GPS World 200907
GPS World 200907
GPS World 200907
COVER STORY
OPINIONS &
DEPARTMENTS
INNOVATION
Where is GIOVE-A Exactly? 42
Using Microwaves and Laser Ranging for Precise Orbit Determination
Though Galileos GIOVE-A is a test
satellite not necessarily ready for
scientific use, orbit analyses with
a reduced accuracy can help to
identify weaknesses and suggest
improvements. This month, the
authors share work being carried out
to precisely determine the orbit of
GIOVE-A using SLR and microwave
observations. This preliminary
investigation will benefit the
procedures to be implemented for
the future Galileo constellation.
By Erik Schnemann, Tim A.
Springer, Michiel Otten, and Matthias Becker
Graphics courtesy of Topcon
Out in Front 6
Next Is the New Now
By Alan Cameron
Letters to the Editor 8
DAGR, GAO Furors
Expert Advice 12
All Rise, GPS Entering the Court
By Len Jacobson
GPS0709_003.pgs 06.22.2009 08:19 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 4
WHATS HOT AT GPSWORLD.COM
Online Interviews
From the European Navigation Conference
Watch now at www.gpsworld.com/videos
Mikel Miller
President, Institute of Navigation
(ION); chair of the Joint Service Data
Exchange; Technical Director of the
Advanced Guidance Division, Air
Force Research Laboratory
Peter Grognard
President and CEO,
Septentrio Navigation
Pascal Campagne
Coordinator, Organization of European
GNSS Equipment and Service
Industries (OREGIN), now merged
with Galileo Services
Hottest Pages @ GPSWorld.com
May 16, 2009 June 15, 2009
1
GPS at Risk: Doomsday 2010
2
GNSS Leaders to Watch (May issue)
3
Block IIF: Follow-on, or Failure?
4
Parkinson Prescribes Remedy
for GAO Report Alarm
5
New GPS Satellites Problems Indicated
6
Innovation: Precise Point Positioning
7
Taking up Indoor Positions: Qualcomm and
Skyhook (Utilities & Communications newsletter)
8
Broadcom Introduces PND on a Chip
9
Consumer-Grade GPS Receivers for GIS Data
Collection (Survey & Construction newsletter)
10
Air Force Space Command
Committed to GPS Health
Wide Awake
Staying Up Late
Editor and resident curmudgeon
Alan Cameron writes an after-hours
blog on all matters GNSS. It started
with jet lag in Naples while attending the European
Navigation Conference and proceeds from there.
Recent topics include:
virtually infected
GAO report, long form and short
IIF stands for two furies
long-term commitment
the real race in GNSS
software receivers
jamming: the Queen is not amused
hard work in the GNSS trenches
Galileos chamber of commerce
Peruse the blog at
www.gpsworld.com/wideawake
VIDEOS GNSS BLOG
Whoa, GAO!
Full Report Worth the Read
By Don Jewell
There is a 61-page version of the
GAO report and a 15-page version.
My assessment of the report has changed markedly
since I read the full report. Most of my objections
concerning the Testimony version delivered to Congress
were answered in the full-length report.
The full-length report is educational, even enlightening,
although the recommendations are woefully inade-
quate. I have hopes that the dialog as well as the intense
interest the report has created will continue for some
time, possibly for years. Thats because a GAO report,
by definition, should be much more than a conclusion or
recommendation. It serves as an excellent quick look at
a critical part of our national security infrastructure, the
Global Positioning System.
Read full column at www.gpsworld.com/whoa
MILITARY & GOVERNMENT NEWSLETTER
GPS0709_004.pgs 06.22.2009 08:19 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
SOLUTIONS AND PRODUCTS FOR A
NEW ERA IN SATELLITE NAVIGATION
Modernized GPS ...
NavX
-NCS RF Navigation
Constellation Simulator
Now Supports Galileo CBOC
and Japanese QZSS Signals
www.ifen.com
sales@ifen.com
GPS0709_005.pgs 06.11.2009 13:39 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
OUT IN FRONT
Published monthly
www.gpsworld.com
W
ere in a hurry. We know
what we want, we have
developed the technology to
achieve it, but . . . we just cant get there
from here fast enough. Something stands
in the way.
The Atlantic Interoperability Initiative
to Reduce Emissions (AIRE), conducted
jointly by the U.S. Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), the European
Commission, and several airlines, plans
to demonstrate how GPS technology can
cut flight times and reduce fuel use by
thousands of pounds per longhaul flight.
A green ticket, some call it.
Test aircraft will fly GPS-assisted
routes that run straighter than the courses
they ordinarily follow. They will climb
continuously instead of in steps, and
approach destinations on tailored paths,
burning less fuel by running at idle for the
last 100 miles.
These new navigational tools go by the
name NextGen, for Next Generation Air
Transportation System, the coming wave
in air-traffic control. The FAA plans to
implement it by 2020 for planes flying in
controlled airspace in the United States.
Some say NextGen can happen today;
they want what they call NowGen. They
say whats holding it up is an outdated
air-traffic system and the FAA.
Advocates including the Air Transport
Association of America say NowGen
could produce more than $12 billion
in economic benefits through 2012.
They remind us that flight delays caused
by constraints in the current air-traffic
system may cost more than $9 billion a
year. We have the tools today and really
shouldnt be forced to wait until 2020.
J. Randolph Babbitt, in his first speech
as FAA administrator on June 10, quoth
NextGen is just flat out not moving fast
enough. I want more, and I want more
faster. However, industry critics see a
long history of the FAA not showing up
or simply not holding up its end of the
deal in implementing new procedures.
Much of this capability has been
around for some time, they maintain;
manufacturers started delivering
GPS-equipped passenger planes that
could have supported these kinds of
improvements as early as 1995.
Theres a lot more, but Ill stash the
materials on the Wide Awake blog while
hurrying to the next several points.
This issues Letters section flames with
passion over outdated specs by which the
soldiers GPS handheld was designed;
further, over a flawed award process
for Block IIF and prolonged Block III
contract exercise that together may
create gaps in the GPS constellation over
the next eight years. Business Outlook
warns of irrelevance-at-birth for Galileo
unless the European Union issues with
alacrity a signal-in-space interface control
document, so that manufacturers can
actually make GPS/Galileo chips.
Government moves exceedingly
and sometimes maddeningly slow,
except when invading the domains of
other governments. To govern means
to keep a steady hand on the helm.
The line between steady and heavy
sometimes eludes the rulers, er, that is,
the representatives of the people.
Letters to Editor invited: email to eic@gpsworld.com.
Next Is the New Now
EDITORIAL
Editor in Chief Alan Cameron | acameron@questex.com
Managing Editor Tracy Cozzens | tcozzens@questex.com
Art Director Charles Park | cpark@questex.com
EDITORIAL OFFICES
201 Sandpointe Avenue, Suite 500,
Santa Ana, CA 92707-8716 USA
714-338-6700 | Fax 714-338-6717
www.gpsworld.com | info@gpsworld.com
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Innovation Richard Langley | lang@unb.ca
LBS Kevin Dennehy | kdennehy@questex.com
Mass Market OEM Stephen Colwell | scolwell@questex.com
Military/Government Don Jewell | djewell@questex.com
Precision OEM Rob Lorimer | rlorimer@questex.com
Survey Eric Gakstatter | egakstatter@questex.com
Transport/Avionics Bill Thompson | bthompson@questex.com
Utilities/Communications Janice Partyka | jpartyka@questex.com
ADVERTISING
Publisher Kristina Panter
kpanter@questex.com | 714-338-6733
Eastern Region/International Account Manager Michael Eager
meager@questex.com | 714-338-6738
Western Regional Account Manager & Classifieds
Jeannie Hortness | jhortness@questex.com | 714-338-6732
Group Marketing Director Kristina Kronenberg
kkronenberg@questex.com | 714-338-6743
Sales & Marketing Coordinator Sarah Joy Obaa
sobana@questex.com | 714-338-6763
ADVERTISING OFFICES
201 Sandpointe Avenue, Suite 500, Santa Ana, CA 92707-8716 USA
714-338-6700 | Fax 714-338-6717
PUBLISHING SERVICES
Production Manager Sue Gigliotti | sgigliotti@questex.com
Audience Development Manager Deborah Gullian
dgullian@questex.com
PRODUCTION OFFICE 306 West Michigan St., Suite 200,
Duluth, MN 55802, USA; 218-279-8840
CIRCULATION/SUBSCRIBER SERVICES
gpsworld@halldata.com | USA: 866-344-1315 (toll free)
International: 1-847-763-9594
QUESTEX MEDIA GROUP, INC.
President & CEO: Kerry C. Gumas
EVP & CFO: Tom Caridi
EVP: Tony DAvino
EVP: Gideon Dean
QUESTEX WORLDWIDE HEADQUARTERS
275 Grove Street, Newton, MA 02466, USA
617-219-8300 | Toll-Free 888-552-4346 | Fax 617-219-8310
MANUSCRIPTS: GPS World welcomes unsolicited articles but cannot be held responsible
for their safekeeping or return. Send to: 201 Sandpointe Avenue, Suite 500, Santa Ana,
CA 92707-8716 USA. Every precaution is taken to ensure accuracy, but publishers cannot
accept responsibility for the accuracy of information supplied herein or for any opinion
expressed. REPRINTS: Reprints of all articles are available (500 minimum). Contact
800-290-5460, ext. 100, e-mail GPSWorld@reprintbuyer.com. DIRECT MAIL LIST
RENTAL: Ilene Schwartz, Kroll Direct, 216-371-1667, fax 216-371-1669 e-mail Ilene@
krolldirect.com. SUBSCRIBER SERVICES: To subscribe, change your address, and all
other services, e-mail gpsworld@halldata.com or call 866-344-1315 (1-847-763-9594 outside
the U.S.). PERMISSIONS: Contact 800-494-9051 ext. 100 or questexpermissions@
reprintbuyer.com. INTERNATIONAL LICENSING: Contact e-mail info@gpsworld.com.
