A Comparison of Single Reference Station, Correction-Based Multiple Reference Station, and Tightly Coupled Methods using Stochastic Ionospheric Modelling

Abstract

The multiple reference station approach to carrier phase-based positioning uses a network of GPS reference stations to model the correlated errors in a geographic region. This paper compares two methods for multiple reference station positioning under a low and a high level of ionosphere. The first method tested is the conventional method for multiple reference station positioning, which is usually a three-step process, namely (1) estimation of the carrier phase ambiguities in the network, (2) prediction of the measured network errors at the location of the rover, and (3) application of the corrections in a practical format. The second method is called the tightly coupled or in-receiver approach, which uses the data from the rover and integrates it with the network solution to better model the effect of the ionosphere. In this approach there are no explicit corrections. These two methods are compared with the single reference station approach for data from two days collected from the Southern Alberta Network in Canada, a medium scale network with inter-stations distance of 34 to 59 km.

Share and Cite:

P. Alves and G. Lachapelle, "A Comparison of Single Reference Station, Correction-Based Multiple Reference Station, and Tightly Coupled Methods using Stochastic Ionospheric Modelling," Positioning, Vol. 1 No. 9, 2005, pp. -.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

[1] Alves P (2004) Development of two novel carrier phase-based methods for multiple Reference station positioning. PhD Thesis, published as UCGE Report No. 20203, Department of Geomatics Engineering, The University of Calgary.
[2] Alves P, Lachapelle G, and Cannon ME (2004) In-Receiver Multiple Reference Station RTK Solution, Proceedings of the Institute of Navigation Saetllite Division Technical Meeting, GPS 04 (September 2004, Long Beach, USA).
[3] Dao D, Alves P and Lachapelle G (2004) Performance Evaluation of Multiple Reference Station GPS RTK for a Medium Scaled Network. Proceedings of the International Symposium on GPS/GNSS, Sydney, Australia (6-8 December).
[4] Lachapelle G, and Alves P (2002) Multiple Reference Station Approach: Overview and Current Research, Invited Contribution, Expert Forum. Journal of Global Positioning Systems, 1(2), 133 – 136.
[5] Lachapelle G, Liu C, and Lu G (1993) Quadruple Single Frequency Receiver System for Ambiguity Resolution on the Fly. Proceedings of the International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of the Institute of Navigation, ION GPS 03 (September 1993, Salt Lake City, USA), 1167 – 1172.
[6] Luo N, and Lachapelle G (2003) Relative Positioning of Multiple Moving Platforms using GPS. IEEETransactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems, 39(3), 936 – 948.
[7] Odijk D (1999) Sochastic Modelling of the Ionosphere for Fast GPS Ambiguity Resolution. Proceedings of General Assembly of the International Association of Geodesy (July 1999, Birmingham, England), volume 121, 387 – 392. International Association of Geodesy, Springer-Verlag.
[8] Odijk D (2000) Weighting Ionospheric Correction to Improve Fast GPS Positioning Over Medium Distances. Proceedings of the National Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of the Institute of Navigation, ION GPS 2000 (September 2000, Salt Lake, USA), 1113 – 1124.
[9] Pugliano G, Alves P, Cannon ME, and Lachapelle G (2003) Performance Analysis of a Post-Mission Multi-Reference RTK DGPS Positioning Approach. Proceedings of the International Association of Institutes of Navigation World Congress (October 2003, Berlin, Germany)
[10] Puliano G, Obrizza F, Pingue F, Sepe V, Alves P, and Lachapelle G (2004) Monitoring the Neapolitan Volcanic Area Using an Advanced Multiple Reference Station RTK DGPS Technique, Proceedings of the Institute of Navigation Satellite Division Technical Meeting, GPS 04 (September 2004, Long Beach, USA)
[11] Raquet J (1998) Development of a Method for Kinematic GPS Carrier-Phase Ambiguity Resolution Using Multiple Reference Receivers. PhD Thesis, published as UCGE Report No. 20116, Department of Geomatics Engineering, The University of Calgary.

Copyright © 2025 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.