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Galileo Signal and Positioning Performance Analysis Based on Four IOV Satellites
25
Citations
17
References
2014
Year
Systematic BiasEngineeringMeasurementGlobal Navigation Satellite SystemPositioning SystemPositioning Performance AnalysisEducationPrecision NavigationLocalizationPrecise Satellite OrbitGlobal Positioning SystemCalibrationPositioningInstrumentationFour Iov SatellitesGeodesyGalileo SignalSatellite NetworkSatellite Signal ProcessingComputer EngineeringSatellite Navigation SystemsRadarSatellite OrbitAerospace EngineeringGlobal Satellite Navigation SystemsSpace Geodesy
With the availability of Galileo signals from four in-orbit validation (IOV) satellites, positioning with Galileo-only observations has become possible, which allows us to assess its positioning performance. The performance of the Galileo system is evaluated in respect of carrier-to-noise density ratio (C/N 0 ), pseudorange multipath (including noise), Galileo broadcast satellite orbit and satellite clock errors, and single point positioning (SPP) accuracy in Galileo-only mode as well as in GPS/Galileo combined mode. The precision of the broadcast ephemeris data is assessed using the precise satellite orbit and clock products from the Institute of Astronomical and Physical Geodesy of the Technische Universität München (IAPG/TUM) as references. The GPS-Galileo time offset (GGTO) is estimated using datasets from different types of GNSS receivers and the results indicate that a systematic bias exists between different receiver types. Positioning solutions indicate that Galileo-only SPP can achieve a three-dimensional position accuracy of about six metres. The integration of Galileo and GPS data can improve the positioning accuracies by about 10% in the vertical components compared with GPS-only solutions.
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