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by AlotOfReading
894 days ago
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Can you elaborate on what you mean by "not intended for navigation"? GPS was intended as a replacement for TRANSIT and LORAN, which have navigation literally in their names. It's also the textbook example on Wikipedia's satellite navigation page, and I can't imagine how precise geolocation somehow wouldn't be useful for navigation. Also, the general analysis after KAL007 was that GPS should be made publicly available specifically to aid civilian navigation. They even identify what we call RAIM today to make it suitable for eventual usage as a primary navigation system. |
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No US military system relies on GPS for navigation. Military navigation systems use GPS as an untrusted source for fine-tuning inertial navigation within tight error bounds. Against US military systems, successfully spoofing GPS might buy you several meters of deviation. This only affects the cheapest US guidance systems, since most weapons have active terminal guidance. It is worth noting that GPS corrections are being phased out in US weapon systems, purportedly due to improvements in INS tech that moot the value of GPS corrections.
The tl;dr: GPS was developed to build a precise model of the world in peacetime that could be fed to inertial targeting and navigation systems in the complete absence of GPS. In that, it has been a massive success. US military systems have never relied on GPS for anything important. Contrary to popular media, the US has never produced GPS-guided weapons, even the cheapest systems are INS at their core.
Civilian systems use GPS for navigation, against its design, because they can mostly ignore its trivial susceptibility to hostile actors.