From michael.b.heflin at jpl.nasa.gov Sat Nov 29 14:52:50 2014 From: michael.b.heflin at jpl.nasa.gov (Heflin, Michael B (335N)) Date: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 22:52:50 +0000 Subject: [IGSMAIL-7005] 20 Years of GPS Time Series Message-ID: <8A084ACE7E004C4183471A9282AE38801A807537@ap-embx-sp20.RES.AD.JPL> Twenty years ago our GPS Time Series web page was launched at JPL. Current results are based on free-network point positions with ambiguity resolution transformed into IGS08. A large number of people, institutions, and nations have contributed to improvements over the years including: Sharing of GPS data from around the world Reprocessing orbits and clocks with consistent state of the art models Resolving of ambiguities for individual point positions Automating outlier removal, break detection, and weekly estimates for all parameters The original IGS Mail announcement is included below. Mike H. ****************************************************************************** IGS Electronic Mail Tue Nov 29 17:02:11 PST 1994 Message Number 0790 ****************************************************************************** Author: Michael B. Heflin Subject: Mosaic Time Series at JPL Global GPS time series derived at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory are now available via Mosaic. The URL is: http://sideshow.jpl.nasa.gov/mbh/series.html Simply click on a site to see latitude, longitude, and height as a function of time. Take a look and let me know if you have any comments. The current URL is: http://sideshow.jpl.nasa.gov/post/series.html -------------- next part --------------