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Journal of Global Positioning Systems
Vol. 11, No. 1, 2012
ISSN 1446-3156 (Print Version)
ISSN 1446-3164 (CD Version)
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JGPS Team Structure, Copyright and Table of Contents |
JGPS Team Structure, Copyright
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Table of Contents
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Editorial: The 10th Anniversary of the Journal of Global Positioning Systems |
Jinling Wang and Yanming Feng
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1. A Novel Real-time Precise Positioning Service System: Global Precise Point Positioning With Regional Augmentation |
Maorong Ge(1), Jan Douša(2), Xingxing Li(1), Markus Ramatschi(1), Thomas Nischan(1), Jens Wickert(1)
(1) German Research Center For Geosciences, Telegrafenberg A17, 14473 Potsdam, Germany
(2) Research Institute of Geodesy, Topography and Cartography, GO Pecny, 250 66 Ondrejov 244, Czech Republic
See Abstract and
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Based on precise real time orbit and clock products from a global network, the standard Precise Point Positioning (PPP)
computes user states, which requires a long initialization time in order to obtain a converged solution. Conversely, the
Network Real-Time Kinematic (NRTK) positioning requires additional corrections from regional or local dense network for
instantaneous ambiguity resolution and state solutions. Both standard PPP and NRTK modes have their own advantages and limitations.
A new approach is developed to generate undifferenced corrections in the observation domain from a regional network which
can be disseminated station-by-station and applied to user observations for instantaneous ambiguity-fixing. In the proposed
service, instantaneous ambiguity resolution is accessible for regions with these observation corrections as regional augmentation
information, so that PPP and RTK are integrated into a unified service.
The paper presented the approach for generating the undifferenced corrections and the realization of the augmented system
in detail. Results from an operational service are introduced as experimental validation.
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2. Demonstration of Inter-Vehicle UWB Ranging to Augment DGPS for Improved Relative Positioning |
Mark G. Petovello(1), Kyle O'Keefe(1), Billy Chanv, Stephanie Spiller(1), Cyril Pedrosa(1), Peng Xie(1), Chaminda Basnayake(2)
(1) Dept. of Geomatics Engineering, University of Calgary Schulich School of Engineering, 2500 University Dr. NW, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
(2) Electrical and Controls Integration (ECI) Laboratory, General Motors Technical Centre
See Abstract and
PDF file
Vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) navigation is reviewed and the concept of differential GPS relative navigation augmented
with ultra-wideband (UWB) and bearing measurements is introduced theoretically. Filtering software is developed
and tested using a data set collected between three moving vehicles in a test in Calgary. Initial results combining
GPS pseudorange, UWB range and bearing measurements show that the additional measurements can significantly improve
horizontal positioning accuracy, particularly in environments where GPS availability is poor. The UWB measurements
generally contributed to an improved along-track relative position while the bearing measurements improved the
across-track position. Whether or not the azimuth of the vehicle making the bearing measurement is known a priori
or estimated by the filter is shown to have very little effect on the performance. Data from the three-vehicle
test was also used to characterize UWB systematic errors in the V2V environment.
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3. An Analysis of Low-Latitude Ionospheric Scintillation and Its Effects on Precise Point Positioning |
Rui Xu(1), Zhizhao Liu(1), Min Li(1,2), Yu Morton(3) and Wu Chen(1)
(1) Department of Land Surveying and Geo-Informatics, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China
(2) GNSS Research Center, Wuhan University, Wuhan, Hubei, China
(3) Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Miami University, Ohio, USA
See Abstract and
PDF file
Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers at low latitudes have a high probability of experiencing severe ionospheric
scintillations. This paper presents the results of scintillation characteristics and scintillation effect on GPS precise
point positioning (PPP), using the data observed by the first ever GNSS scintillation monitoring receiver in Hong Kong.
Ionospheric scintillation data were collected in July and August 2012 using a Septentrio PolaRxS Pro receiver located at
a station (22°12'N, 114°15'E) in the south of Hong Kong. It was observed that August had much more and stronger scintillations
than July in Hong Kong. Amplitude scintillation events ( =0.4) were frequently observed during 21:00-3:00 LT (UT+8 hour) in
July and 20:00-4:00 LT in August. Strong scintillations ( =0.8 or ) were mostly observed during 0:00-1:00 LT in July and
20:00-23:00 LT in August. The effect of scintillations on GPS positioning was evaluated using a dual-frequency PPP method.
