SPNIMar 17

Evaluating Smartphone GNSS Accuracy for Geofenced 6 GHz Operations

arXiv:2603.2670659.0h-index: 13
AI Analysis

This addresses the safety and regulatory compliance of GVP devices for telecommunications operators and regulators, but is incremental as it provides empirical validation of known GNSS limitations in a specific context.

This paper tackles the problem of GNSS localization reliability for Geofenced Variable Power (GVP) devices in the 6 GHz spectrum, finding that operational environments like indoor settings and dense urban areas are the primary drivers of error, with outdoor positions near buildings also causing significant inaccuracies.

The recently deployed 6 GHz spectrum in the U.S. utilizes distinct power categories, with the latest proposed "Geofenced Variable Power" (GVP) category permitting indoor and outdoor operations without continuous Automated Frequency Coordination (AFC) by relying instead on local databases of exclusion zones. Consequently, the safe operation of GVP devices depends entirely on reliable GNSS localization to respect these geofences. However, GNSS accuracy is highly variable and significantly degrades in environments like urban canyons or indoors. This paper presents the first comprehensive empirical study evaluating GNSS reliability specifically for GVP compliance. Utilizing the SigCap Android application, we document and compare GNSS accuracy across an extensive array of real-world conditions, encompassing urban versus suburban landscapes, varying mobility states (stationary, walking, driving), and indoor versus outdoor settings. The results demonstrate that while device hardware causes variations in GNSS accuracy, the operational environment is the primary driver of error. Indoor settings and dense urban areas consistently degrade localization. Moreover, outdoor positions adjacent to buildings often surprisingly produce significant inaccuracies, even near low-elevation structures. We further analyze the contribution of different GNSS constellations to device positioning and show that satellites from non-U.S.-licensed constellations-although currently used in a substantial portion of location fixes-are not permitted for regulatory geolocation under FCC requirements.

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