Simulation Studies to Evaluate the Impact of Receiver Clock Modelling in Flight Navigation

Publikation: KonferenzbeitragPosterForschung

Autoren

  • Ankit Jain
  • Steffen Schön

Organisationseinheiten

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Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seitenumfang1
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2019
VeranstaltungFrontiers of Geodetic Science - Messepiazza 1, Stuttgart, Deutschland
Dauer: 17 Sept. 201919 Sept. 2019
https://www.frontiers-of-geodetic-science.de/

Konferenz

KonferenzFrontiers of Geodetic Science
KurztitelFROGS 2019
Land/GebietDeutschland
OrtStuttgart
Zeitraum17 Sept. 201919 Sept. 2019
Internetadresse

Abstract

GNSS based positioning and navigation always require perfect synchronization between the receiver and satellites clock. Further, due to the limited frequency stability of the GNSS receiver’s internal oscillator, an additional receiver clock error has to be estimated along with the coordinates. Thus, the observation geometry is changed; it results in some disadvantages which are: at least four satellites are required for positioning or navigation, high correlations are generated among the estimated receiver clock, the up-component and tropospheric delay, and the up-component is estimated less precisely than the horizontal coordinates. Research has shown that these drawbacks can be avoided by replacing the receiver internal oscillator with a more stable external clock and modelling its operation in a physically meaningful way over intervals in which the oscillator noise is far less than the observation noise. This method is known as receiver clock modelling (RCM). In this contribution, we will present a simulation study which is done to evaluate the gain in performance by RCM in code-based GNSS flight navigation where the height component is of relevance. Different flight test trajectories are simulated with code observation of a multi-GNSS system. Observations for different test trajectories are evaluated with and without RCM using different types of external clocks. The gain in precision of the coordinates for different trajectories w.r.t different clocks will be presented.

Zitieren

Simulation Studies to Evaluate the Impact of Receiver Clock Modelling in Flight Navigation. / Jain, Ankit; Schön, Steffen.
2019. Postersitzung präsentiert bei Frontiers of Geodetic Science, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Deutschland.

Publikation: KonferenzbeitragPosterForschung

Jain, A & Schön, S 2019, 'Simulation Studies to Evaluate the Impact of Receiver Clock Modelling in Flight Navigation', Frontiers of Geodetic Science, Stuttgart, Deutschland, 17 Sept. 2019 - 19 Sept. 2019. https://doi.org/10.15488/5367
Jain, A., & Schön, S. (2019). Simulation Studies to Evaluate the Impact of Receiver Clock Modelling in Flight Navigation. Postersitzung präsentiert bei Frontiers of Geodetic Science, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Deutschland. https://doi.org/10.15488/5367
Jain A, Schön S. Simulation Studies to Evaluate the Impact of Receiver Clock Modelling in Flight Navigation. 2019. Postersitzung präsentiert bei Frontiers of Geodetic Science, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Deutschland. doi: 10.15488/5367
Jain, Ankit ; Schön, Steffen. / Simulation Studies to Evaluate the Impact of Receiver Clock Modelling in Flight Navigation. Postersitzung präsentiert bei Frontiers of Geodetic Science, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Deutschland.1 S.
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AU - Schön, Steffen

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N2 - GNSS based positioning and navigation always require perfect synchronization between the receiver and satellites clock. Further, due to the limited frequency stability of the GNSS receiver’s internal oscillator, an additional receiver clock error has to be estimated along with the coordinates. Thus, the observation geometry is changed; it results in some disadvantages which are: at least four satellites are required for positioning or navigation, high correlations are generated among the estimated receiver clock, the up-component and tropospheric delay, and the up-component is estimated less precisely than the horizontal coordinates. Research has shown that these drawbacks can be avoided by replacing the receiver internal oscillator with a more stable external clock and modelling its operation in a physically meaningful way over intervals in which the oscillator noise is far less than the observation noise. This method is known as receiver clock modelling (RCM). In this contribution, we will present a simulation study which is done to evaluate the gain in performance by RCM in code-based GNSS flight navigation where the height component is of relevance. Different flight test trajectories are simulated with code observation of a multi-GNSS system. Observations for different test trajectories are evaluated with and without RCM using different types of external clocks. The gain in precision of the coordinates for different trajectories w.r.t different clocks will be presented.

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