Trilaterering
Trilaterering is a positioning technique used to determine an object's absolute location in three-dimensional space. It relies on measuring the distance from the object to three known points, often called reference points or anchors. Each distance measurement defines a sphere, with the object located somewhere on the surface of that sphere. The intersection of these three spheres will yield a maximum of two possible points where the object could be.
To uniquely determine the object's position, a fourth distance measurement to a fourth reference point is typically
Trilaterering is fundamental to many modern navigation and positioning systems, most notably the Global Positioning System