Measuring emission coordinates in a pulsar-based relativistic positioning system
Darius Bunandar, Scott A. Caveny, and Richard A. Matzner

TL;DR
This paper introduces a numerical method to determine emission coordinates in relativistic spacetime using pulsar signals, applicable in flat and curved spacetimes, enhancing space navigation accuracy.
Contribution
It presents a robust numerical approach based on solving the eikonal equation for measuring emission coordinates in arbitrary spacetime geometries.
Findings
Successfully applied to Minkowski spacetime with stationary pulsars.
Demonstrated in Schwarzschild spacetime with pulsars near a black hole.
Method shows potential for precise space navigation and trajectory measurement.
Abstract
A relativistic deep space positioning system has been proposed using four or more pulsars with stable repetition rates. (Each pulsar emits pulses at a fixed repetition period in its rest frame.) The positioning system uses the fact that an event in spacetime can be fully described by emission coordinates: the proper emission time of each pulse measured at the event. The proper emission time of each pulse from four different pulsars---interpolated as necessary---provides the four spacetime coordinates of the reception event in the emission coordinate system. If more than four pulsars are available, the redundancy can improve the accuracy of the determination and/or resolve degeneracies resulting from special geometrical arrangements of the sources and the event. We introduce a robust numerical approach to measure the emission coordinates of an event in any arbitrary spacetime geometry.…
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