ACCOUNTING OFFICE and OFFICE OF PUBLICATION: 306 West Michigan
St., Ste 200, Duluth, MN 55802, USA.
GPS WORLD does not verify any claims or other information appearing in any of the
advertisements contained in the publication and cannot take any responsibility for any losses
or other damages incurred by readers in reliance on such content.
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 6
I want more, and I want more
faster, says J. Randolph Babbitt.
GPS0709_006r1.pgs 06.23.2009 09:32 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
Try ArcPad Today!
Download a free evaluation of ArcPad software and see how it
improves your eld productivity. Visit www.esri.com/gpsworld.
ArcPad
GAO, FIGURE 5 Probability of maintaining constellation of at least 18, 21, and 24 GPS
satellites based on reliability data as of March 2009 and a two-year GPS III launch delay
1)
Position
A New Direction
in Geo-Imaging
MEN K
1/3
END
City Name
Structure Type
Photographer
Camera ID No.
Department
DATA ENTRY SCREEN
SELECT
Denver
CapitaI BuiIding
WiIIiams
:104.59.1550"
N: 39.44.3520"
TM
Tel ephone
GPS0709_013.pgs 06.17.2009 13:32 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
EXPERT ADVICE
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 14
ADVISORS UPDATE
ALISON BROWN, president and
CEO of NAVSYS Corporation,
announced that NAVSYS received
the Talon Namath Phase III
Follow-on Contract from U.S.
Air Force Space Command 50th
Contracts with funding provided
by Air Combat Command. NAVSYS developed this GPS
enhancement, which transfers zero age of data GPS ephemeris
corrections over Link 16, a secure military communications
channel, to Air Force planes and GPS guided weapons.
EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD
Vidal Ashkenazi Nottingham Scientific Ltd., United Kingdom
Sally Basker General Lighthouse Authorities, United Kingdom & Ireland
Alison K. Brown NAVSYS Corporation, United States
Pascal Campagne France Developpement Conseil, France
Ismael Colomina Institut de Geomtica, Spain
Jordi Corbera Spanish Institute of Navigation, Spain
Paul A. Cross University College London, United Kingdom
Nicolas de Chezelles Ministry of Defense, France
Clem Driscoll C.J. Driscoll & Associates, United States
Brje Forssell Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
Alain Geiger Institute of Geodesy and Photogrammetry, Switzerland
Art Gower Lockheed Martin, United States
Sergio Greco Alcatel Alenia Spazio, Italy
Jrg Hahn European Space Agency, The Netherlands
Michael Healy Astrium Limited, United Kingdom
Gnter Hein University of the Federal Armed Forces, Germany
Larry D. Hothem U.S. Geological Survey, United States
Len Jacobson Global Systems & Marketing, United States
William J. Klepczynski Institute for Defense Analyses, United States
Grard Lachapelle The University of Calgary, Canada
Wolfgang Lechner Telematica, Germany
Jingnan Liu National Research Center for Satellite Systems, China
Pietro Lo Galbo European Space Agency, The Netherlands
Keith D. McDonald NavtechGPS, United States
Terence J. McGurn Consultant, United States
Jules G. McNeff Overlook Systems Technologies, United States
James Miller NASA, United States
Terry Moore University of Nottingham, United Kingdom
Ruth Neilan Jet Propulsion Laboratory, United States
Bradford W. Parkinson Stanford University, United States
Ivan G. Petrovski iP Solutions, Japan
Mario Proietti TechnoCom Corporation, United States
Jayanta Ray Accord Software and Systems, India
Martin U. Ripple European Aeronautics Defense and Space, Germany
Michael E. Shaw National Space-based PNT Office, United States
Giorgio Solari Galileo Supervisory Authority, Belgium
Jac Spaans European Group of Institutes of Navigation, Netherlands
Thomas Stansell Jr. Stansell Consulting, United States
F. Michael Swiek U.S. GPS Industry Council, United States
David Turner Department of State, United States
A.J. Van Dierendonck AJ Systems, United States
Frantisek Vejrazka Czech Technical University, Czech Republic
Akio Yasuda Tokyo University of Marine Science & Technology, Japan
LEN JACOBSON is a consultant to the GPS industry and has participated as an expert witness
in many cases involving GPS. He is the author of the book GNSS Markets and Applications,
published in 2007.
Alison Brown
and never recover. As a result of these
tests, the tracking company purchased
replacements and then sued the receiver
company for the costs, claiming a latent
defect in their products. The jury ruled
for the tracking company and ordered
the receiver company to pay for the
replacement receivers.
Crash Course. Another case involved
a fatal accident caused by the crash of
an automobile companys test van into
an open-structured, desert racing car.
The test van had GPS onboard as it was
performing experiments. The data showed
the speed and location of the van up to the
time of the collision, and that was enough
to cause a settlement.
GPS has figured in countless cases of
property incursions where GPS survey
data has been used to prove exactly where
one property begins and another ends.
Probably the most celebrated and
precedent-setting cases occurred in 2001,
when a driver sued a rental-car company
because it levied a $450 surcharge when
a concealed GPS unit indicated he was
speeding while driving the rental car. The
judge threw out the case because the rental
company failed to disclose that it had
hidden GPS unit in the car, and that it
had no right to collect a fine for speeding
as only a government entity could do so.
Several ongoing cases involve patent
disputes about GPS applications and
receiver designs, but all are subject to non-
disclosure restrictions.
Suspect Tracking. In the criminal
arena, a large number of cases involve
GPS use to track suspects. That sort
of data was used to help convict Laci
Petersons husband of murder in a recent
and celebrated California trial. Today,
courts all over America are pondering
whether the covert use of GPS tracking is
an invasion of privacy and should require
a warrant before police can use it.
Authorities use GPS quite openly
to keep track of felons, child molesters,
parolees, indicted suspects out on bail,
people sentenced to home restraint, and so
on. Supposedly, in these cases the person
has already broken the law so their rights
are abrogated. Or, they may have signed
an agreement giving consent to such
tracking in exchange for their conditional
release.
In one instance, a paroled sex offender
in Florida was rearrested when the tracking
company informed the sheriff that he was
not where he was supposed to be. After
an examination of the data and with help
from Google maps, it was determined that
if the tracking companys data was correct,
the parolee had to be traveling at 90 miles
per hour across a field where there was no
road. He was released forthwith.
Law enforcement routinely uses GPS
to locate stolen cars equipped with services
such as OnStar.
In Malibu, California, two fishermen
were stopped by fish and game deputies
and charged with illegal taking of lobsters.
The officers had photos and onboard GPS
fixes to present in court. Unfortunately
for the district attorney, the wily defense
claimed that since magnetic north had
moved more than 100 meters since the
maps that Fish and Game relied on were
made, the maps were not accurate, and
therefore the GPS data was inaccurate. The
jury did not seem interested in science, the
law, or the facts, and it acquitted the lead
defendant. His partner chose to plead to a
lesser charge and was fined, while the boat
owner went free.
Market Outlook. It is highly likely that
litigation regarding IP will grow as more
companies profit from GPS technology,
in many instances not knowing that
someone holds a patent on which they
could possibly be infringing. Criminal
proceedings will increase as well, now that
GPS tracking is relatively inexpensive for
law enforcement to deploy. Meanwhile
legislatures and high courts ponder how
to deal with potential violations of privacy
and the need for warrants.
GPS0709_014.pgs 06.22.2009 08:21 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS0709_015.pgs 06.11.2009 13:42 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
Policy and system news and developments | GPS | Galileo | GLONASS
SYSTEM
THE
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 16
By Grard Lachapelle and Richard Ong
The current GPS constellation of 30+ satellites provides a
high level of availability, reliability, and accuracy to users.
Centimeter-level accuracy requires the use of carrier-
phase measurements and the resolution of associated
integer ambiguities; success is a function of the number
of satellites and their geometry and duration of observa-
tions. Given that the use of additional satellites is always
preferable, the question arises as to the gain that might be
achieved using combined GPS-GLONASS. Recently, a
renewed commitment by the Russian government has
increased the GLONASS constellation to a 1520 range.
Under a worst-case replenishment scenario foreseen by
the recent U.S. Government Accountability Office report,
the number of operational GPS satellites might drop below
24 in the next two years due to procurement delays
giving this question added and urgent relevance. FIGURES 1
and 2 provide part of the answer: the horizontal dilution of
precision (HDOP) at the 95 percentile level for a depleted,
19-satellite GPS constellation and a 19+16 GPS-GLONASS
constellation. The figures were obtained by computing
HDOP values on a 20-degree grid at time intervals of one
minute for 24 hours and calculating the 95 percentile
values at these points, using an elevation mask of 5.
No constraints were applied. Although most GPS values
are below 2, which is excellent, regions of significant
size have values between 6 and 10, which is marginal.
The corresponding values for a 30-satellite constellation
would be consistently below 2. The corresponding HDOP
values for a combined GPS-GLONASS constellation are
consistently below 2.
More telling are the reliability parameters (FIGURES 3 and 4).
These are 95-percentile horizontal probable errors (HPE) that
would go undetected, were they to occur, due to the lack of
redundancy. They are also called external reliability numbers
and are closely related to RAIM values. Standard deviations
of 2 and 6 meters were assigned to GPS and GLONASS
code measurements, respectively. The higher GLONASS
value accounts for larger orbital errors. A 0.1-percent
significance level and 90-percent test power were used.
