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radiopositioning

Radiopositioning is the process of determining geographic position using radio waves from fixed transmitters or satellites. It relies on measuring properties of radio signals such as travel time, phase, angle, or signal strength, to infer distance or direction to known reference points.

The primary methods include time-based ranging (TOA, TDOA) and multilateration, which compute a position from measured

Key technologies include satellite-based radiopositioning such as GNSS (GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, BeiDou), which provide outdoor positioning

Accuracy varies widely. GNSS in open areas yields meters-level accuracy; indoor and urban environments may require

Challenges include multipath propagation, non-line-of-sight conditions, clock synchronization, interference, and privacy concerns. Ongoing developments combine multiple

distances
to
multiple
transmitters.
Another
approach
uses
signal
strength
measurements
(RSSI)
or
fingerprinting,
comparing
observed
signal
signatures
to
a
pre-surveyed
map.
Angle
of
arrival
(AOA)
uses
antenna
arrays
to
estimate
the
direction
of
signals.
Modern
systems
often
combine
techniques
to
improve
reliability,
especially
indoors
where
signals
are
degraded.
via
coordinated
time
signals.
Terrestrial
approaches
include
legacy
systems
like
LORAN,
but
more
common
today
are
cellular
network
positioning
(cell-ID,
OTDOA),
Wi-Fi
fingerprinting,
Bluetooth
beacons,
and
ultra-wideband
(UWB)
ranging.
Indoor
positioning
often
relies
on
Wi-Fi,
Bluetooth,
UWB,
and
sometimes
RFID.
Wi‑Fi,
BLE,
or
UWB
to
achieve
meter
to
decimeter
precision.
Applications
span
navigation,
vehicle
tracking,
logistics,
robotics,
emergency
response,
and
location-based
services.
radio
technologies
with
inertial
sensors
and
map
data
to
improve
reliability,
especially
in
challenging
environments,
and
next-generation
networks
aim
to
enhance
positioning
in
urban
canyons
and
indoors.