FineSat: Enhancing GNSS Signals for High-precision Sensing

Published: 2025, Last Modified: 09 Feb 2026PerCom 2025EveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY-SA 4.0
Abstract: Wireless sensing technologies have shown significant promise in various applications, but their spatial coverage is confined to the vicinity of the transmitters, limiting their applicability in broader environments. In this paper, we introduce an innovative wireless sensing approach based on the globally covered Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) signals. While GNSS signals have been widely used in remote sensing to monitor slow changes in the Earth’s surface, like sea level and snow depth, their ability to accurately detect highly dynamic target motions, such as human respiration, gestures, and intrusions, remains unclear. The main challenge arises from the interference brought by the large-scale satellite movement and severe GNSS signal errors. In this study, we present a novel GNSS signal enhancement system named FineSat to address these interference. Specifically, we first utilize polynomial representations to cancel satellite movement interference. Then, based on the analysis of GNSS signal errors, we propose a signal differential processing module to mitigate the errors. We implement our system on commercial devices and validate its performance in three sensing applications: respiration monitoring, gesture recognition, and intrusion detection. Results show that we achieve 0.42 bpm mean absolute error in respiration monitoring, 96.5% average accuracy in gesture recognition, and 98.6% accuracy in intrusion detection.
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