scholarly journals Validation of Compact-Standard Antenna Method for Antenna Calibration above 1 GHz

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 89-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min-Joo Jeong ◽  
Jong-Hyuk Lim ◽  
Ji-Woong Park ◽  
Sung-Won Park ◽  
Nam Kim
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Paolo Blasone ◽  
Fabiola Colone ◽  
Pierfrancesco Lombardo ◽  
Philipp Wojaczek ◽  
Diego Cristallini

Author(s):  
C.P Krueger ◽  
J Freiberger ◽  
B Heck ◽  
M Mayer ◽  
A Knöpfler ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 1393 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Krietemeyer ◽  
Hans van der Marel ◽  
Nick van de Giesen ◽  
Marie-Claire ten Veldhuis

The recent release of consumer-grade dual-frequency receivers sparked scientific interest into use of these cost-efficient devices for high precision positioning and tropospheric delay estimations. Previous analyses with low-cost single-frequency receivers showed promising results for the estimation of Zenith Tropospheric Delays (ZTDs). However, their application is limited by the need to account for the ionospheric delay. In this paper we investigate the potential of a low-cost dual-frequency receiver (U-blox ZED-F9P) in combination with a range of different quality antennas. We show that the receiver itself is very well capable of achieving high-quality ZTD estimations. The limiting factor is the quality of the receiving antenna. To improve the applicability of mass-market antennas, a relative antenna calibration is performed, and new absolute Antenna Exchange Format (ANTEX) entries are created using a geodetic antenna as base. The performance of ZTD estimation with the tested antennas is evaluated, with and without antenna Phase Center Variation (PCV) corrections, using Precise Point Positioning (PPP). Without applying PCVs for the low-cost antennas, the Root Mean Square Errors (RMSE) of the estimated ZTDs are between 15 mm and 24 mm. Using the newly generated PCVs, the RMSE is reduced significantly to about 4 mm, a level that is excellent for meteorological applications. The standard U-blox ANN-MB-00 patch antenna, with a circular ground plane, after correcting the phase pattern yields comparable results (0.47 mm bias and 4.02 mm RMSE) to those from geodetic quality antennas, providing an all-round low-cost solution. The relative antenna calibration method presented in this paper opens the way for wide-spread application of low-cost receiver and antennas.


GPS Solutions ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Darugna ◽  
Jannes B. Wübbena ◽  
Gerhard Wübbena ◽  
Martin Schmitz ◽  
Steffen Schön ◽  
...  

Abstract The access to Android-based Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) raw measurements has become a strong motivation to investigate the feasibility of smartphone-based positioning. Since the beginning of this research, the smartphone GNSS antenna has been recognized as one of the main limitations. Besides multipath (MP), the radiation pattern of the antenna is the main site-dependent error source of GNSS observations. An absolute antenna calibration has been performed for the dual-frequency Huawei Mate20X. Antenna phase center offset (PCO) and variations (PCV) have been estimated to correct for antenna impact on the L1 and L5 phase observations. Accordingly, we show the relevance of considering the individual PCO and PCV for the two frequencies. The PCV patterns indicate absolute values up to 2 cm and 4 cm for L1 and L5, respectively. The impact of antenna corrections has been assessed in different multipath environments using a high-accuracy positioning algorithm employing an undifferenced observation model and applying ambiguity resolution. Successful ambiguity resolution is shown for a smartphone placed in a low multipath environment on the ground of a soccer field. For a rooftop open-sky test case with large multipath, ambiguity resolution was successful in 19 out of 35 data sets. Overall, the antenna calibration is demonstrated being an asset for smartphone-based positioning with ambiguity resolution, showing cm-level 2D root mean square error (RMSE).


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