As expected, the reliability of the 19-satellite GPS
constellation is very poor, given that errors of up to 300
meters would go undetected. The corresponding values for
a 30-satellite constellation, not shown here, all fall below
20 meters. The corresponding HPE values for a combined
p FIGURE 2 HDOP for a combined 19-satellite GPS and
16-satellite GLONASS constellation
p FIGURE 3 Maximum horizontal error probable for a 19-satellite
GPS constellation
p FIGURE 1 HDOP for a 19-satellite GPS constellation
Can GLONASS Alleviate
GAO Malaise?
GPS0709_016.pgs 06.22.2009 08:22 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS0709_017.pgs 06.17.2009 13:32 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 18
THE SYSTEM
Survey/Construction
Comments on GAO
By Eric Gakstatter
The recent GAO report has alarmed
the GPS community. Is a high level
of concern justified? As with most
answers about GPS, it depends.
While most GPS users ponder the
effects of a potential drop below 24
satellites seemingly a long way
from 31 real-time, high-precision
users should worry about a drop of
only two or three satellites, unless
they can use GLONASS.
Surveyors, engineers, construc-
tion companies, and GIS users who
rely on real-time, high-precision posi-
tioning require a lot of observables,
from at least six satellites that
produce a low position dilution of
precision (PDOP) value. These real-
time kinematic (RTK) users will be
among the first affected by any
degradation in the GPS constellation.
If the constellation dropped five
satellites tomorrow, typical con-
sumer GPS users wouldnt feel the
pain. They would still be able to navi-
gate from Point A to Point B, to their
favorite fishing spot, and so on. Even
pilots wouldnt have any problems
using GPS for aviation navigating.
But professionals who have spent
tens of thousands of dollars on GPS
equipment to increase their produc-
tivity would feel the difference im-
mediately during certain parts of the
day, due to lack of satellites and an
increased PDOP. Their productivity
would drop significantly.
GPS-GLONASS constellation are much
better, below 50 meters for much of
the world, except specific regions.
Kinematic GPS-GLONASS
GLONASS satellites can also help in
resolving carrier-phase ambiguities
faster and more reliably, despite the
limitations of the GLONASS FDMA
signals, together with associated solu-
tions. We illustrate this through a series
of short kinematic test-runs conducted
in March at speeds of up to 50 kilo-
meters per hour, using two NovAtel
OEMV1-G receivers and GPS-702-GG
antennas. The OEMV1-G provides L1
GPS and GLONASS code and carrier-
phase measurements. The reference
unit was located within 1 kilometer
from the mobile unit, and the mask
angle due to surrounding mountainous
topography reached 25 degrees. The
number of GPS satellites ranged be-
tween 5 and 11 and that of GLONASS
satellites between 5 and 7. The data
was reduced using PLANSoft, a
proprietary carrier-phase ambiguity-
resolution software developed internally.
The combined effect of noise and
multipath double-difference mea-
surements was of the order of 60
centimeters for the code and 8 to 10
millimeters for the carrier phase, at
the one sigma level, for either GPS or
GLONASS, as shown in FIGURE 5. The
corresponding undifferenced 1-sigma
figures are therefore 30 centimeters
and 4 to 5 millimeters, respectively.
Seven test runs of 200 seconds were
completed. In GPS-only mode, the
L1 integer ambiguities were resolved
in four cases while in GLONASS-only
mode, the ambiguities were resolved
in three cases. For the combined
case, ambiguity resolution was suc-
cessful in all cases. These results are
obviously very limited, and one should
not extrapolate them automatically to
other applications. They nevertheless
indicate the advantages of a com-
bined GPS-GLONASS approach. This
is of course well known and is the
reason why high-end GNSS manufac-
turers have offered combined GPS-
GLONASS equipment for a few years.
These results show that the
benefits of a combined approach are
indeed significant. While high-end
equipment is available for various
classes of users, location-based
services, which use low-cost chipsets,
do not have access to equivalent
equipment at this time. The question
then becomes: when will chipset
manufacturers come up with GPS-
GLONASS chipsets?
GRARD LACHAPELLE is a professor and RICHARD
ONG an MSc candidate in geomatics
engineering at the University of Calgary.
p FIGURE 4 Maximum horizontal error
probable for a combined 19-satellite GPS
and 16-satellite GLONASS constellation
p FIGURE 5 Combined effect of noise and multipath in double-difference kinematic mode
Continued on page 41
GLONASS Data
Innovation editor Richard
Langley and University of
New Brunswick colleagues
have also published satellite availability
studies: see www.gpsworld.com/glo.
MORE ONLINE
GPS0709_018.pgs 06.22.2009 08:22 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS0709_019-020.pgs 06.11.2009 11:41 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS0709_021-022.pgs 06.11.2009 11:43 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS0709_019-020.pgs 06.11.2009 11:41 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS0709_021-022.pgs 06.11.2009 11:43 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS0709_025-026.pgs 06.11.2009 11:38 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
2 different mounting
options:
female thread 1-14
3 holes M5 50
GPS0709_023-024r1.pgs 06.25.2009 09:38 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
2 different mounting
options:
female thread 1-14
3 holes M5 50
GPS0709_023-024r1.pgs 06.25.2009 09:38 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS0709_025-026.pgs 06.11.2009 11:38 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
BUSINESS
Industry news and developments | GPS | Galileo | GLONASS
THE
Broadcom Introduces PND on a Chip
MASS MARKET OEM
Broadcom has released what it calls
the first PND on a chip, a new
navigation processor and power man-
agement unit (PMU) designed for
personal navigation devices (PNDs).
The BCM4760 system-on-a-chip
(SoC) includes a GPS baseband, radio
frequency (RF) circuitry, low noise
amplifier (LNA), and high-powered
applications and graphics processors
to drive 3D user interfaces.
By integrating many of the nec-
essary, and costly, external com-
ponents required for a competitive
product, Broadcom aims to afford
PND manufacturers the ability to
create engaging 3D graphical user
interfaces (GUIs), accelerating map-
rendering and eliminating lags and
blocky renderings of many current
devices. Marketing Director Dave
Murray characterized it as a more
spectacular and interactive GUI, now
capable of 10 updates per second, as
opposed to one update per second
that has been the norm.
The BCM4760 is a low-power SoC
that combines a high-performance
GPS receiver and baseband, an
ARM11 processor, an OpenGL ES
1.1/OpenVG 1.0-compliant graphics
processor, and analog technology in a
built-in applications processor power-
ful enough to serve as the core for a
full range of devices beyond the PND
market, including personal media
players, gaming devices and other
mobile products. A 65-nanometer
chip carrying an audio codec, touch
screen controller, and USB 2.0 con-
troller with high-speed transceiver, all
on a single die, it provides integrated
support for Broadcoms other tech-
nologies including Bluetooth, Wi-Fi,
and combo-chip solutions.
A fabless semiconductor company
with 2008 revenue of $4.66 billion
headquartered in Irvine, California,
Broadcom acquired GPS chipmaker
Global Locate in June 2007. Broad-
com stated it planned to combine
Global Locates GPS technology with
its own Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and cellular
technologies, and supply that combi-
nation to mobile handset makers.
PNDs and MIDs. Despite the rela-
tive slackening in the PND market
foreseen by some analysts, Broad-
com remains committed to it and
seeks to create new pricepoints in
the PND marketplace presum-
ably to stimulate demand. Murray
stated that while the 4760 could
potentially be used in a smartphone,
such products would probably prefer
combo chips that Broadcom also pro-
duces, rather than ones with applica-
tion processors.
He spoke of the rise of mobile
internet devices, or MIDs, which the
4760 suits. Hybrids between smart-
phones and small laptops, the MIDs
are a new category of mobile devices
for both business and consumer
users, also called touch tablets.
Video- as well as positioning-enabled,
these devices do not currently per-
form both functions simultaneously,
although they could. Only the con-
tent is lacking. But Murray sees that
as a soon-to-develop field.
According to the company, its
BCM4760 enables system manu-
facturers to create a platform meet-
ing the needs of the entry-level,
mid-level, and high-level GPS PND
market segments. The BCM4760 and
BCM59040 are now sampling.
Applanix Introduces Flight Management and Direct Georeferencing System
www.gpsworld.com July 2009 | GPS World 27
Applanix of Richmond Hill, Canada,
has introduced the POSTrack 410
flight management and direct geore-
ferencing system for medium-format
airborne digital photogrammetric
cameras to maximize the efficiency
and productivity of airborne mapping,
the company said.
POSTrack has a built-in POS AV
GNSS-Inertial Navigation System
(INS) for direct georeferencing of
airborne images. Flight management
features include mission planning,
pilot guidance, automatic stabilized
mount control, and automatic camera
triggering at pre-planned intervals.
The POS AV features include in-air
initialization, leveling of stabilized
mounts, automatic drift correction,
GNSS position translation using en-
coder data from stabilized mounts,
and generation of exterior orienta-
tion of each image for the mapping
process.
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
GPS0709_027.pgs 06.22.2009 08:23 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
THE BUSINESS
TechnoCom Corporation has launched a mobile advertis-
ing and marketing content-delivery platform, SpotOn
GPS, providing comprehensive turn-by-turn navigation,
search, and mapping. A white-branded mobile platform,
SpotOn GPS represents the first U.S. offering of advertis-
ing/marketing integrated with navigation. The sweet spot
is the added revenue stream it provides to affinity groups,
brands, and most important of all for the future of loca-
tion-based advertising (LBA) and location-based services
(LBS) wireless carriers.