It revealed that under the impact of severe ionospheric scintillations ( =1.0 and =1.0 rad), the largest PPP error can
increase to more than 34 cm in the vertical and more than 20 cm in the horizontal components.
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4. Regression and Hypothesis Tests for Multivariate GNSS State Time Series |
Yanming Feng
Science and Engineering Faculty, Queensland University of Technology, GPO Box 2434, Q4001, Australia
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PDF file
A satellite based observation system can continuously or repeatedly generate a user state vector time series that
may contain useful information. One typical example is the collection of International GNSS Services (IGS) station
daily and weekly combined solutions. Another example is the epoch-by-epoch kinematic position time series of a
receiver derived by a GPS real time kinematic (RTK) technique. Although some multivariate analysis techniques have
been adopted to assess the noise characteristics of multivariate state time series, statistic testings are limited
to univariate time series. After review of frequently used hypotheses test statistics in univariate analysis of
GNSS state time series, the paper presents a number of T-squared multivariate analysis statistics for use in the
analysis of multivariate GNSS state time series. These T-squared test statistics have taken the correlation between
coordinate components into account, which is neglected in univariate analysis. Numerical analysis was conducted
with the multi-year time series of an IGS station to schematically demonstrate the results from the multivariate
hypothesis testing in comparison with the univariate hypothesis testing results. The results have demonstrated that,
in general, the testing for multivariate mean shifts and outliers tends to reject less data samples than the testing
for univariate mean shifts and outliers under the same confidence level. It is noted that neither univariate nor
multivariate data analysis methods are intended to replace physical analysis. Instead, these should be treated as
complementary statistical methods for a prior or posteriori investigations. Physical analysis is necessary
subsequently to refine and interpret the results.
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5. New Outlier Separability Test and Its Application in GNSS Positioning |
Jinling Wang and Nathan L Knight
School of Surveying and Geospatial Engineering, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia
See Abstract and
PDF file
With the increasing automation of measurement, adjustment, outlier detection and the consequential use
of the results for real-time applications, reliable methods to detect and mitigate an outlier are required.
However, it is frequently advised that the outlier test should not be used as a means to automatically reject
an outlier. One of the reasons for this is that the outlier detection test at times can identify a wrong
measurement. To address this issue, this paper proposes a new outlier separability test to confirm that
the identified outlier, by the outlier test, can be confidently rejected as the outlier. In addition,
the Minimally Separable Bias and the separability multiplying factor are also obtained for the proposed
outlier separability test. With the initial comparisons between the proposed method with the reapplication
of the global model test method and multiple hypothesis method, the advantages of the new outlier
separability test are demonstrated.
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6. Detecting Severe Weather using GPS Tomography: An Australian Case Study |
Toby Manning(1), Kefei Zhang(1), Witold Rohm(1,2), Suelynn Choy(1), Fabian Hurter (3)
(1) Satellite Positioning for Atmosphere, Climate and Environment (SPACE) Research Centre, RMIT University, VIC, AUSTRALIA
(2) Institute of Geodesy and Geoinformatics, WUELS, Wroclaw, POLAND
(3) Geodesy and Geodynamics Laboratory, Institute of Geodesy and Photogrammetry, ETH Zurich, SWITZERLAND
See Abstract and
PDF file
The dynamics of water vapour (WV) has a strong influence on the formation and lifecycle of severe mesoscale
convective storm systems due to the large energy transfers in the hydrological processes. Contrary to its
importance WV remains poorly understood and inadequately measured both spatially and temporally, especially
in the southern hemisphere where meteorological data are sparse. GPS meteorology is currently one of the most
important atmospheric remote sensing instruments for meteorology and climatology due to its high spatial and
temporal resolutions. Kalman filtering based GPS tomography is a promising method of reconstructing dynamically
changing four dimensional (4D) wet refractivity fields. This method takes advantage of the high density and
homogeneity of ground-based GPS Continuously Operating Reference Station (CORS) networks. Ground-based GPS
tomography has the potential to utilize the dense ground-based infrastructure in Australia providing wet
refractivity field solutions at a high spatial and temporal resolution to improve early detection and prediction
of severe weather. This research presents a case study based on the analysis of an extreme convective super cell
storm in the Victorian region during March 2010 using GPS tomography and the most advanced state-wide CORS
network – GPSnet in Australia. Integrated Precipitable Water Vapour (PWV) estimates derived for the MOBS GPS CORS
station confirmed high time resolution as well as sensitivity to incoming severe weather. A wet refractivity
index adopted for GPS tomographic wet refractivity profiles shows an excessive increase as a response to supercell
thunderstorm formation. Finally a 2D cross section mapping over the lifecycle of this severe weather event concludes
a correlation between the highly dynamic spatial and temporal changes of wet refractivity modelled using 4D GPS
tomography with precipitation intensities measured using weather radars.
