While satellite-based global navigation systems have become essential tools in our daily lives, their effectiveness is often hampered by the fact that the signals cannot be accessed in underground, indoor, or underwater environments. Recently, a novel navigation system has been invented to address t...
While satellite-based global navigation systems have become essential tools in our daily lives, their effectiveness is often hampered by the fact that the signals cannot be accessed in underground, indoor, or underwater environments. Recently, a novel navigation system has been invented to address this issue by utilizing the characteristics of the ubiquitous and highly penetrative cosmic-ray muons.
since the reference detectors and the receiver detectors are connected with physical cables
Key limitation, so while somthing like a tunnelling machine this is great way to allign (but we already do that perfectly with lasers) for things like submarines and cave explorers not wanting to lay a line it is not the silver bullet it sounds like
In its first phase of development, these reference detectors had to be connected to the receivers via a wired configuration to guarantee precise time synchronization. This work describes more versatile, wireless muometric navigation system (MuWNS), which was designed in conjunction with a cost-effective, crystal-oscillator-based grandmaster clock and a performance evaluation is reported for shallow underground/indoor, deep underground and undersea environments.
A wireless master-detector connection is bound by the same limitation: radio waves don't propagate well in water and rock.
This could work underground for commercial operations via a combination of wired or wireless relays, but not for submarines or in other recreational situations, like spelunking.
How can you have "reference" detectors if they are not talking to the differential as providing the accuracy. or maybe it can be used to tell you where you were when you come back to the surface and compare notes, but I dont see how it can see where you are now? However, mapping the seabed with a UAV if it can produce a this is what a saw, is an interesting project.