A hosted solution, SpotOn GPS delivers ads to the
cell-phone handset as part of a navigation/local search
platform. It delivers customizable interactive and loca-
tion-aware advertising, offers, coupons, and loyalty-build-
ing promotional messages. According to TechnoCom,
it increases the effectiveness and reach of advertising
and promotional messaging by presenting it to consum-
ers at select times, in the right places, close to points of
sale enhancing the return on investment from mobile
advertising dollars.
SpotOn GPS has the potential to reach a wide range
of end-users with access to international local search da-
tabases, and text- and voice-prompted instructions in 13
languages, with more being added.
Early evidence suggests LBA yields significantly
higher conversion rates with direct response modes,
such as click-to-locate and click-to-navigate, compared to
nonlocation- based advertising, says ABI Research prac-
tice director Dominique Bonte. LBA and navigation are a
winning combination, mutually reinforcing each other. For
the end-user, ad-funded navigation represents a highly
valued balance between exposure to advertising and ac-
cess to reduced cost, or potentially free, navigation, thus
driving adoption of both.
According to TechnoCom, groups that are defined by
a membership or community are in excellent position to
brand their own navigation offering and participate in the
flexible revenue streams offered by SpotOn GPS. Affin-
ity groups often have partners that they want to cross-
promote so there is no need to go find ads. Affinity
groups such as airline mileage-rewards programs, shop-
ping clubs, or travel clubs can offer search listings of their
inventory, suppliers, and partners.
A turn-key solution, SpotOn GPS is designed for fast
deployment, with service launch within 60 days of con-
tract signing. Worldwide rich-mapping options include
street maps, 3-D map views, and satellite images. Loca-
tion-specific traffic and weather are also offered.
SpotOn GPS Platform Enables LBS Ad Delivery
LOCATION-BASED SERVICES
See all events at www.gpsworld.com/events.
UN ICG Seeks Presenters for Fourth Meeting
September 1418, 2009, St. Petersburg, Russia
The United Nations International Committee on GNSS
is looking for presenters on the interoperability of naviga-
tion satellite systems and augmentations from the user
perspective. Contact Rick Hamilton, cgsic@cgls.uscg.mil.
International Association of Institutes of Navigation (IAIN)
Tri-Annual Congress
October 2730, 2009, Stockholm, Sweden
www.congrex.com/nnf/iain2009/welcome.asp
GPS World Editor Alan Cameron will chair a session on
Human Technical Interaction and Useability.
IGNSS 2009 Conference & Exhibition
December 13, 2009, Queensland, Australia
www.ignss.org/?D=5
EVENTS
Targeting an emerging class
of location-centric devices for
budget-conscious consumers, SiRF
Technology Holdings has introduced
the SiRFatlasIV multifunction location
system processor for creating high-
volume, navigation, and location-aware
products. The SiRFatlasIV platform
available now in production quantities is designed to
minimize bill of materials (BOM) and overall system cost
while giving manufacturers the premium location and
multimedia performance they need to create innovative,
value-priced consumer products.
We believe multifunction, location-centric consumer
devices are best served by multifunction location silicon
and software platforms, said Kanwar Chadha, founder and
vice president of marketing for SiRF. The compelling cost/
performance benefits of our SiRFatlasIV solution enable
our customers to profitably address these high-volume
consumer markets without compromising the location
performance consumers have come to expect from SiRF.
Together, our SiRFatlas and premium SiRFprima multifunc-
tion system platforms enable SiRFs customers to offer a
complete range of location-centric products.
SiRFatlasIV Processor for Low-Cost Navigators
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 28
In-depth Coverage
Find more details on these stories at gpsworld.com.
For the latest GPS news, sign up for GPS World Alerts.
MORE ONLINE
GPS0709_028.pgs 06.22.2009 08:23 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
Let Topcon steer you
where you need to go.
topconsolutions.com
Its time.
Precise precision for your automation.
A
s dependence upon GPS grows,
so does the need for comple-
mentary or augmented solu-
tions. In commercial aviation, the lack of
integrity in GPS is addressed by systems
such as the European Geostationary Navi-
gation Overlay Service (EGNOS), while
mariners have developed their own dif-
ferential network for similar assurances.
The mobile market has developed net-
work-assisted techniques to counter the
slow time-to-first-fix, whilst on-board
solutions such as map-matching enable
seamless in-car navigation.
Experience shows that, regardless of
sector, users gravitate to free signals of
opportunity. Even the lack of a stable
operational system does not appear to
slow innovation of downstream indus-
try. Take the examples of EGNOS, not
yet fully operational, and GLONASS,
at reduced capacity for years. Yet both
systems have already become an essential
part of the mix for specific user segments
such as agriculture and land survey.
The future will be no different. The
presence of even more free-to-air signals
in space will effectively raise the bar for
commercial services wishing to offer ad-
ditional value at a price to end users.
Thus we establish our first ground
rule in the competition among other
GNSS Galileo, GLONASS, and
Compass to become the partner of
choice with GPS: Markets will not
wait for new solutions to existing
problems.
The lack of signal availability in the
urban environment remains one of the
biggest obstacles to expansion in GPS
use. Monetizing GPS for the mass mar-
ket depends upon the same level of ap-
plication continuity that we experience
today for voice or messaging, regardless
of whether we are indoors or under a
canopy.
Competition is fierce among GNSS
The Real Race in GNSS
To Be the Partner of Choice with GPS
By Andrew Sage
BUSINESSOUTLOOK
GPS0709_029.pgs 06.22.2009 08:58 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 30
BUSINESS OUTLOOK
chipset and platform manufacturers, with ever-decreasing
margins. The slightest performance advantage can make a big
difference to sales. Therefore these manufacturers are desper-
ate for a second constellation. Even though GLONASS has
been in use for many years in survey, GPS has not yet found its
natural partner for the mass market.
Despite cynicism regarding Galileos timelines, support for
the project remains very strong from the downstream supply
chain, for whom 50 or 60 satellites present ample opportuni-
ties for performance innovation. Hence, if anyone had any
doubt whether the race had started, our second rule is : The
market for multiple constellations is already here.
Perhaps not quite yet for the consumer market but for
longer lifetime platforms, todays procurements must future-
proof against potential upgrades. Car manufacturers now re-
quest flexible software receivers that can be readily upgraded to
multiple constellations, an obvious requirement given the typi-
cal six-year period for car design and manufacture, followed
by 10 years in service. Train rolling-stock procurement officers
are also asking manufacturers to indicate how they propose to
upgrade to multiple GNSS during the lifetime of the asset.
Because of all this stored-up demand, and in spite of the
uncertainty surrounding timescales for GNSS programs, a core
and very key handful of chipset and receiver manufacturers are
already investing substantial amounts of R&D.
Let us recall henceforth that an ever-decreasing number
of chipset suppliers control an ever-increasing portion of the
GNSS market. They do not care from which part of the globe
the second-place GNSS comes; this is completely irrelevant to
the bottom line. They are looking for the same thing that GPS
has provided for two decades: a continuous and, above all, pre-
dictable, thus bankable, signal and service.
From discussions with our customers, the key metric in
determining the GNSS second-place winner will not be who
launches the most satellites soonest but who publishes a firm
and manufacturer-friendly interface control document (ICD).
Enabling manufacturers to design, build, and sell chips and
receivers that are prepared to receive interoperable multi-GNSS
signals may be more important than the actual arrival of those
signals, or declared full operational capability of the GNSS
delivering them.
This then is the third rule governing the GNSS race: ICDs,
not satellites, constitute the key performance indicator.
Costs of R&D and product development have driven
consolidation amongst the major global players. Further, the
influence of companies once confined to mobile phones and
personal navigation devices has now spread to automotive
and leisure, formerly secured by professional receiver manu-
facturers.
In essence, high volumes and low margins characterize both
the consumer and telematics markets. The additional cost of
GNSS in an integrated chipset is expected to be less than $1 by
the end of 2010. Some predict that half of all new mobile sales
in the UK will be GPS-enabled in the same timeframe.
This means that while companies are desperate for new per-
formance differentiators, technical innovation is low on their
list of priorities. Instead, cost is the deciding factor in product
choice. But every feature has its price; Russias announce-
ment of implementing CDMA on a GLONASS open-service
frequencies has whet the appetites of many GPS developers.
Thus, the fourth ground rule: Innovation in technology
necessitates tangible performance benefit.
Such is the ferocity of price competition that any royalty fee,
however small, will have an immediate and detrimental effect
on Galileos uptake. Even an optimistic fee of $0.01 across 1
billion sales per annum would only scrape up $10 million.
Meanwhile, professional and safety-of-life (SoL) markets,
characterized by higher unit costs and lower volumes, dif-
fer greatly from the mass market. Receivers cannot easily be
developed without sufficient user-pull and backing from
international agreements and standards. EGNOS experience
provides some key lessons here. Certified commercial air-
transport receivers are only just becoming available in Europe
despite equipment standards being finalized many years ago.
In turn, receiver suppliers are unwilling to spend marketing
resource without a critical mass of user-pull, despite imminent
operational capability.
Uptake of new open services such as Galileos Open Service
(OS) in markets like aviation and maritime depends upon
many steps, and unfortunately they are sequential. They in-
clude equipment standards, international agreement and accep-
tance (ICAO, IMO), upgrade and re-capitalization of ground
infrastructure, and new procedures and training. Even replacing
existing equipment every 15 years is often optimistic, as users
instead opt to tie into other wider aircraft/vessel upgrades.
And thats just for open free-to-air services. The acceptance
of more specific Galileo services such as safety of life will re-
quire a new precedence in international acceptance, and may
ultimately have to wait until GPS is ready to provide the same
functionality and performance as part of a global integrity
concept. Therefore, the uptake of integrity services in
safety-critical markets will be slow.
