1 / 21

P. Wielgosz and A. Krankowski

Real-time Kinematic GPS Positioning Supported by Predicted Ionosphere Model. P. Wielgosz and A. Krankowski. University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Poland pawel.wielgosz@uwm.edu.pl. IGS AC Workshop Miami Beach, June 2-6, 2008. Research objectives ARMA method RTK positioning model

elina
Download Presentation

P. Wielgosz and A. Krankowski

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Real-time Kinematic GPS Positioning Supported by Predicted Ionosphere Model P. Wielgosz and A. Krankowski University of WarmiaandMazury in Olsztyn, Poland pawel.wielgosz@uwm.edu.pl IGS AC Workshop Miami Beach, June 2-6, 2008

  2. Research objectives ARMA method RTK positioning model Experiment design Test results and analysis Conclusion Outline

  3. Develop and evaluate methodology and algorithms for OTF-RTK positioning technique suitable for medium and long ranges 10-100 km Test applicability of predicted ionosphere models to support medium range OTF-RTK positioning Evaluate prediction model based on ARMA method Study the impact of the model accuracy on the ambiguity resolution (speed and reliability) Research Objectives

  4. Methodology – ARMA prediction of real-valued time series Let yt for t =1, 2, …. , n be an equidistant stationary stochastic time series and yt+1 be the prediction at time t+1. The autoregressive-moving average process ARMA(p,q) is defined by the formula: where: i are autoregressive coefficients, i are the moving average coefficients,p and q are the autoregressive and moving average orders, i is a white noise process After introducing the backshift operator BK the process can be converted to :

  5. Methodology – ARMA prediction of real-valued time series The ARMA forecast L steps ahead - the part of the operator containing only nonnegative powers of B * 10 previous days of the TEC values were taken for the prediction computation

  6. Methodology – ARMA prediction of real-valued time series • Our previous studies showed that the TEC prediction for 1- to 3 hours ahead yields values very close to real, observed TEC (under quiet to moderate geomagnetic conditions) • After 3 hours the quality of the forecast diminishes very quickly • ARMA forecasting method is very simple and does not need any a-priori information about the process nor additional inputs such as, e.g., solar or geomagnetic activity indices Reference:Krankowski A., Kosek W., Baran L.W., Popiński W., 2005, Wavelet analysis and forecasting of VTEC obtained with GPS observations over European latitudes, Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, 67 (2005), pp. 1147 – 1156

  7. Methodology – ARMA prediction of real-valued time series • GPS data from European IGS stations were used for TEC calculations • 10 previous days of the TEC values were taken for the prediction computation • Prediction for May 8, 2007 • Ionospheric conditions with max Kp=4o and sum of Kp = 22+ http://igscb.jpl.nasa.gov Test network area

  8. Methodology – Positioning Adjustment Model Sequential Generalized Least Squares (GLS) • All parameters in the mathematical model are considered pseudo-observations with a priori information (σ = 0 ÷ ) • Two characteristic groups of interest: - instantaneousparameters (e.g., DD ionospheric delays)- accumulatedparameters (e.g., DD ambiguities) • Flexibility, easy implementation of: • stochastic constraints • fixed constraints • weighted parameters

  9. Methodology – Positioning • MPGPS software was used for all calculations • Mathematical model uses dual-frequency code and phase GPS data • Unknowns: DD Ionospheric delays, Tropospheric TZD per station, DD ambiguities, rover coordinates • Tropospheric TZD calculated at the reference stations and interpolated to the rover location, tightly constrained in GLS • DD Ionospheric delays obtained from the ARMA forecast, constrained to 10-20 cm in GLS • Ambiguity resolution: Least square AMBiguity Decorrelation Algorithm (LAMBDA) • Validation: W-test - minimum of 3 observational epochs (for 5-second sampling rate) and W-test > 4 required for validation

  10. Experiment • GPS data from ASG-EUPOS and EPN networks • 24-hour data set collected on May 8, 2007 with 5-second sampling rate • KATO station selected as a simulated user receiver (rover) • Ambiguity resolution was restarted every 5 minutes (288 times) • Maximum 5 minutes (60 epochs) for initialization allowed 25 km 67 km 50 km Map: www.asg-pl.pl

  11. Experiment • 3 baselines of different length were processed independently (single baseline mode) and also in a multi-baseline mode (all baselines together) • predicted iono model was applied (1-2 hour forecast) • Time-to-fix was analyzed • Ambiguity resolution success rate was analyzed • Ambiguity validation failure ratio was analyzed • ”True” reference coordinates derived using Bernese software • IGS predicted orbits and clocks used (ultra-rapid) 25 km 67 km 50 km Map: www.asg-pl.pl

  12. Test results DD Ionospheric correction residuals, KATO-TARG baseline – 25 km

  13. Test results DD Ionospheric correction residuals, KATO-WODZ baseline – 50 km

  14. Test results DD Ionospheric correction residuals, KATO-KRAW baseline – 67 km

  15. Test results Kinematic position residuals (NEU), KATO-TARG baseline – 25 km

  16. Test results Kinematic position residuals (NEU), KATO-WODZ baseline – 50 km

  17. Test results Kinematic position residuals (NEU), KATO-KRAW baseline – 67 km

  18. Test results Kinematic position residuals (NEU), multi-baseline 25, 50 and 67 km

  19. Test results and analysis Ambiguity resolution statistics *minimum 3 epochs (15 seconds) required for validation

  20. Conclusions • Cm-level horizontal kinematic position accuracy can be achieved using proposed methodology with dual-frequency GPS data over distances of tens of km • When the ionospheric correction accuracy is better that ½ cycle of L1 signal, fixed solution is possible just after a few observational epochs only • The ionosphere forecast model reduce ~ 40% of the ionospheric delay (its accuracy is limited by the base model) • The applicability of the presented forecast model is limited to the distances of 25-50 km in a single-baseline mode and to 60-70 km in a multi-baseline mode

  21. Future Developments • Research on the level of stochastic constraints imposed on the ionospheric corrections • Too tight constraints cause false fixes • Too loose constraints make time-to-fix longer • Test prediction of more accurate ionospheric (base) models • Higher accuracy base models will also improve accuracy of the prediction, and hence, the predicted TEC level will be more beneficial to RTK positioning

More Related