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Title
International cooperation and technology transfer
Author
Mussio, Luigi

306
GPS and GLONASS in Italy
Giorgio Manzoni
University of Trieste, Department of Civil Engineering, Piazzale europa 1,1-34100 Trieste. Italy
manzoni@univ.trieste.it
KEY WORDS: GNSS, GPS, GLONASS
ABSTRACT:
In 1987, Mariano Cunietti and Giorgio Folloni joined a group of Italian Universities in a national project financed by the Ministry of
University. The aim was to purchase a couple of LI GPS receivers. This was the first geodetic national project with a large
participation of researchers. A few months later Giuseppe Birardi joined them in the Brennero-Noto GPS geoidal transverse, by using
two more, L1/L2, reveivers of Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche. In winter 1997 Alberto Gubellini nad Daniele Pospictchill used
the same receivers in the first GPS campaign in Antartica. Since then almost all Italian geodesists have been involved in GPS theory
and applications, including tectonic and soil movement monitoring, kinematic positioning in aerial photogrammetry, geoid
ondulations modelling, road survey and traffic pollution control etc.. Outside the Universities, the Istituto Geografico Militare, IGM,
has established the first order GPS network . Several professional surveyors currently use GPS in cartography. GPS is used for
vehicles navigation and fleet management, in robbery alert, in conjunction with GSM. Applications are in progress for air traffic
control, which requires the most reliable and advanced GPS and GLONASS methods. The use of real time Differential GPS is
expected to increase with the future availabilty of the radiobroadcasted corrections also diffused by telecomunication satellites.
1. MARIANO CUNIETTI and GIORGIO FOLLONI
The histoiy of GPS in Italy is linked to Mariano Cunietti,
Politecnic of Milan and Giorgio Folloni, University of
Bologna.
1986: Giorgio Folloni organized a GPS measurement in
Castel dell' Alpi, performed by IGM, Italian Military
Geographic Institute: IGM was already equipped with GPS
receivers.
1987: Mariano Cunietti and Giorgio Folloni promoted a
request to the Ministry signed by many Universities for a
couple of LI receivers (still working sometimes at the
Universities of Pisa and Trieste).
1988: Giuseppe Birardi, University of Rome, obtained from
CNR, National Research Council, the funds for a couple of
L1/L2 receivers.
1988: Giuseppe Birardi planned the Nord-Sud geodetic
GPS transverse from Brennero( Austrian border) to
Noto(Sicily), with the cooperation of several Universities
(Bari, Rome, Pisa, Trieste, Politecnic of Milan, Politecnic
of Turin).
1989: Politecnic of Milan repeated the northen part of the
transverse with the cooperation of the same Universities. A
similar transverse has been measured in Sardinia by the
University and the Astronomical Observatory of Cagliari.
The University of Bologna organized geodinamic GPS in
Calabria and Tyrrenic islands. This University began GPS
networks for monitoring subsidences in Bologna and other
sites.
Kinematic GPS tests have been performed since 1988 on
terrestrial vehicles in airports, cable cabin, and aircrafts in
cooperation among Politecnic of Turin, Politecnic of Milan,
Universities of Trieste, Pisa, Ancona, Bologna and Rome and
some photogrammetric companies: Alifoto, Turin, CGRA di
Parma, Alenia di Roma.
GPS measurements have been performed in Anctartica by
Alberto Gubellini and Daniele Pospictchill, both from the
University of Bologna, and in Himalaya by the Universities
of Trieste and Padua.
Mariano Cunietti, Giorgio Folloni, Giuseppe Birardi,
Alberto Gubellini, Daniele Pospictchill are no more with
us, and this paper is dedicated to them.