Prospects are strong for a multiconstellation, single-
First GPS/Galileo receiver sales
Time
Penetration
GNSS %
Time of Galileo
Introduction
Determined by:
- Internal factors such as
programme timescales and
ICD release
- External factors such as
standards andinstitutional
approval
Rate of Galileo
Penetration Increase
Fundamentally driven by rate
of replacement (eg mobile
phones = 2 years; ships = 15
years)
What % of users choose to
upgrade from GPS to
GPS/Galileo?
Galileo%
GPS0709_030.pgs 06.22.2009 08:29 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
BUSINESS OUTLOOK
www.gpsworld.com July 2009 | GPS World 31
frequency, L1 open service, with rapid
take-up across virtually all markets. Gali-
leo has married itself to the GPS open
civil signal from its very beginnings,
and the EU-U.S. agreement means that
Galileo still holds onto second position
in the race. Despite the complexity in
decoding the Galileo signal, added soft-
ware and silicon should not mean that a
future GPS/Galileo L1 receiver is signifi-
cantly more expensive than GPS alone.
For the time being, it looks as though
a world of free-to-air multiple open
services will not only meet the needs of
most users, but enable a significant step
up in user experience and application
performance. The window for Galileo
remains open but its closing fast, as
Russian and Chinese counterparts jostle
for position alongside GPS. The case
for Galileos other services such as SoL
remains unanswered for the time being.
Clearly, however, even with strong user
demand, it is likely that the second gen-
eration of Galileo users will be the early
adopters of these added-value services.
Moral: Given the chance, users will
quickly turn to GPS/Galileo L1.
Three Tactics to Improve Odds
Examination of these sporting statistics
suggests three easy ways for Galileo to im-
prove its chances in the marketplace.
Of first and paramount importance is
the early release of the Open Service
signal-in-space (OS SIS) ICD with
immediate rights for commercializa-
tion and no royalty fees. The GPS
SIS ICD was published at least 10
years prior to GPS full operational
capability (FOC). Each competitor
in this race leaves the starting blocks
when its ICD is released not when
FOC is reached.
Promote development of multiple-
channel software receivers flexible to
all of this program uncertainty. These
can be exploited by long-lifetime
platforms such as aviation, maritime,
rail, and ground networks, and will
minimize through-life costs of infra-
structure over 1520 years. Galileo
has a real opportunity to put hooks
into the market at this early stage to
ensure its future.
Do nothing to risk delays in OS intro-
duction. From discussions with users
and manufacturers, 12 more satellites
will make sufficient difference to the
user experience to encourage receiver
development.
There is a real race to become the
partner of choice for GPS, but it is in
the chipset, not in the programs.
ANDREW SAGE is a director of Helios, a UK-
based management and technology consul-
tancy specializing in the field of navigation.
BUILDING ANTENNAS TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS
At Antcom, custom antenna design is our specialty. Recognized as the designer of choice
across multiple industries and applications, we excel at customer-specic design and
ultra-fast prototype turnaround.
GPS, GNSS, UHF, Iridium, Beidou, L/S/C/X-band, Globalstar, Inmarsat, Thuraya, ICO.
If we dont have the antenna you require, well build it for you.
Try our antenna Product Finder
Available 24/7 at www.antcom.com
For Excellence in Antenna & Microwave Products
Phone: 301-782-1076
Email: sales@antcom.com
Web: www.antcom.com
GPS0709_031.pgs 06.22.2009 08:29 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 32
A
ccuracy improvements and cost reductions in the
surveying field have both accelerated rapidly in re-
cent years, driven by changes in work procedures
that combine different instruments and techniques. Sensor
integration for positioning and precise navigation is the prin-
cipal innovation responsible for these advances.
This evolution also affects construction, specifically earth-
moving machines assisted by GNSS receivers integrated with
attitude/tilt sensors. These recently introduced systems con-
tinue to undergo new developments, one such described here,
as well as study and testing to improve their affordability and
performance within the complexity and special circumstances
of construction projects.
Currently most companies producing positioning instru-
ments also distribute machine-control systems tailored to the
custom requirements and accuracies to be obtained. Such sys-
tems are based on satellite positioning and include one or more
dual-frequency GNSS receivers. Many of these systems can
receive GLONASS as well as GPS signals. Nearing comple-
tion as of May 2009, the GLONASS constellations availability
improves the positioning success rate in sites with natural or
artificial obstructions.
In bulldozer-type machines, the GNSS antenna is installed on
the frontal blade, protected by vibration-damping systems set up
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
|
Machine Control
Guido Fastellini, Fabio Radicioni, and Aurelio Stoppini
University of Perugia, Italy
Network-based real-time kinematic (NRTK) positioning reduces or eliminates the communication, integrity,
and affordability problems associated with semi-automated guidance of bulldozers, excavators, and other
equipment at centimeter-level accuracy. This new method addresses adequate height control, a crucial factor
for machine-control users.
Network Corrections
for Machine Control
Excavator
Tilt Sensors
GPS Receiver
Control Box
Radio Antenna
Tilt Sensor
GPS Single Antennas
GPS0709_032.pgs 06.22.2009 08:36 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
www.gpsworld.com July 2009 | GPS World 33
Machine Control
|
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
in different ways by the manufacturers.
These systems must also withstand the
high temperatures that can occur during
work. A second GNSS antenna measures
the blades transversal inclination.
Other devices such as micro-elec-
tromechanical systems (MEMS) and
similar sensors also contribute to
machi ne con-
trol. Such in-
struments have
many interesting
characteristics:
large numbers
of uni t s pro-
duced at l ow
cost, toughness,
smal l size, easy
installation and cus-
tomization, and possibil-
ity of integration with
other sensors. For ex-
ample, one company has
announced that their next
control system for dozers will
carry a three-axes MEMS capable of a
position and attitude estimation at rates
up to 100 Hz. Such a powerful sensor
system will further improve productiv-
ity of the system and augment the GNSS
receiver during poor satellite visibility.
Machines turning around a vertical
axis, such as excavators, also carry a sec-
ond GNSS antenna, as well as two- or
three-axes tilt sensors to estimate the in-
clination of the booms and the position
and attitude of the bucket.
Problems and Innovations
The current state of machine control
(see CURRENT BASELINE sidebar), while
representing great advances over tradi-
tional building practices, still presents
some drawbacks and limitations:
costs for a base station on each
building site (purchase, installation,
precise positioning, surveillance);
necessity of preliminary survey oper-
ations for the estimation of a datum
transformation between the local
datum of the computer-assisted
design (CAD) and WGS84, incor-
porating an adequate number of
ground-control points;
communication problems between
base station and the rovers, due to
the low radio-modem power per-
mitted by the law in some countries
(for example, 1 watt in Italy, lim-
iting the operating range to a few
kilometers);
sites spanning long distances, as in
the case of road construction, that
require placing and geo-referenc-
ing more base stations, or installing
radio-repeater devices; and
GPS0709_033r1.pgs 06.25.2009 15:10 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
|
Machine Control
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 34
affordability and integrity problems
for the correction data coming from
a single station that require frequent
control measures on known points.
To help solve some of these prob-
lems, the Department of Civil and En-
vironmental Engineering (DICA) at the
University of Perugia conducts research
on possible improvements to machine-
control systems.
The main avenue we have explored in-
volves permanent networks for the GNSS
corrections, which would eliminate the
need for one or more base stations in or
near the building site. The transmission
from the network to the rovers can be
effected in two different modes: direct,
through a GPRS or UMTS modem in-
stalled on each rover; or indirect, with
an intermediate pass on a radio repeater
redistributing the corrections all over
the building site. This second approach
has a consistent advantage over the first
one: only one GPRS/UMTS modem is
required for any number of machines op-
erating on the site, and it can be placed
where the GSM coverage is better.
FIGURE 1 shows the impact of a GNSS
permanent network on the organization
of the machine-control system. Under the
current system architecture, each build-
ing site operates with a connection to its
own local base station. Figure 1 shows
the future set-up utilizing a permanent
network, in this case the GNSS network
in Umbria, Italy: an unlimited number of
p FIGURE 1 Future proposed organization:
all building sites get RTCM corrections
from the network Ntrip caster
The use of real-time kinematic
(RTK) and network RTK (NRTK)
techniques enable such systems to
reach accuracies less than
5 centimeters, but some applica-
tions, for example road paving,
require even better performances,
on the order of a few millimeters. In
such cases, laser or ultrasonic levels
are installed at the building site, to
furnish height determinations with
a sub-centimetric accuracy for dis-
tances up to hundreds of meters, for
an unlimited number of receivers.
The main element of any machine-
control system consists of one or
more GNSS receivers installed on
the machine. A fixed GNSS station
installed in or near the building site
sends RTK corrections via radio
modem to all GNSS rovers operating
inside the transmission range. The
rovers are installed on machines or
carried by operators for tracking and
control purposes. A differential tech-
nique with code and phase correc-
tions estimates the rover position,
reaching accuracies equal or better
than 5 centimeters.
The system estimates in real time
the plano-altimetric position of the
rover. Other sensors, if present, can
improve the height accuracy and
enable determination of other com-
ponents of movement, position, and
attitude of the excavating blade or
bucket, after a brief one-time cali-
bration procedure.
An onboard computer, previously
loaded with a digital terrain model
(DTM) of the site, processes all data
acquired by the sensors. Thus, the
machine operator can visualize at
any moment the difference between
the actual ground surface and the
intended design.
In most cases, the system is also
connected to the machines hydrau-
lic control system, so that software
automatically commands the move-
ment of the booms or blade. The
driver only has to control the excava-
tion result and follow the design plot,
assisted by the displayed informa-
tion: machine position, excavation
or filling height, ground slope, cross
section, and so on.
