 20, 2022. Estimated Expiration Date is calculated based on simple USPTO term provisions. It does not account for terminal disclaimers, term adjustments, failure to pay maintenance fees, or other factors which might affect the term of a patent.

Patent References

System for measuring position by using global positioning system and receiver for global position system
Patent #: 5434787
Issued on: 07/18/1995
Inventor: Okamoto, et al.

Global positioning system receiver with improved multipath signal rejection
Patent #: 5808582
Issued on: 09/15/1998
Inventor: Woo

System and method for demodulating global positioning system signals
Patent #: 6125135
Issued on: 09/26/2000
Inventor: Woo, et al.

Method and apparatus for determining position using global positioning satellites
Patent #: 6182011
Issued on: 01/30/2001
Inventor: Ward

Interference canceller for the protection of direct-sequence spread-spectrum communications from high-power narrowband interference
Patent #: 6215812
Issued on: 04/10/2001
Inventor: Young, et al.

Method and apparatus for transmitter noise cancellation in an RF communications system Patent #: 6567649
Issued on: 05/20/2003
Inventor: Souissi

Inventor

Assignee

Application

No. 10/147983 filed on 05/20/2002

US Classes:

701/213, Using Global Positioning System (GPS)342/357.12, GPS receiver signal processing455/296Noise or interference elimination

Examiners

Primary: Beaulieu, Yonel
Assistant: Gibson, Eric M

International Class

G01S 1/00 (20060101)

Abstract

GPS signals are typically weak and thus easily interfered with by other radio transmissions in the same or adjacent frequency bands. Interference can be especially problematic when the GPS receiver is co-located with a communications device that includes a radio transmitter, such as a cellular telephone. The transmitted signal from the co-located communication device can overload (or saturate) the GPS receiver front-end designed to receive weak GPS signals. In such a situation no useful information can be extracted from the received GPS signals originating from the GPS satellites. Described herein is a novel apparatus and method that can be used to minimize the effect of co-located interference on a GPS receiver.

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