Chris Rizos receives Elected Fellow Membership of the Institute of Navigation

By on 7 February, 2012
 
During the recent Institute of Navigation (ION) International Technical Meeting (ITM) 2012 in Newport Beach, California, ION announced that Professor Chris Rizos is a recipient of the 2012 Fellow Membership.
 
Election to Fellow membership recognises the distinguished contributions of the Institute of Navigation members to the advancement of the technology, management, practice and teaching the arts and science of navigation; and/or lifetime contributions to the Institute.
 
Professor Chris Rizos has been elected for sustained contributions to the practice and management of satellite navigation research; and for leadership representing the satellite navigation community in Australia.
 
Prof. Rizos is an internationally recognised expert in GNSS geodesy; algorithms and methodologies for precise kinematic positioning using GPS and other GNSS signals; the combination of GPS and Differential Interferometric SAR for ground subsidence monitoring; pseudolite and new terrestrial navigation sensor research; multi-sensor integration; and data quality, multipath and RF interference studies.
 
Over the last ten years, Prof. Rizos has expanded his work into the areas of GNSS reflectometry, integrated GNSS and WiFi positioning, terrestrial RF-based positioning (including Locata), and investigations on software receivers. This body of research is internationally recognised; the results of which have been published in many refereed journals and presented at ION, IAG, FIG, and other national and international conferences.
 
Chris is recognized for pioneering navigation research at the Satellite Navigation and Positioning (SNAP) group in the University of New South Wales – today’s premier GNSS and wireless location technology laboratory in Australia. He recently established Australia’s first academic research group in GNSS receiver design using reconfigurable hardware and software-defined radio principles, which has led to the development of the “Namuru” GNSS research receiver, the current versions of which are being developed for satellite applications.
 
Chris has demonstrated sustained commitment to teaching in the fields of navigation, geodesy, and geomatics. He has taught satellite navigation courses at UNSW and professional short courses for over 20 years. More than 20 graduate students from Prof. Rizos’s lab have won ION student prizes/scholarships to attend the ION GPS/GNSS international conferences. He is the author or co-author of four papers in NAVIGATION, 80 ION conference papers, and over 500 journal and conference papers in general.
 
During his professional career, Chris has made numerous contributions to the activities of professional and scientific societies including serving as president of the International Association of Geodesy (2011-2015), a current member of the Governing Board of the International GNSS Service (since 2004), co-chair of the Steering Committee of the Multi-GNSS Asia organization, and as a past member of the ION Satellite Division’s Executive Committee (2004-2006). He has also served on numerous other committees and panels dealing with geodesy, GPS, GNSS or navigation science, including dozens of conference organizing committees.
 
The staff at Position Magazine and SpatialSource extend their congratulations to Chris on receiving this honour.

You may also like to read:



Newsletter

Sign up now to stay up to date about all the news from Spatial Source. You will get a newsletter every week with the latest news.

Geospatial in the age of the metaverse
The geospatial sector is set to both underpin the metaverse ...
$140 million allocated for WA Spatial Digital Twin
The 10-year project aims to improve infrastructure delivery,...
March 21: Celebrating Global Surveyors’ Day
March 21 is the day on which we celebrate the essential work...
Government releases new Local Drone Rules map
UAV users can now easily see whether they need to obtain aut...
Photogrammetry with enhanced cloud capabilities
SimActive has announced improved cloud environment enhanceme...