Introduction of such machine con-
trol has considerably improved the
accuracy of earth movement, reduc-
ing times and costs. Advantages
include:
complete elimination of costs
for preliminary survey phase and
for the tracking during excava-
tion (more office work required
for design and DTM elaboration
and loading, but this is offset by a
more accurate data provision);
direct transition from the design
to execution phase, eliminating
intermediate passes, with a con-
sistent reduction of time, cost,
and potential errors;
better involvement and efficiency
of the machine operators, who
control project execution in real
time on their display;
consistent improvement in project
accuracy, reducing waste of mate-
rial, energy, and time;
on-site technicians controlling the
work in a very fast and affordable
way by means of the same RTK
corrections;
most machine-control systems,
even the newest releases, fully or
nearly turn-key, easy to learn and
understand by the operators after
a quick calibration phase;
damages to underground cables
and pipes avoided if the design
drawings includes their position
and depth.
Current Baseline
GPS0709_034.pgs 06.22.2009 08:37 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
www.gpsworld.com July 2009 | GPS World 35
Machine Control
|
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
operating machines in different building
sites work simultaneously and indepen-
dently, all connected to the permanent
network without local base stations.
Networks. The DICA operates two
permanent networks:
GPSUMBRIA, the official GNSS
network of the Umbria Region, cen-
tral Italy, offers both post-processing
and real-time positioning services. It
comprises 10 stations (two more are
scheduled in the next few months),
covering the region (FIGURE 2). More
information about the network
and its data (freely available at the
moment) is at www.gpsumbria.it.
LABTOPO, a regional network set
up for research purposes, is putting
together a bundle of GNSS perma-
nent stations of different operators
(universities, schools, public admin-
istrations, and private companies).
It includes 21 stations over a wide
area in central Italy from Rimini to
Rome (FIGURE 3), and offers only
post-processing services. See http://
labtopo.ing.unipg.it/labtopo/index.php.
The monumentation of the stations of
both networks is very stable: all GPSUM-
BRIA stations match the IAG Reference
Frame Sub-Commission for Europe
(EUREF) and International GNSS Ser-
vice prescriptions, and most LABTOPO
stations are set up with equivalent char-
acteristics. Two GPSUMBRIA stations
(UNPG Perugia and UNTR Terni) form
p FIGURE 2 GPSUMBRIA network
p FIGURE 3 LABTOPO network
O M N I S T A R H I G H P E R F O R M A N C E
T M
D G P S :
B R I N G I N G D E C I M E T E R
A C C U R A C Y WI T H I N R E A C H
Introducing OmniSTAR High Performance (HP), our revolutionary new DGPS
system that redefines the standard for differential correction. OmniSTAR has
developed cost-effective, reliable real-time corrections enabling high-accuracy
applications over entire continents without depl oyi ng l ocal base stati ons.
Our i nnovati ve HP si gnal provi des fi ve ti mes the accuracy of standard
DGPS for hori zontal accuracy of ~ +/- 10- 15 cms. HP means a wi de- area
sol uti on offeri ng previ ousl y unobtai nabl e l evel s of accuracy, openi ng the door
for hi gh- preci si on uses such as auto steeri ng, gui dance and automati on
of agri - vehi cl es, i ncreased hi t probabi l i ty for GIS/uti l i ti es, rough gradi ng
f or const r uct i on appl i cat i ons, sur vey pr oj ect s, oi l expl or at i on, aer i al
photogrammetr y, and more. We j ust rai sed the bar on accuracy and rel i abi l i ty,
but i ts way wi thi n your reach. Omni STAR HP. Others promi sewe del i ver.
Contact us for more information
www.omnistar.com
Ex p e c t h i g h p e r f o r ma n c e
2
0
0
5
,
O
m
n
iS
T
A
R
GPS0709_035.pgs 06.22.2009 08:38 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
|
Machine Control
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 36
part of the European Permanent Network
and the EUREF-IP real-time project.
All stations are equipped with GPS-
GLONASS geodetic receivers. Most have
choke-ring antennas; all GPSUMBRIA
antennas are individually calibrated.
All data of both networks are sub-
mitted to an automatic quality-control
procedure and then distributed to the sci-
entific and technical community through
the websites mentioned, in the form of
daily or hourly RINEX files at sampling
rates of 30, 5, and 1 seconds, to be used
for post-processing applications, enabling
users to achieve position accuracies down
to a few millimeters.
Post-processing data are currently
provided free in order to promote their
use, but such distribution policy might
change in the future, for example requir-
ing a fee for the 1-second files.
The GPSUMBRIA network also sup-
plies real-time positioning services (net-
work code corrections or NDGPS, and
network phase corrections or NRTK) to
registered users. Registration is currently
free because the real-time services are still
in a promotional phase; such policy will
likely change to a fully operational phase
in the future. FIGURE 4 shows the real-
time network.
Phase corrections are transmitted
to the users in virtual reference station
(VRS) or Flchen Korrektur Parameters
(FKP) modes, using the RTCM 2.3 for-
mat (correction types 18, 19 or 20, 21).
Code corrections are given in RTCM 2.0
format. Users can receive the corrections
through a direct connection to a stack of
GSM modems set up at the network con-
trol center or through our recommended
approach, the network Ntrip caster.
The real-time software performs a
continuous computation of the network,
which besides its primary function (am-
biguities and biases computation) consti-
tutes a powerful instrument for network
analysis and control.
Network Corrections Tests
Trovati S.n.c., a building and earth-
moving company of Perugia, recently
acquired two machine-control systems,
installed on a dozer and an excavator.
The dozer carries a system including
a dual-frequency GPS-GLONASS re-
ceiver, with antenna mounted on a
vibration-damping rod located at the
center of the excavating blade. A mono-
axial tilt sensor estimates the transversal
attitude of the blade. The equipment
also includes a control box, an onboard
computer with LCD screen, and a radio
modem receiving the RTCM correction
from the base station (see FIGURE 5).
The excavator has been fitted with a
system composed of two GNSS antennas
and five two-axes gravitational sensors
mounted on the three booms of the ex-
cavating machine, plus one on the bucket
and one on the machine body. The sys-
tem includes an onboard computer with
touch-screen control panel and a control
box including the GNSS receiver, con-
nected to a radio modem.
Both machines carry an oleo-dynamic
group actuating the blade movement and
p FIGURE 5 Dozer installation
p FIGURE 4 GPSUMBRIA real-time
network
GPS0709_036.pgs 06.22.2009 08:35 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
www.gpsworld.com July 2009 | GPS World 37
an electronic control system connected to
the control box.
Standard operating procedure requires
in a preliminary phase the selection of a
ground point to place the GNSS base
station. Its WGS84 position can be ob-
tained by means of a rapid-static or RTK
GNSS survey, using the post-processing
or real-time data of a permanent net-
work, or connecting the station to some
known points, such as vertexes of the Ital-
ian Geodetic Network IGM95.
To make the procedure easier for opera-
tors lacking knowledge on the reference
systems, the base station is often georefer-
enced in an approximate way (for exam-
ple, by a simple point-positioning through
pseudorange) with the condition that the
monumentation and the assigned coordi-
nates (we can call them pseudo-WGS84)
do not change from one day to another.
Using the phase corrections from the
base stations, the pseudo-WGS84 coordi-
nates of a series of ground control points
are determined by means of an RTK local
survey. This way, the control points have
a double set of coordinates: the pseudo-
WGS84 and the local ones extracted from
the design CAD drawings.
The system manufacturers software es-
timates a set of transformation parameters
between pseudo-WGS84 and the local
system. From then on, the operator works
in the local system, following the design
digital terrain model (DTM) and draw-
ings loaded on the PC and visible on the
screen. The machine position, computed
in RTK mode in the pseudo-WGS84
datum, is automatically converted by the
software into the local system.
With this operating mode, there is an
error due to the roughly approximate po-
sition of the base station. However, such
error has no influence on the work if the
base station position does not change in
time. If the base has to be moved for any
reason, the initialization procedure must
be repeated, including a new parameter
estimation.
We selected a test area and surveyed it
with the GNSS NRTK technique, using
VRS corrections from the GPSUMBRIA
permanent network and producing an ac-
curate local DTM. We set up a sample
design of a road track (FIGURE 6) for test-
ing purposes, including a straight part
and a 15-meter-radius curve, for a total
length of about 100 meters. We exag-
gerated the transversal slope of the test
road (10 percent, more than the values
p FIGURE 6 Test with NRTK corrections: left, the design plot; right, a planimetric
representation of the differences in meters measured between the designed and the
initial survey
Machine Control
|
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
A giant container terminal in the port of Antwerp.
Its hard to imagine a more complex day-to-day reality than that!
Around the clock, massive freights are shipped,
unshipped and moved around the terminal.
What could well be a logistical nightmare, now runs smoothly
with the aid of Septentrios ultra-precise positioning techniques.
Why?
Because we are reliable experts.
Because we are ahead.
anks to Septentrio
GPS technology,
we can run
24/7 operation
with 0 misplaced
containers.
Stephan Gosiau,
Technical Director
PSA HNN
vcrsaiilc utV kcccivcrs [cr ucmanding licaiicns
www.sepIenIrio.com
GPS0709_037.pgs 06.22.2009 08:59 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
|
Machine Control
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 38
normally allowed) for a better testing of the dozer blade-control
system.
To apply the innovative use of the GNSS permanent network,
it was necessary to partially modify the machine-control system,
which is a closed system, a limit due to its turnkey philosophy.