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7. A Floor Plan based Vision Navigation System for Indoor Navigation with Smart Device |
Bei Huang and Yang Gao
Department of Geomatics Engineering, University of Calgary
See Abstract and
PDF file
Many smart devices like smart phone and tablet nowadays are featured for hybrid sensor platform of GPS
chip, inertial sensor(s), magnetic compass and other gadgets such as camera and Wi-Fi. The interest to
apply those smart devices for indoor navigation is growing since a large variety of sensors on such devices
enable hybrid location solutions to not only improve the availability of indoor positioning but also
the accuracy and smoothness. However, in deep indoor scenario, the positioning accuracy is still seldom
satisfactory due to large accumulative errors of dead-reckoning sensors. In this paper, a floor plan
based vision navigation method is designed for pedestrian handset indoor application. The floor plan
for buildings is an easily accessible indoor map with detailed path and room information. It can be
matched with the vision measurements from the camera sensor to derive accurate and drift-free positions
even in deep indoor environments. The Random Sample Consensus (RANSAC) algorithm is adopted for robust
matching between floor plan and camera photo. An iPhone Demo App is developed to evaluate the performance
of the designed system and the test results indicate meter-level horizontal accuracy.
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8. Observability Analysis of Non-Holonomic Constraints for Land-Vehicle Navigation Systems |
Xiaoji Niu, You Li, Quan Zhang, Yahao Cheng and Chuang Shi
GNSS Research Center, Wuhan University
See Abstract and
PDF file
Over the past decades, the integration of a MEMS-based (Micro-Electro Mechanical Systems) Inertial
Measuring Unit (IMU) with a GNSS receiver-chip has become commonly used navigation techniques by
virtue of their advantages such as small sized, light weight, with low power consumption, and have
extremely low cost. To provide accurate and reliable positioning solutions with a low-cost GNSS/MEMS
INS system, it is valuable to introduce specific auxiliary information that can improve the navigation
performance without adding extra hardware costs. The auxiliary information is especially useful during
GNSS outage periods or when the vehicle is moving with low dynamics (e.g. no change of attitude and
accelerations) which lead to the poor observability of the GNSS/INS navigation system. For LVN
applications, Non-Holonomic Constraints (NHC) is one of the most common types of auxiliary information.
This paper focuses on studying the contributions of the NHC from the perspective of observability,
which provides a deeper insight and shows how the NHC improves the navigation solutions. Considering
several typical vehicle dynamics, it is also clear to see the effects of the NHC to the inertial
navigation under different situations. Both theoretical analysis and simulation tests have shown
that the contributions of the NHC to the estimation of a certain state depend on both the current
vehicle dynamic and the relative error magnitude of this state compared to the coupled state under
the current vehicle dynamic; both the accelerating and turning motions can enhance the contributions
of the NHC to the estimation of both the yaw and the pitch, and such contributions will be stronger
with a higher vehicle speed; the NHC has significant effects on controlling the roll in all motion
status. Furthermore, the effects of the NHC on the estimation of the biases of both gyroscopes and
accelerometers are also analyzed. The outcomes of this paper show that the proposed observability
analysis is beneficial to the utilization of NHC or other priori information in low-cost navigation systems.
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Corporate Members of CPGPS |
Corporate Members of CPGPS
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Instructions to Authors |
Instructions to Authors
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CPGPS Team Structure |
CPGPS Management Team (2012) Structure
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© CPGPS, 2008. All the rights reserved.
Last Modified: February, 2013
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