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Three Times a Winner
Electrical Engineering Professor at Cal State Fullerton Chosen
Among 50 Worldwide to Watch in Field of Satellite Navigation

May 30, 2007 :: No. 222

It’s a little like winning the office pool on the Stanley Cup Finals, then going home to find you got an unexpected tax rebate, too. And both of those just a few months after winning a trophy.

Mohinder Grewal, professor of electrical engineering, was just posted online in the May issue of GPS World as one of the “50+ Leaders to Watch” in 2007 and 2008 for advancements in space-based positioning, navigation and timing systems. Those leaders are chosen from among the many thousands worldwide in scientific and engineering disciplines involved in global positioning and navigation.

“As the year continues to unfold, look for these individuals, as well as their companies and organizations, to bring further innovation to an already dynamic field,” states GPS World in the introduction to “50+ Leaders to Watch.”
An energetic Grewal was very pleased: “I feel very good about this. It is an exclusive group, and they are from around the world. I know most of them and am aware of the work of all of them.”

The professor said he expects to see most of them Sept. 25-28 in Fort Worth, Texas, during the Institute of Navigation Conference on Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS). “I will be giving a tutorial on WAAS — that is Wide Area Augmentation System — at the conference.”

WAAS is another of the three “wins” Grewal has had lately. In April, he was informed by Robin R. Loporchio of Raytheon Co.’s Waltham, Mass., office that Raytheon has submitted to the U.S. Patent Office Grewal’s mathematical algorithm to improve navigation via  WAAS. The full title is “Method and Apparatus for Wide Area Augmentation System Having Geo Uplink Subsystem With Enhanced Clock Steering.”

Grewal said that although the process is still under way, he expects to get the patent. He speaks from experience, since he acquired a patent for similar work on satellite navigation systems. That one refined and improved calculating time differentials between when the satellite sees a moving object, such as an aircraft, and when the data gets back to the aircraft to tell it exactly where it is.
The new algorithm now in the U.S. Patent office does something similar: “It corrects the signal being sent. There can be errors in the data given by the Global Positioning Satellites. They orbit the Earth and, therefore, are in motion, which can introduce errors, as can the time difference between when the data is sent and when it gets back to the target. Atmospheric interference and ionization from the sun’s radiation can introduce errors, too, that need to be corrected,” Grewal said.

“That data gets sent to a ground station for calculations, then is sent back up to a geostationary satellite — which does not orbit, but stays over the same part of the Earth all the time — then back to the aircraft, or automobile or ship. The new algorithm further refines correcting for those errors, including the time differential, which is called steering the clock. The clock is steered to within a nanosecond.

“You just can’t have a 10-meter error when an airplane is landing,” Grewal said.
In January, the first of Grewal’s “wins” was the second edition of his book on global positioning and inertial navigation systems, “Global Positioning Systems, Inertial Navigation and Integration,” published by Wiley & Sons. Co-authors are Lawrence R. Weill, CSUF emeritus professor of mathematics, and Angus P. Andrews, retired senior scientist for Rockwell.  

The book is a guide to Global Navigation Satellite Systems and Inertial Navigation Systems and the integration of the two. The book includes a CD and offers solutions to real-world Global Positioning Systems (GPS) problems. GPS is used in everyday life. Besides aircraft and automobile navigation, it is used in cell phones, national security, commercial fishing and geocaching, even golf.
The first edition of Grewal’s book was published in 2001 and used worldwide. A number of reviewers have called the book a landmark.

But that was not Grewal’s first book. In 1993, the first edition of “Kalman Filtering: Theory and Practice Using MATLAB” was published, also by John Wiley & Sons. The second edition was published in 2001, and the professor is working on the third edition now, with an anticipated release date in early 2008.

Kalman filtering is an integral part of GPS technology, so his books are complementary, he said.

The professor also has authored and co-authored dozens of articles and papers on navigation and global positioning and has given many presentations, lectures and seminars.

Grewal earned his Ph.D. at USC and joined the Cal State Fullerton faculty in 1975.

Media Contacts:

Mohinder Grewal, Electrical Engineering, 657-278-3874 or
mgrewal@fullerton.edu

Russ L. Hudson, Public Affairs, 657-278-4007 or rhudson@fullerton.edu


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Mohinder Grewal
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