Following the indirect method described earlier, we supplemented
the system with a small hardware component capable of receiv-
ing NRTK corrections through an internal GPRS modem, and
redistributing them over the building site by means of a radio
modem. The adopted device also includes a basic GPS receiver
(code-only, 20 channels) that computes an approximate position
by means of the pseudoranges and sends a NMEA message to the
permanent network control center (necessary when operating in
the VRS mode). The supplementary device configuration is easily
done by sending it an SMS code (FIGURE 7).
We encountered some practical problems during the tests: a
poor GSM coverage over the test area, and some interference on
radio transmission. Both were easily solved, the first by changing
the supplementary devices location and the GSM operator, the
second by changing the frequency on the radio modem.
A further problem concerned the data stream (VRS or FKP
corrections in RTCM 2.3. format) transmitted by the GPSUM-
BRIA network caster. The bit-rate normally given by the technical
literature for VRS corrections is about 600 bits per second (bps)
for each satellite. During the test, the number of available satellite
increased to 14 (GPS + GLONASS), with a total bit rate of 8400
bps. Adding some other data exchanged between the caster and
the rover, the bandwidth available on the radio modem (9600
bps) was fully occupied.
A further increase in the number of satellites available once
GLONASS reaches its full operational phase would make things
even more difficult in the future. A possible solution is the adop-
tion of the Compact Measurement Record (CMR) format, a stan-
dard protocol for reducing the bit rate, usable with any brand of
receiver. A CMR bit rate can be estimated as follows:
Bytes/s = 6 + N [8 + (Freq - 1) 7]
where N is the number of available satellites (GPS + GLONASS)
and Freq the frequencies (1 for single, 2 for double). In the case
of our test (14 satellites), the result is 216 bytes per second,
thus 1728 bps. Even adding other message parts necessary to
transfer supplementary information about the reference station
and its coordinates (about 500 bps every 10 seconds), the 9600
bps limit seems sufcient.
A further possibility is given by the definition of a data stream
in the RTCM 3.0 format. A data stream of about 200 bps is esti-
mated for each satellite in the type 1004 message, while the 1003
is about 50 bps smaller. The 1004 or 1003 types only contain
GPS observations, but similar evaluations can be made for the
1012 or 1011 types used for GLONASS. Referring once more
to the test situation (14 satellites), a stream data of about 2800
bps can be estimated, which is about one third of the RTCM 2.3
value. The manufacturers support documentation, where a baud
rate of 2742 bps is evaluated with 12 satellites for a RTCM 3.0
VRS correction, confirms this.
We carried out the first test using the classic RTCM 2.3 format
transmitting VRS and FKP corrections. The limited bandwidth
provoked a periodic bottleneck effect in radio data transmission,
thus the dozer partially operated without differential correc-
tions.
After the dozer had completed its earth-moving job, a new
GNSS survey (NRTK VRS) checked the correspondence between
the execution and the design DTM. The mean value of the dif-
ferences between the two DTMs (shown in FIGURE 8) is about 5
centimeters, with standard deviation of 8 centimeters.
Note that a survey performed after the skinning phase of
the ground is subject to a few centimeters uncertainty, because
p FIGURE 8 Distribution of the height differences between
design DTM and execution (meters)
p FIGURE 7 Supplementary equipment for the test
GPS0709_038.pgs 06.22.2009 08:36 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
www.gpsworld.com July 2009 | GPS World 39
Machine Control
|
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
the surface is irregular and the survey shaft tends to sink into the
ground. Adding to this the uncertainties of the NRTK survey
(about 5 centimeters), and considering the aforementioned diffi-
culties given by the radio bandwidth in relation to the data stream,
the test result can be considered successful.
Improvements. To fix the main problem concerning the radio
modem bandwidth encountered during the test, the GPSUM-
BRIA real-time positioning service was improved by introduction
of a new data stream in CMR format, accessible through Ntrip.
We subsequently performed a second test on a real building site,
relative to the realization of a new road track near Perugia, includ-
ing a traffic roundabout (FIGURE 9).
Besides a dozer (the same as the first test), an excavator and a
grader were also used. The equipment installed on the grader is
the same as that of the dozer: it can be easily transferred from one
machine to another by appropriately setting the pre-calculated
calibration parameters.
The second test, performed with CMR corrections received
from GPSUMBRIA through the supplementary device, shows a
regular and continuous operation of the system in NRTK mode.
The GSM coverage over the building site, in a suburban area,
is very good. In any event, the adoption of the CMR format
completely fixed the problem related to the limited bandwidth of
the radio modem, even with a great number of available satellites
(from 13 to 15 during the test).
To verify the accuracy of the GNSS-controlled machine work
(besides the earth movements, the creation of a lime-stabilized
ground), a control survey was performed with an handheld rover
on a sample of about 100 ground surface points, plus some mark-
ers set up for control purposes. A comparison between the design
DTM and the surveyed heights is summarized by FIGURE 10 and
TABLE 1. The results can be considered acceptable given the rough
surface of the ground at the present intermediate phase of the
work, before laying down the paving layers. A final check will be
performed on the finished asphalt paving. Referring to our earlier
research on network phase corrections, an accuracy of about 5
p FIGURE 9 Design DTM for the second test
p CONTROL SURVEY for the second test
GPS Signal Distribution
even in adverse environments!
Toll Free Phone: 866-289-4777 www.gpssource.com
Providing friendly service and personalized
technical support
High Performance Amplifiers, Splitters, Combiners,
Repeater Kits, Antennas, Fiber Optic Links and More!
Custom solutions with prompt delivery
Expert GPS and RF technical support
Regulatory compliant designs
GPS0709_039.pgs 06.22.2009 08:37 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
SURVEY & CONSTRUCTION
|
Machine Control
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 40
centimeters is to be expected as a routine
result.
During the roundabout test, we
performed a further test, shown in
FIGURE 11: we determined the 3D position
of some control points with the central
tooth of the excavator bucket, to test the
affordability of the cinematic chain going
from the two GPS antennas to the bucket
through the five tilt meters mounted re-
spectively on the machine body, the three
booms, and the bucket itself. The control-
point coordinates match at a few centime-
ters level, confirming once more the good
calibration of the system a rough but
effective test.
The Trovati company is complet-
ing the roundabout building with the
NRTK technique and has adopted the
technique as a routine method for their
future work.
Future Developments
The tests described here evaluate the
potential of using real-time positioning
services supplied by a GNSS permanent
network for machine-control applica-
tions. Use of the supplementary device
distributing the corrections over the
building area has shown some points
of weakness connected with the radio
transmission: interferences, limited
range, limited bandwidth. Most prob-
lems can be fixed, as we have shown,
and the experimented technique also has
demonstrated obvious benefits:
elimination of the local base station
(one for each building site), with a
sensible cost reduction;
possibility of using a theoretically
unlimited number of GNSS-con-
trolled machines in any building area
covered by the permanent network;
reduction of the costs connected
with preliminary survey operations;
improvement of the accuracy and
affordability of the machine position-
ing, in other words of the integrity of
the process, thanks to the better per-
formances of NRTK versus RTK;
use of a global reference system,
controlled and monitored by the
network, rather than a pseudo
WGS84 system;
availability of quality control proce-
dures more effective and simple than
those currently in use, with possibili-
ties of quality certification.
At present, the use of the supplementary
device appears to be a convenient solution
to send corrections to the machines op-
erating in a building site. The alternative
(installation of a GPRS or UMTS modem
on each machine and/or surveying rover)
is expensive due to the cost of the GSM
services, and can also represent a source
of problems if the GSM coverage is not
very good over the whole building area.
An advantage of the device-based solution
is the possibility of moving it to wherever
the GSM signal is best. Further tests are
still necessary to pass from the prototype
to the standard application of the method,
in order to satisfy the turnkey operability
request.
Precision farming practices can benefit
from the same advantages of the GNSS
control supported by a permanent net-
work listed earlier. This is particularly
true for the most accuracy-dependent ag-
ricultural applications, currently using the
base-rover approach with a fixed station,
which could be eliminated.
Other farming applications require a
lower accuracy and are based on code-dif-
ferential corrections transmitted by geo-
stationary satellites. An alternative could
be obtained receiving the code RTCM by
a permanent network, which would per-
mit the use of low-cost receivers. Other
testing that we have conducted shows that
submetric accuracies are possible to reach
with relatively low investments.
Acknowledgments
We thank the Trovati and Geotop com-
panies for collaboration on this research.
Manufacturers
All GPSUMBRIA and LABTOPO
stations are equipped with Topcon GPS-
GLONASS geodetic receivers (www.
topcon.com). Real-time functionality
of GPSUMBRIA is achieved through
GNSMART software by Geo++ (www.
geopp.de). The dozer (CAT D6M) carries
a Topcon 3DMC system, and the exca-
vator (CAT 320CS) a Topcon 3DXi sys-
tem. The system was supplemented with
the SmallTRIP produced by Smalltouch
Aps (www.smalltouch.com). The CMR
protocol was introduced by Trimble
(www.trimble.com).
p FIGURE 11 Excavator bucket test
p TABLE 1 Statistical data summary
referring to the histogram of Figure 10.
Values in meters.
Mean -0.006
Median -0.012
Max -0.140
Min -0.142
RMS -0.059
p FIGURE 10 Frequency distribution of
the height differences (meters) between
design DTM and control survey
GPS0709_040.pgs 06.22.2009 08:37 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
www.gpsworld.com July 2009 | GPS World 41
Acknowledgments
This article is based on the paper GIOVE-A Precise
Orbit Determination from Microwave and Satellite Laser
Ranging Data First Perspectives for the Galileo Constel-
lation and Its Scientific Use presented at the 1st Collo-
quium on the Scientific and Fundamental Aspects of the
Galileo Program, held in Toulouse, France, October 1-7,
2007.
