scholarly journals Kinematic ME-MAFA for Pseudolite Carrier-Phase Ambiguity Resolution in Precise Single-Point Positioning

Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (21) ◽  
pp. 6197
Author(s):  
Kai Liu ◽  
Xiye Guo ◽  
Jun Yang ◽  
Xiaoyu Li ◽  
Changshui Liu ◽  
...  

Precise single-point positioning using carrier-phase measurements can be provided by the synchronized pseudolite system. The primary task of carrier phase positioning is ambiguity resolution (AR) with rapidity and reliability. As the pseudolite system is usually operated in the dense multipath environment, cycle slips may lead the conventional least-squares ambiguity decorrelation adjustment (LAMBDA) method to incorrect AR. A new AR method based on the idea of the modified ambiguity function approach (MAFA), which is insensitive to the cycle slips, is studied in this paper. To improve the model strength of the MAFA and to eliminate the influence of constant multipath biases on the time-average model in static mode, the kinematic multi-epoch MAFA (kinematic ME-MAFA) algorithm is proposed. A heuristic method for predicting the ‘float position’ corresponding to every Voronoi cell of the next epoch, making use of Doppler-based velocity information, is implemented to improve the computational efficiency. If the success rate is very close to 1, it is possible to guarantee reliable centimeter-level accuracy positioning without further ambiguity validation. Therefore, a computing method of the success rate for the kinematic ME-MAFA is proposed. Both the numerical simulations and the kinematic experiment demonstrate the feasibility of the new AR algorithm according to its accuracy and reliability. The accuracy of the horizontal positioning solution is better than 1.7 centimeters in our pseudolite system.

GPS Solutions ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Wang ◽  
Zishen Li ◽  
Ningbo Wang ◽  
Zhiyu Wang

AbstractGlobal Navigation Satellite System raw measurements from Android smart devices make accurate positioning possible with advanced techniques, e.g., precise point positioning (PPP). To achieve the sub-meter-level positioning accuracy with low-cost smart devices, the PPP algorithm developed for geodetic receivers is adapted and an approach named Smart-PPP is proposed in this contribution. In Smart-PPP, the uncombined PPP model is applied for the unified processing of single- and dual-frequency measurements from tracked satellites. The receiver clock terms are parameterized independently for the code and carrier phase measurements of each tracking signal for handling the inconsistency between the code and carrier phases measured by smart devices. The ionospheric pseudo-observations are adopted to provide absolute constraints on the estimation of slant ionospheric delays and to strengthen the uncombined PPP model. A modified stochastic model is employed to weight code and carrier phase measurements by considering the high correlation between the measurement errors and the signal strengths for smart devices. Additionally, an application software based on the Android platform is developed for realizing Smart-PPP in smart devices. The positioning performance of Smart-PPP is validated in both static and kinematic cases. Results show that the positioning errors of Smart-PPP solutions can converge to below 1.0 m within a few minutes in static mode and the converged solutions can achieve an accuracy of about 0.2 m of root mean square (RMS) both for the east, north and up components. For the kinematic test, the RMS values of Smart-PPP positioning errors are 0.65, 0.54 and 1.09 m in the east, north and up components, respectively. Static and kinematic tests both show that the Smart-PPP solutions outperform the internal results provided by the experimental smart devices.


GPS Solutions ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 273-282 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Philippe Montillet ◽  
Lukasz K. Bonenberg ◽  
Craig M. Hancock ◽  
Gethin W. Roberts

Positioning ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 05 (04) ◽  
pp. 107-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rock Santerre ◽  
Lin Pan ◽  
Changsheng Cai ◽  
Jianjun Zhu

2007 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 149-153
Author(s):  
A. Farah

Code Single Point Positioning Using Nominal Gnss Constellations (Future Perception) Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) have an endless number of applications in industry, science, military, transportation and recreation & sports. Two systems are currently in operation namely GPS (the USA Global Positioning System) and GLONASS (the Russian GLObal NAvigation Satellite System), and a third is planned, the European satellite navigation system GALILEO. The potential performance improvements achievable through combining these systems could be significant and expectations are high. The need is inevitable to explore the future of positioning from different nominal constellations. In this research paper, Bernese 5.0 software could be modified to simulate and process GNSS observations from three different constellations (GPS, Glonass and Galileo) using different combinations. This study presents results of code single point positioning for five stations using the three constellations and different combinations.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (14) ◽  
pp. 1679 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianghui Geng ◽  
Enming Jiang ◽  
Guangcai Li ◽  
Shaoming Xin ◽  
Na Wei

In May 2016, the availability of GNSS raw measurements on smart devices was announced by Google with the release of Android 7. It means that developers can access carrier-phase and pseudorange measurements and decode navigation messages for the first time from mass-market Android-devices. In this paper, an improved Hatch filter algorithm, i.e., Three-Thresholds and Single-Difference Hatch filter (TT-SD Hatch filter), is proposed for sub-meter single point positioning with raw GNSS measurements on Android devices without any augmentation correction input, where the carrier-phase smoothed pseudorange window width adaptively varies according to the three-threshold detection for ionospheric cumulative errors, cycle slips and outliers. In the mean time, it can also eliminate the inconsistency of receiver clock bias between pseudorange and carrier-phase by inter-satellite difference. To eliminate the effects of frequent smoothing window resets, we combine TT-SD Hatch filter and Kalman filter for both time update and measurement update. The feasibility of the improved TT-SD Hatch filter method is then verified using static and kinematic experiments with a Nexus 9 Android tablet. The result of the static experiment demonstrates that the position RMS of TT-SD Hatch filter is about 0.6 and 0.8 m in the horizontal and vertical components, respectively. It is about 2 and 1.6 m less than the GNSS chipset solutions, and about 10 and 10 m less than the classical Hatch filter solution, respectively. Moreover, the TT-SD Hatch filter can accurately detect the cycle slips and outliers, and reset the smoothed window in time. It thus avoids the smoothing failure of Hatch filter when a large cycle-slip or an outlier occurs in the observations. Meanwhile, with the aid of the Kalman filter, TT-SD Hatch filter can keep continuously positioning at the sub-meter level. The result of the kinematic experiment demonstrates that the TT-SD Hatch filter solution can converge after a few minutes, and the 2D error is about 0.9 m, which is about 64%, 89%, and 92% smaller than that of the chipset solution, the traditional Hatch filter solution and standard single point solution, respectively. Finally, the TT-SD Hatch filter solution can recover a continuous driving track in this kinematic test.


GEOMATICA ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Bisnath ◽  
P. Collins

In standard Precise Point Positioning (PPP), the carrier phase ambiguities are estimated as real-valued constants, so that the carrier-phases can provide similar information as the pseudoranges. As a consequence, it can take tens of minutes to several hours for the ambiguities to converge to suitably precise values. Recently, new processing methods have been identified that permit the ambiguities to be estimated more appropriately as integer-valued constants, as they are in relative Real-Time Kinematic (RTK) positioning. Under these conditions, standard ambiguity resolution techniques can be applied to strengthen the PPP solution. The result can be a greatly reduced solution convergence and re-convergence period, representing a significant step toward improving the performance of PPP with respect to that of RTK processing. This paper describes the underlying principles of the method, why the enhancements work, and presents some results.


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