scholarly journals GPS + Galileo tightly combined RTK positioning for medium-to-long baselines based on partial ambiguity resolution

Author(s):  
Guangcai Li ◽  
Jianghui Geng ◽  
Jiang Guo ◽  
Sen Zhou ◽  
Shuang Lin
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (15) ◽  
pp. 2904
Author(s):  
Juan Manuel Castro-Arvizu ◽  
Daniel Medina ◽  
Ralf Ziebold ◽  
Jordi Vilà-Valls ◽  
Eric Chaumette ◽  
...  

The use of carrier phase data is the main driver for high-precision Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) positioning solutions, such as Real-Time Kinematic (RTK). However, carrier phase observations are ambiguous by an unknown number of cycles, and their use in RTK relies on the process of mapping real-valued ambiguities to integer ones, so-called Integer Ambiguity Resolution (IAR). The main goal of IAR is to enhance the position solution by virtue of its correlation with the estimated integer ambiguities. With the deployment of new GNSS constellations and frequencies, a large number of observations is available. While this is generally positive, positioning in medium and long baselines is challenging due to the atmospheric residuals. In this context, the process of solving the complete set of ambiguities, so-called Full Ambiguity Resolution (FAR), is limiting and may lead to a decreased availability of precise positioning. Alternatively, Partial Ambiguity Resolution (PAR) relaxes the condition of estimating the complete vector of ambiguities and, instead, finds a subset of them to maximize the availability. This article reviews the state-of-the-art PAR schemes, addresses the analytical performance of a PAR estimator following a generalization of the Cramér–Rao Bound (CRB) for the RTK problem, and introduces Precision-Driven PAR (PD-PAR). The latter constitutes a new PAR scheme which employs the formal precision of the (potentially fixed) positioning solution as selection criteria for the subset of ambiguities to fix. Numerical simulations are used to showcase the performance of conventional FAR and FAR approaches, and the proposed PD-PAR against the generalized CRB associated with PAR problems. Real-data experimental analysis for a medium baseline complements the synthetic scenario. The results demonstrate that (i) the generalization for the RTK CRB constitutes a valid lower bound to assess the asymptotic behavior of PAR estimators, and (ii) the proposed PD-PAR technique outperforms existing FAR and PAR solutions as a non-recursive estimator for medium and long baselines.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (17) ◽  
pp. 2727
Author(s):  
Ruijie Xi ◽  
Qusen Chen ◽  
Xiaolin Meng ◽  
Weiping Jiang ◽  
Xiangdong An ◽  
...  

We propose a multiple global navigation satellite system (multi-GNSS) differential phase kinematic post-processing method, expand the current Track ability, and finely tune processing parameters to achieve the best results for research purposes. The double-difference (DD) phase formulas of GLONASS are especially formulated, and the method of arc ambiguity resolution (AR) in post-processing is developed. To verify the feasibility of this AR method, a group of static baselines with ranges from 8 m to 100 km and two kinematic tests were used. The results imply that 100% of ambiguities in short baselines and over 90% in long baselines can be fixed with the proposed ambiguity resolution method. Better than a 10-mm positioning precision was achieved for all the horizonal components of those selected baselines and the vertical components of the short baselines, and the vertical precision for long baselines is around 20 to 40 mm. In the posterior residual analysis, the means of the residual root-mean-squares (RMSs) of different systems are better than 10 mm for short baselines and at the range of 10–20 mm for baselines longer than 80 km. Mostly, the residuals satisfy the standard normal distribution. It proves that the new method could be applied in bridge displacement and vibration monitoring and for UAV photogrammetry.


GPS Solutions ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Brack ◽  
Benjamin Männel ◽  
Harald Schuh

Abstract The use of the GLONASS legacy signals for real-time kinematic positioning is considered. Due to the FDMA multiplexing scheme, the conventional CDMA observation model has to be modified to restore the integer estimability of the ambiguities. This modification has a strong impact on positioning capabilities. In particular, the ambiguity resolution performance of this model is clearly weaker than for CDMA systems, so that fast and reliable full ambiguity resolution is usually not feasible for standalone GLONASS, and adding GLONASS data in a multi-GNSS approach can reduce the ambiguity resolution performance of the combined model. Partial ambiguity resolution was demonstrated to be a suitable tool to overcome this weakness (Teunissen in GPS Solut 23(4):100, 2019). We provide an exhaustive formal analysis of the positioning precision and ambiguity resolution capabilities for short, medium, and long baselines in a multi-GNSS environment with GPS, Galileo, BeiDou, QZSS, and GLONASS. Simulations are used to show that with a difference test-based partial ambiguity resolution method, adding GLONASS data improves the positioning performance in all considered cases. Real data from different baselines are used to verify these findings. When using all five available systems, instantaneous centimeter-level positioning is possible on an 88.5 km baseline with the ionosphere weighted model, and on average, only 3.27 epochs are required for a long baseline with the ionosphere float model, thereby enabling near instantaneous solutions.


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