ERIK SCHNEMANN studied geodesy at the Technische Universitt
Darmstadt (TUD), Germany, writing his diploma thesis at the
University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. Since receiv-
ing his diploma from TUD in April 2005, he has been working
for the Institute of Physical Geodesy at TUD on GNSS station
calibration and validation and analyses of GIOVE-A and GIOVE-B
data.
Fortunately, Russia has been launching GLONASS
satellites at an aggressive pace, with 19 operational as
of June 18, and six more scheduled to launch by the end
of the year. Users with equipment that utilizes GPS and
GLONASS should not feel the effect of a slightly
degraded GPS constellation; they could still initialize with
as few as three GPS satellites as long as their receiver is
tracking at least four GLONASS satellites.
Hold the Phone. Is there anything really to worry
about? The U.S. Air Force says no because it main-
tains a ghost fleet of partially mission-capable satellites
as back-ups.
But remember that the Air Force is only committed
to a 24-satellite constellation. Real-time, high-precision
users have become accustomed to much more than
that over the last few years. More satellites generally
means increased productivity, which translates into
greater profit margins. The GPS constellation could drop
five satellites tomorrow (although highly unlikely) to a
26-satellite constellation, and while the Air Force would
certainly be alarmed, they would still be maintaining a
level of service above their commitment.
While the rest of the community worries about a
drop below 24 satellites, real-time, high-precision users
should really fret about a drop of two or three satellites
(unless they are using GLONASS), especially with the
machine-control segment expected to be one of the
fastest growing over the next five years.
Survey/Construction
continued from page 18
System Design & Test
|
INNOVATION
THE SYSTEM
GIOVE-A
continued from page 50
TIM SPRINGER received his Ph.D. in physics from the Astronomical
Institute of the University of Berne (AIUB) in 1999. He has
been a key person in the development of the Center for Orbit
Determination in Europe, one of the IGS analysis centers, located
at AIUB. Since 2004, he has been working for the Navigation
Support Office ( NSO) at the European Space Operations Centre
( ESOC) of the European Space Agency ( ESA) in Darmstadt. In
this group, he has led the development of the new ESOC GNSS
software, which is used for most GNSS activities at NSO includ-
ing GIOVE-A and -B analyses.
MICHIEL OTTEN obtained a degree in aerospace engineering from
Delft University of Technology in 2001. He has been working for
ESOCs NSO since 2002. His main role within NSO is the precise
orbit determination of low Earth-orbiting satellites equipped for
SLR, DORIS, and GPS tracking. He is also responsible for ESAs
International DORIS Service Analysis Centre activities.
MATTHIAS BECKER is a full professor of geodesy and director of the
Institute of Physical Geodesy, TUD. He received his diploma and
Ph.D. in geodesy from TUD in 1979 and 1984, respectively. He
is responsible for research and teaching in the fields of physical
geodesy and satellite geodesy.
Further Reading
For references related to this article, go to gpsworld.com and click on
Innovation under Resources in the left-hand navigation bar.
MORE ONLINE
GPS0709_041.pgs 06.22.2009 08:38 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
GPS World | July 2009 www.gpsworld.com 42
INNOVATION
|
System Design & Test
WE USE THEM FOR LISTENING TO MUSIC, for routine surgeries, for making a
point in a presentation, and even for hanging pictures straight. Of course, Im
talking about lasers. Invented in 1960, the laser (an acronym for light amplifica-
tion by the stimulated emission of radiation) has become ubiquitous in modern
society. Every CD and DVD player has one. Many printers use them. But lasers
are also used in a wide range of industrial and scientific applications including
determining the orbits of satellites through satellite laser ranging (SLR).
In the SLR technique, pulses of laser light from a ground reference station
are directed at satellites equipped with an
array of corner-cube retroreflectors, which
direct the pulses back towards a collocated
receiving telescope. By accurately measuring
the two-way travel times of the pulses and
knowing the location of the station and other
operating parameters, the positions of the sat-
ellites can be determined. A network of SLR
reference stations around the globe is used to
monitor the orbits of satellites over time and
their variations have been used by scientists to
improve our knowledge of the Earths gravity
field; to study the long term dynamics of the
solid Earth, oceans, and atmosphere; and even
to verify predictions of the General Theory of Relativity.
The first SLR measurements were obtained from the Beacon Explorer-B
satellite, which was launched in October 1964. Since then, dozens of satel-
lites equipped with corner-cube retroreflectors have been launched including
a number of radio-navigation satellites. Every GLONASS satellite is equipped
with retroreflectors and two GPS satellites have been equippedSVN35/
PRN05 and SVN36/PRN06. The COMPASS-M1 satellite in medium Earth orbit
carries retroreflectors, as do both GIOVE-A and B, the Galileo test satellites.
Precise orbit determination of radio-navigation satellites using SLR has the
advantage of being unaffected by any onboard satellite electronics and associ-
ated signal biases. Radiometric observations of a satellites microwave signals,
on the other hand, are influenced by the satellites clock, for example, and its
effect must be estimated to obtain precise (and accurate) satellite orbits for
navigation and positioning. Therefore, a comparison of SLR- and microwave-
derived orbits can be very useful for studying the performance of the data
measurement and orbit-determination processes of both techniques.
In this months column, we take a look at some work being carried out to
precisely determine the orbit of the GIOVE-A test satellite using SLR and
microwave observations. This preliminary investigation will benefit the proce-
dures to be implemented for the future Galileo constellation.
SLR is unaffected by
satellite electronics.
INNOVATION INSIGHTS
with Richard Langley
Innovation is a regular column that features discussions about recent advances in GPS technology and
its applications as well as the fundamentals of GPS positioning. The column is coordinated by Richard
Langley of the Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering at the University of New Brunswick, who
welcomes your comments and topic i deas. To contact him, see the Contributing Editors section on page 6.
Erik Schnemann, Tim A. Springer, Michiel Otten, and Matthias Becker
Using Microwaves and Laser Ranging for Precise Orbit Determination
Where is GIOVE-A Exactly?
T
he navigation office of the Euro-
pean Space Operations Centre
(ESOC) is engaged in various ac-
tivities using observations of the Galileo test
satellite, GIOVE-A (Galileo In-Orbit Vali-
dation Element-A), recorded at the Galileo
Experimental Sensor Stations (GESS). The
work includes the assessment of the qual-
ity and performance of GIOVE satellite
observables and the testing and improve-
ment of orbit-determination software.
These activities support the long-term goal
of advancing the scientific applications of
the future Galileo constellation.
Since the launch of GIOVE-A on De-
cember 28, 2005, various tests have been
carried out to analyze the quality of the
new code (pseudorange) and carrier-phase
observables derived from tracking the sat-
ellites microwave signals. All of these tests
demonstrate the advantages of the new
signal structure compared to that of legacy
GPS signals. In general, the reduction of
the noise by factor of 4-5 as well as a re-
duction of the code multipath by approxi-
mately a factor of 1.2 (GPS C1C versus
GIOVE-A C1B/C1C) could be seen.
As the comparison of observations is
done indirectly (GPS and GIOVE-A have
different orbits) and the databases used
for most analyses published up to now
is sparse, a deeper analysis of the signal
quality parameters seems appropriate, es-
pecially as data quality has a direct impact
on the precision of orbit determination.
Our analyses, presented in the first half
of this article, are based on a broad base
of data from most of the stations in the
GESS network. Because of the difficulty
in accessing the phase multipath directly,
we first evaluated the signal strength and
the code multipath, which gave the first
hint of the multipath behavior. In order
to compare GPS and GIOVE-A data di-
rectly, only data received from the same
elevation angles and azimuths were used.
GPS0709_042r1.pgs 06.22.2009 08:46 janinej
BLACK YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN
www.gpsworld.com July 2009 | GPS World 43
System Design & Test
|
INNOVATION
Subsequently, we present an analysis of the phase residuals de-
rived by precise point positioning.
The second part of this article focuses on the precise orbit de-
termination or POD of the GIOVE-A spacecraft. The Navigation
Package for Earth Observation Satellites (NAPEOS) software
used at the ESOC Navigation Support Office allows microwave
(radiometric) and satellite laser ranging (SLR) observations to be
used either separately or together. The two methods are different
due to different tracking networks and the different sensitivity of
the observables to atmospheric effects and in their noise levels. We
will present the orbit results focusing on internal orbit consistency
checks and SLR validation of the microwave-based orbits.
Data Analysis
We first describe the procedures used for analyzing the micro-
wave data followed by those used for the SLR data.
Microwave Analysis. For the GIOVE-A signal analysis and
precise orbit determination we used the RINEX data from all of
the GESS stations available from the GIOVE archiving facility
(see TABLE 1). All stations are equipped with GPS/Galileo anten-
nas, built by Space Engineering S.p.A. and Galileo Experimental
Test Receivers (GETRs), built by Septentrio. The data, contain-
ing tracking data of all GPS satellites and the GIOVE-A satellite,
is given in the RINEX 3.00 data format with a sampling interval
of 1 second. To save on storage space for the long-term analyses,
Station name Location Country
GIEN Turin Italy
GKIR Kiruna Sweden
GKOU Kourou French Guyana
GLPG La Plata Argentina
GMAL* Malindi Kenya
GMIZ Mizusawa Japan
GNNO New Norcia Australia
GNOR Noordwijk Netherlands
GOUS Dunedin New Zealand
GTHT Tahiti French Polynesia
GUSN Washington U.S.A.
GVES* Vesleskarvet Antarctica
GWUH* Wuhan China